San Francisco supervisors approve Mayor Lurie's 'Family Zoning' housing plan
Briefly

San Francisco supervisors approve Mayor Lurie's 'Family Zoning' housing plan
"This is a critical step to keep San Francisco in control of what gets built in our city,"
"Too many families and young people are wondering if they'll be able to stay in the city that they call home."
"As long as they are affordable and make sense for what people are making, then yes. But if it's just gonna push out people already in the community, then no."
"This is response to state bullying disguised as results-oriented,"
San Francisco's Board of Supervisors approved Mayor Daniel Lurie's Family Zoning Plan to enable taller, denser multifamily housing across the city. The plan aims to increase housing capacity to meet California targets and avoid state intervention, with a Jan. 31 deadline and a requirement to create capacity for nearly 83,000 new units over six years. The proposal targets low-development neighborhoods like the Marina, Richmond and Sunset. Supporters cite affordability and retention of residents; opponents criticized the lack of dedicated funding and called the measure a response to state pressure and oversight.
Read at ABC7 San Francisco
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