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May 11th, 2008
 By Wendy Koch
USA Today
Cigarettes are getting harder to find. More retail chains are dropping them, and for the first time, officials in a few states want to ban pharmacies from selling them. This month, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom proposed an unprecedented city ban on drugstores selling tobacco products, including cigars, pipes and smokeless tobacco. "This will be the beginning of a national movement," Newson predicts. He says he's "absolutely confident" the San Francisco Board of Supervisors will approve the ban this month or early in June. It would take effect Oct. 1. Read more »
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May 6th, 2008
By Felicity Barringer
New York Times
Mayor Gavin Newsom is competitive about many things, garbage included. When the city found out a few weeks ago that it was keeping 70 percent of its disposable waste out of local landfills, he embraced the statistic the way other mayors embrace winning sports teams, improved test scores or declining crime rates. But the city wants more. So Mr. Newsom will soon be sending the city’s Board of Supervisors a proposal that would make the recycling of cans, bottles, paper, yard waste and food scraps mandatory instead of voluntary, on the pain of having garbage pickups suspended. Read more »
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May 4th, 2008
By Wyatt Buchanan
San Francisco Chronicle
San Francisco's groundbreaking program to provide health care to all 73,000 uninsured city residents received a major lift this week as more than 700 businesses in the city signed up for the plan. The businesses represent 12,900 employees, more than half of whom are eligible for the Healthy San Francisco program, which currently enrolls 19,000 people. The other employees are eligible for a health-care reimbursement account.
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April 30th, 2008
 By Dave Loos
EnviroWonk
Many of the most progressive environmental policy initiatives seem to origininate in the Bay Area these days, and this one fits the mold. To help San Francisco reach its self-imposed goal of a 75 percent recycling rate by 2010, Newsom announced on Earth Day that city officials are drafting an ordinance that would require all residents and businesses to recycle paper, plastics and aluminum, and to compost all food scraps and yard waste. Read more »
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March 30th, 2008
By Karrie Jacobs
Travel + Leisure
San Francisco is green, clean, and organic—the architecture is high-tech and eco-friendly, and the food is excruciatingly fresh and local. Is this the world's first true 21st-century city? I've prepared for my appointment with Mayor Gavin Newsom by stopping at Citizen Cake, a Hayes Valley restaurant where my iced coffee is made with organic milk and my chocolate cream-filled cookies, a sophisticated take on the Oreo, are spiked with fleur de sel. But even the infusion of sugar, caffeine, and sea salt can't help me keep up with the mayor who, despite being trapped behind his enormous traditional wooden desk, is a bundle of nervous energy as he rattles off the ways in which San Francisco is becoming America's premier green city. Read more »
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March 25th, 2008
By Cecilia Vega
San Francisco Chronicle
San Francisco moved a step closer Wednesday to imposing the country's most stringent green building codes, regulations that would require new large commercial buildings and residential high-rises to contain such environmentally friendly features as solar power, nontoxic paints and plumbing fixtures that decrease water usage. City officials estimate that by 2012, the new green building codes could reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 60,000 tons and save 220,000 megawatt hours of power and 100 million gallons of drinking water.
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March 15th, 2008
By Sue Rochman
The Advocate
Four years after he pushed same-sex marriage forward in the national debate, Gavin Newsom is waiting for his answer in the California supreme court. So are we. What is clear is that same-sex marriage ceremonies have moved the once-radical concept of civil unions into the mainstream. Both Clinton and Obama support civil unions, while John McCain has walked a fine line, not overtly stating his support of unions yet acknowledging he would not prevent states from allowing them. Although Newsom says he admires and respects both Clinton and Obama, he takes issue with their position that there is no difference between civil unions and marriage. To him, denying same-sex marriage is discrimination, period. "There is nothing in the Constitution," he says, "that denies people the right to live out their lives, regardless of their race, ethnicity, or sexual orientation." Read more »
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March 9th, 2008
USA Today
San Francisco is joining a list of cities and counties that will be using only 100% recycled paper. Mayor Gavin Newsom ordered all city departments Tuesday to purchase only the recycled office paper for use by the city. San Francisco now joins nine other cities and counties in California, including Berkeley, Los Angeles and San Diego, that also only purchase 100% recycled paper. Before Newsom issued his executive order, San Francisco agencies were required to buy office paper made from at least 30% recycled materials. Officials say by using the recycled paper, the 10 cities and counties will save about 67,000 trees a year.
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February 23rd, 2008
By Robert Selna
San Francisco Chronicle
Expanding on a growing list of environmental initiatives in San Francisco, Mayor Gavin Newsom called on leaders of Bay Area cities and counties Thursday to join him in urging automakers to produce plug-in hybrid cars. At a press conference at a southeast San Francisco auto repair shop that converts standard hybrids to plug-ins, Newsom said he would mail letters to Bay Area mayors and other leaders asking them to join him in an offer to buy the autos if the industry will make them.
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February 14th, 2008
 San Francisco is the only city in the nation to offer local incentives for lower-income families to take advantage of the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC). The EITC is a federal tax refund offered to working families of up to $4,716 over their normal tax refund. The local incentive, and our extensive volunteer program, help bring tens of millions of federal dollars back to San Francisco through increased refunds for working families. Read more »
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