Twelve years ago, amid surging housing prices, a booming dot-com industry and a pro-development mayor, San Francisco voters elected a crop of new supervisors who gave rise to the progressives' lock on the Board of Supervisors for the decade that followed. Now, with the city's housing prices increasing, the tech industry undergoing a rebirth and a new mayor pushing business-friendly policies, voters once again will get to steer San Francisco's political course with the Nov. 6 supervisors races. Five incumbents are on the ballot, and one seat is open. Two incumbents, District 11 Supervisor John Avalos and District Nine Supervisor David Campos, both of whom vote consistently with the board's...
0 Responses to Supervisor races could steer SF's course