San Francisco, California, Homeless Services and Transportation Funds Amendment, Proposition J (November 2016)
| Proposition J: San Francisco Homeless Services and Transportation Funds Amendment |
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| The basics |
| Election date: |
| November 8, 2016 |
| Status: |
| Topic: |
| City budget |
| Related articles |
| City budget on the ballot November 8, 2016 ballot measures in California San Francisco County, California ballot measures Local charter amendments on the ballot |
| See also |
| San Francisco, California |
A charter amendment to allocate funds to homeless services and transportation was on the ballot for San Francisco voters in San Francisco County, California, on November 8, 2016. It was approved.
| A yes vote was a vote in favor of amending the city charter to allocate an initial $50 million per year and $101.6 million per year—with scheduled increases—to homeless services and transportation services respectively for 24 years. |
| A no vote was a vote against this proposition, leaving the city's budget allocation for homeless services and transportation services at the discretion of the board of supervisors. |
Election results
| Proposition J | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 251,699 | 67.17% | |||
| No | 123,004 | 32.83% | ||
- Election results from San Francisco Department of Elections
Text of measure
Ballot question
The following question appeared on the ballot:[1]
| “ |
Shall the City amend the Charter to create a Homeless Housing and Services Fund, which would provide services to the homeless including housing and Navigation Centers, programs to prevent homelessness and assistance in transitioning out of homelessness by allocating $50 million per year for 24 years, adjusted annually; and create a Transportation Improvement Fund, which would be used to improve the City’s transportation network by allocating $101.6 million per year for 24 years, adjusted annually?[2] |
” |
Simplification digest
The following summary of Proposition J was provided by San Francisco's Ballot Simplification Committee:[1]
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Fiscal impact
The following fiscal impact statement about Proposition J was provided by the San Francisco Controller:[1]
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Full text
The full text of the measure is available here.
Support
Preserve Legacy Businesses in SF is the primary campaign effort in support of Proposition J. Endorsements included: 11 San Francisco supervisors; American Institute of Architects, San Francisco; Bay Area Reporter; California Music and Culture Association; California Preservation Foundation; Chinese Chamber of Commerce; Coalition for San Francisco Neighborhoods; D5 Action; Evolve-CA; Golden Gate Restaurant Association; Haight-Ashbury Neighborhood Council; Hispanic Chambers of Commerce of San Francisco, Hospital Council of Northern & Central California; Mark Dwight, William Ortiz-Cartagena, Kathleen Dooley and Steve Adams of the Small Business Commission; Andrew Wolfram, Aaron Jon Hyland, Diane Miyeko Matsuda, Jonathan Pearlman and Karl Hasz of the Historic Preservation Commission; and more.[3]
Supporters
The following individuals signed the official argument in favor of the measure:[1]
- Mayor Edwin M. Lee
- President London Breed
- Supervisor John Avalos
- Supervisor Malia Cohen
- Supervisor Mark Farrell
- Supervisor Eric Mar
- Supervisor Katy Tang
- Supervisor Scott Wiener
Arguments in favor
Official argument
The following official argument was submitted in favor of the measure:[1]
| “ |
Proposition J guarantees critical funding to address two of our City’s most important challenges: homelessness and transportation. Proposition J will ensure that a set amount of San Francisco’s General Fund is spent on two of our most important priorities: housing and supportive services for homeless residents, and better roads, public transit and pedestrian safety throughout the City. Proposition J will create a “lockbox” that guarantees much-needed funding for vital homelessness and transportation needs, including: • Funding to move more than 4,000 people into housing and shelter, including hundreds of homeless families. • Better mental health services and treatment for our severely mentally ill homeless residents. • At least two new homeless Navigation Centers to transition homeless residents from the streets to permanent supportive housing and a more stable life. • A major expansion of road paving and pothole repair. • More BART and Muni trains to make moving around San Francisco easier and less crowded. • Significant safety improvements for bicyclists and pedestrians. • Expansion of late night public transportation. • Muni bus fleet upgrades to improve on-time performance. • Funding to keep transportation affordable for the working people who depend on Muni. Proposition J will ensure that tax revenues will be spent where they’re needed most: ending homelessness for thousands of residents, easing traffic congestion and fixing our roads and public transit for the future. Proposition J is supported by an unprecedented coalition of transportation, homelessness, environmental, and housing advocates. Please join us in voting YES ON PROPOSITION J.[2] |
” |
Opposition
Opponents
The following individuals signed the official argument against the measure:[1]
- SaveMuni
Arguments against
Official argument
The following official argument was submitted in opposition to the measure:[1]
| “ |
