AltWeeklies Wire

Will San Francisco Be the First U.S. City to Implement Congestion Pricing?new

The city could raise $35 million to $65 million for public transit improvements annually by charging drivers $3 to cross specific downtown zones during peak travel hours, according to a San Francisco County Transportation Authority study. But the plan requires approval from both local officials as well and the state legislature.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Sarah Phelan  |  12-04-2008  |  Transportation

'Milk': The Politics Behind the Picturenew

The new Harvey Milk movie, which opens later this month, begins as a love story, but after that, the movie gets political -- in fact, by Hollywood standards, it's remarkably political. The movie raises a lot of issues that are alive and part of San Francisco politics today.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Steven T. Jones and Tim Redmond  |  11-19-2008  |  Movies

Gus Van Sant Gives Harvey Milk His Close-Upnew

Van Sant's first brush with Milk came in 1978 while he was driving across the country and heard on the radio that the supervisor was shot. Though he later saw the 1984 documentary The Times of Harvey Milk, it never occurred to him to make a film about the politician.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Kimberly Chun  |  11-19-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Change Hasn't Come to San Francisconew

While the city's streets may have filled on the night of Nov. 4 to celebrate an electoral revolution against racial injustice, its famous left-wing politicians frequently ally themselves against African-American interests. And those politicians' most cherished dreams have no practical effect on improving city slums, stemming violence, or creating jobs.
SF Weekly  |  Matt Smith  |  11-13-2008  |  Commentary

Clash of the Duck Tours in San Francisconew

The Bay Quackers tours were a big duck in a small pond until another duck tour -- Ride the Ducks -- migrated to the city this summer.
SF Weekly  |  Ashley Harrell  |  11-13-2008  |  Travel

Election '08: The People's Electionnew

On (almost) every level, the grassroots beat the establishment and the progressives beat the big money.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Steven T. Jones and Tim Redmond  |  11-12-2008  |  Politics

Public Transit Agencies May Pay Billions for Risky Deals with Bankersnew

San Francisco is suddenly at risk of paying $140 million to bankers who six years ago convinced the city to use its Muni trains in a $1 billion sham tax shelter. Cities such as Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and New York are suddenly facing similar potential payouts.
SF Weekly  |  Matt Smith  |  11-05-2008  |  Economy

San Francisco's Class of 2000new

Eight years after being swept into office, a once-disorganized band of neighborhood leftists tries to create a citywide political machine.
SF Weekly  |  John Geluardi  |  10-29-2008  |  Politics

Frisco Freakout Makes a California Scenenew

Our state may be flush with wild guitar tamers, but the factors cementing a true sonic landmark -- connections among bands, clubs, and labels defining a specific sound -- are lacking in the Bay Area.
SF Weekly  |  Jennifer Maerz  |  10-09-2008  |  Music

Turning the SF Armory into a Lucrative Palace of Fetish Pornnew

When it comes to BDSM porn peddlers Kink.com, apparently size does matter. At least, that's how it seems now that the steamy studio has purchased the 200,000-square-foot San Francisco Armory. Suddenly, everyone wants to know: What's the carnal concern going to do with all that space?
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Molly Freedenberg  |  09-24-2008  |  Tech

Victims Whose Deaths Remain Unclassified in San Fran Are Stiffednew

Amidst all the murders in San Francisco, some suspicious deaths are hidden in a secret burial ground of bureaucracy.
SF Weekly  |  John Geluardi  |  09-11-2008  |  Crime & Justice

SF's Clean Energy Act Could Mean Lower Carbon Emissions and Lower Electric Billsnew

The Clean Energy Act, which will appear as Proposition H on the November ballot, mandates that the city undertake a study to determine the most cost effective and expeditious way to achieve 100 percent renewable energy by 2040.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Amanda Witherell  |  09-11-2008  |  Environment

Count Dante Recounts His Seven Years in an Incredibly Strange Fight Clubnew

In his new memoir Beer, Blood, and Cornmeal, Bob Calhoun describes a moment where wrestling grappled with surrealism, and surrealism won out with a suplex powerslam.
Chicago Reader  |  Dan Kelly  |  09-08-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

SF's Academy of Art Enters the World of NCAA Athleticsnew

This month, the art school kicks off an intercollegiate sports program, fielding 12 teams in the NCAA Division II Pacific West Conference. And if the notion of an art school recruiting players for NCAA competition and doling out athletic scholarships strikes you as odd -- it is. The Academy of Art is the only one.
SF Weekly  |  Joe Eskenazi  |  08-28-2008  |  Sports

Reclaiming San Francisco -- From Carsnew

The city's first ciclovia will open a car-free Embarcadero to cyclists this weekend.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Janna Brancolini  |  08-28-2008  |  Transportation

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