In December the SFMTA Board of Directors made sixteen Slow Streets permanent

2022 is nearly behind us. The lingering pandemic, political rancor and scandal, and economic uncertainty dominated the local news. Despite all the tumult and uncertainty, Livable City worked hard to help San Francisco take some important steps towards a more livable, just, and sustainable San Francisco. Join us in reflecting on and celebrating what we accomplished in the year nearly past – and how to build on these accomplishments in the year to come.

Complete streets and public transit

This year over a dozen people-oriented streets, created as emergency pandemic measures, were made permanent. Voters approved measures to fund transportation and create complete streets. Public transit ridership and service continued to recover, but transit will soon face a ‘fiscal cliff’ as costs rise, the local economy cools, and federal funds dry up.

Open streets

The pandemic underscored the importance of outdoor public spaces for our mental and physical health, connecting with neighbors and friends, and for the cultural and economic vitality of neighborhoods. Livable City was at the center of reclaiming our public spaces. In 2022 Livable City:

Livable neighborhoods

We San Franciscans love our neighborhoods. We also fear for them. Decent housing is out of reach for more and more of us. Beloved neighborhood-serving small businesses, community institutions, and third places have been battered by the pandemic and rising costs.

The Planning Department worked all year to update our General Plan Housing Element, which will head to the Board of Supervisors early next year. The state mandated that the new element permit over 82,000 new housing units to be built within the decade, with over half affordable to households who can’t afford current market-rate housing. This year the state also started scrutinizing San Francisco’s complicated development approval process, which can add considerable delay, risk, and uncertainty to building and renovating buildings in San Francisco.

San Francisco has an uneven record of implementing its own General Plan policies. We’re working to make the Housing Element a comprehensive and action-oriented plan with legislative and policy changes and programs, along with metrics and evidence-based standards which will allow us to track genuine progress.Livable City engaged the update process, proposing and advocating for dozens of specific reforms to:

We also shouldn’t wait for the housing element to be completed to make overdue changes. Props D and E, competing housing measures on the November ballot, got a lot of attention, but both were rejected by voters. Livable City’s strategy of championing effective reforms through the legislative process yielded some significant successes in 2022.

Get in Touch

Staff Directory

Darin Ow-Wing, Executive Director
[email protected]

Jessica Tovar, Program Director
[email protected]

Sally Chen, Deputy Director
[email protected]

Tom Radulovich, Senior Policy Fellow
[email protected]

Isaac Santiago, Sunday Streets Program Manager [email protected]

Reina Terry, Program & Development Associate, reina@livablecity.org