VOTE NO on PROP J BAIT, SWITCH and GRAB Prop J uses the lure of homelessness to divert funds from cash-strapped city services to one city agency---which we have already given billions of dollars in sales taxes, bonds, fares, fees and fines. For any one of the following reasons, Vote No on Prop J: • City Controller’s Analysis of Prop J: “Should the proposed charter amendment be approved by the voters, in my opinion, it would significantly increase the cost of government.” • City Controller: “This proposed amendment is not in compliance with a non-binding voter-adopted city policy regarding set-asides.” • These muddled ballot measures are the economic-equivalent of rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic---instead of managing the City’s $9.6 billion budget, which exceeds that of many states and small countries. • Despite billions of dollars in expenditures, with a $241 million annual budget, homelessness is worsening. • Despite billions of dollars in expenditures, Muni’s per capita ridership has declined---indicating the need for sound decision-making, not just money. • Transit modal share has stagnated at 25% of all trips---not close to the 60% transit shares of Bogotá, Curitiba and Zurich, who spend less money wisely for bus rapid networks and integrated systems. • While eliminating bus lines, shortening routes, cutting night/ weekend hours and frequency, $600 million of state/ local matching funds were diverted to the Central Subway. • More delays of the DTX (Downtown Caltrain Extension) to the Transbay Terminal will overload Muni, traffic, streets and utilities—even though upzoning and high-rises were predicated on futuristic rail service. [2] |
” |
Media editorials
Support
- San Francisco Chronicle: "The other side of Prop. J will spend $101 million per year on nearly everything that ails travel. The money upgrades Muni’s rolling stock, paves streets, and improves safety for bike riders and pedestrians. With the state stalled on funding public transit, it’s up to local voters to pick up the slack...The real danger to the propositions may be the ballot itself. Voters will be working through federal and state races and 17 California measures before facing San Francisco’s marathon roster of candidates and 24 local measures. It’s an endurance test, but local voters mustn’t skip past these two choices. Vote Yes on Props. J and K."[4]
- The Bay Area Reporter recommended a yes vote for Proposition J.[5]
- San Francisco Bay Guardian: "We don’t love the idea of these two linked ballot measures. Mayor Ed Lee and Sups. Mark Farrell and Scott Wiener, who are trying to criminalize homeless people (see prop. Q), want the voters to pass a (regressive) sales tax to fund services for the homeless and transportation. One of the reasons that there are so many homeless people is that evictions have been epidemic since the mayor gave Twitter and other tech firms at tax break to come to town. One of the reasons that Muni has so much trouble is that Lee, Wiener, and Farrell support the idea of the giant Google buses that take up Muni stops and pay nothing even remotely near their share of the cost. More: The city has the right to charge developers more than $80 a square foot for Muni service. The mayor and the sponsors of this sales tax went with $18. They want to tax the working people of the city and not tax the developers, the Ubers and Lyfts of the world, the Google buses, and tech companies. It’s enough to make you sick. But in the end, the city needs the money, the services are critical, and the tax hike is the only way to pay for the (dubious) set-aside. Hold your nose and vote Yes."[6]
- San Francisco Examiner: "A sales tax to raise $150 million for transit improvements and homelessness services is consistent with our most urgent needs and priorities in San Francisco. Jeff Kositsky, head of the new department of homelessness, and Ed Reiskin, head of the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Authority, which oversees Muni, both argue that such an investment is vital to address the basic mission of their respective departments."[7]
Opposition
Email editor@ballotpedia.org to submit media editorials that should be posted here.
Path to the ballot
This measure was put on the ballot through an 8-3 vote of the San Francisco board of supervisors.
"Yes" votes
The following supervisors voted in favor of putting Proposition J on the ballot:[1]
- Eric Mar - District 1
- Mark Farrell - District 2
- Katy Tang - District 4
- London Breed - District 5
- Scott Wiener - District 8
- David Campos - District 9
- Malia Cohen - District 10
- John Avalos - District 11
"No" votes
The following supervisors voted against putting Proposition J on the ballot:[1]
- Aaron Peskin - District 3
- Jane Kim - District 6
- Norman Yee - District 7
Recent news
The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms San Francisco homeless services and transporation funds Proposition J. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.
See also
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External links
- San Francisco County Elections Office website
- Vote Yes on J -- Legacy Business Historic Preservation
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 San Francisco Elections Office, "San Francisco Voter Information Pamphlet and Sample Ballot," accessed September 26, 2016
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
- ↑ Legacy Businesses SF - Vote Yes on J,"Endorsements," accessed October 23, 2016
- ↑ San Francisco Chronicle,"Pass SF Props. J and K to ease homelessness, improve transit," September 22, 2016
- ↑ The Bay Area Reporter,"B.A.R. election endorsements," accessed October 9, 2016
- ↑ San Francisco Bay Guardian,"ENDORSEMENTS! The case for six progressive supes, Kim for state Senate …," accessed October 6, 2016
- ↑ San Francisco Examiner,"Examiner Endorsements: City measures," October 13, 2016
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