Disputes Over Shovel Ready Developments In SF

According to the San Francisco Chronicle, city planners are clashing with neighborhood advocates questioning whose projects get approved first in San Francisco. The delays could impact millions of square feet of office projects and 9,000 housing units. San FranciscoPlanning Director John Rahaim is expected to weigh-in regarding what is more shovel ready to keep things moving forward but local nonprofits believe approvals should be based on the level of community benefits the projects will provide.
The order in which projects get city approval is significant, because those that are not picked will come up against limits imposed by Proposition M, the 1986 ballot measure that caps the amount of new office space that can be approved in a single year. Projects further back in line may have to wait as many as four or five years before winning approvals. How the dispute plays out could impact several lawsuits that themselves could delay development in Central SoMa.
After seven years of planning and debate, the Board of Supervisors recently rezoned most of the portion of South of Market that extends from Market Street south to Townsend Street and from Second Street to Sixth Street. The rezoning, which runs along the future Central Subway line, will eventually allow for about 9,000 housing units and enough office space for 30,000 workers.

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