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Monday, July 7, 2025

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Tagged with: Workers

New laws seek to end private developer risk, burdening public instead

Why should cities and counties guarantee profits for builders and push the costs of growth onto the local taxpayers?

SF march draws tens of thousands in solidarity with people in Palestine

"From Palestine to the Philippines, stop the US war machines!" rang out through the Civic Center on Saturday.

Bandcamp layoffs paint bleak picture for indie musicians and union organizers

Sadie Dupuis of Speedy Ortiz, John Darnielle of Mountain Goats, more weigh in on rough blow to local fan-favorite platform.

Plan to put police funding in City Charter creates huge public safety risks

Labor activists say Dorsey measure would threaten a wide range of public-safety programs; it also won't work.

Arleene Correa Valencia’s luminous art reflects family strains of Mexican migration

'Naces Así, Naces Prieto. No Naces Blanco' at Catharine Clark includes cross-border, father-daughter letters of love

A dreamlike tale of anxious immigrant experiences in ‘Citizen’

Word for Word stages Greg Sarris' story of a young Mexican-Native American man grappling with a unique identity

Opposition grows to Breed’s APEC boosterism—and the massive security plans

Small businesses, seniors, hotel workers, Soma residents say the billionaire party will hurt them badly.

A (too) modest housing bond, the impacts of APEC security measures …

... and what's headed for the March ballot? That's The Agenda for Oct. 22-29

Progressive slate files to run against tech money for control of SF Democratic Party

A March election will have major impacts on the races for mayor and supes in November.

Bleep, bloop, apocalypse: ‘Rossum’s Universal Robots’ looks back to the future

Cutting Ball's latest searches for ghosts in the machine of a 1920 text, amid our 2023 tech overload