March 29th, 2007 8:21 pm

Mayor Newsom announced today that the State of California has put $73 million into SF's Health Access Plan. The HAP is the linchpin of the city's efforts to provide universal health care to its residents. Supervisor Tom Ammiano said it best: "the state has put their money where their mouth is." The federal government has failed for years to get any kind of solution to our health care crisis. Gavin Newsom has said, you can complain about it, or you can do something about it. We're doing something about it.
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March 29th, 2007 8:54 am

By Rachel Gordon
San Francisco Chronicle
Originally Published March 29, 2007
The "NextMuni" system, which tracks the location of vehicles via satellite, is now up and running on all the city's electrified trolley bus lines. It had been available only on the Metro streetcar lines and the 22-Fillmore, a trolley bus line that served as an early test. The whereabouts of the Global Positioning System-equipped vehicles are fed into a centralized computer system that translates the data into user-friendly updates available on the Internet and on cell phones and personal digital assistants.
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March 22nd, 2007 4:01 pm

Our neighbor to the south, Los Angeles Mayor Villaraigosa has a great idea to help give kids a head start in life. The idea -- have the federal government create a savings account for every child born in the United States, with an initial $500 deposit. The plan proposed by a task force of the nation's mayors also calls for the government to match up to $500 a year -- until a child turns 18 to help pay for higher education or job training.
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March 19th, 2007 10:14 am

By Heather Knight
San Francisco Chronicle
Originally Published March 17, 2007
Calling the quality-of-life crimes that plague downtown San Francisco appalling and frustrating, Mayor Gavin Newsom said Friday he plans to clean up the area by opening a new courthouse to crack down on such infractions as public urination, aggressive panhandling, graffiti and prostitution.
Newsom returned Thursday from New York City, where he toured the Mid-Town Community Court. Opened in 1993, the court is heralded by supporters as one of the keys to former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's transformation of Times Square. Newsom said he will open a similar court in the Tenderloin as soon as this summer.
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March 8th, 2007 2:24 am

If you support same sex marriage in California, the new Field Poll has some encouraging news. According to a release on their website, “Californians stand out for both their level of support for same sex marriage and the rate at which it is growing.”
According to the same release, about 43% approve of same sex marriages while about half of residents disapprove. This is pretty remarkable stuff when you look at it in the context of the rest of the nation.
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March 7th, 2007 1:08 pm

All over America, the public sector is renowned for being slow to consider new ideas and innovation. For the past three years, the Newsom Administration has tried to shatter that notion at every turn.
Today, Gavin Newsom took another step in that direction by saying that he is willing to consider making Muni free. That’s right, free. Now, here is the important part: he said it is an idea worth considering. No commitment to do it, because it might be a terrible idea.
But, it might be a brilliant idea that will change this city and show how acting locally really makes a difference in the world.
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February 22nd, 2007 10:08 pm
San Francisco Chronicle Editorial
February 13, 2007
"THERE they go again.
"The San Francisco Board of Supervisors is scheduled to vote today on Jake McGoldrick's nonbinding resolution urging the city to study building a municipal wireless network rather than proceeding with the public-private partnership Mayor Gavin Newsom worked out with Earthlink and Google. The resolution is ridiculous and redundant. The city's budget analyst already completed a study that thoroughly examines the municipal idea, and it's not pretty."
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February 7th, 2007 2:04 am
“Do you want to complain, or do you want to do something positive?” That’s the question asked in a recent
San Francisco Chronicle editorial supporting Mayor Gavin Newsom’s plan to bring free wireless Internet access to San Francisco – a critical first step in bridging the digital divide that separates literally hundreds of thousands of San Franciscans from the enormous benefits of technology.
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January 28th, 2007 9:30 am
(Read the Mayor's
Op Ed in the
San Francisco Chronicle, outlining our first priority as we work to keep the 49ers: keeping our promise that a new stadium plan bring economic benefit to the surrounding neighborhoods and the entire city.) Like most San Franciscans, I grew up on 49er football. As a boy, I was captivated by the great moments. Montana to Clark. "The Catch." Young to Rice. And now the exciting promise of this new team.
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