In 2020, the City and County of San Francisco passed Right to Return legislation which provides a housing preference to current AND former HOPE SF public housing residents—wherever they might currently live—so they benefit from rebuilt, subsidized units in their original neighborhoods in San Francisco. This policy and other key tenets of the HOPE SF program are centered on reversing the impacts of decades of disinvestment and neglect. The new apartment building at 290 Malosi Street in Sunnydale, HOPE SF’s site in Visitacion Valley, will welcome residents later this fall. It will be the first HOPE SF...
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TAG : Four Communities
In 2005, the Human Services Agency released an analysis of at-risk families known as the “Seven Street Corners Study.” The study came out of an effort to create a consolidated youth database with data from the child welfare and juvenile justice systems. When the data was merged and mapped, it revealed that most of these children lived within walking distance of just seven street corners in the city — street corners that overlapped with obsolete public housing sites where families were living geographically, socially, and economically cut off from San Francisco’s robust resources. Read ‘The Seven Key Street Corners for At Risk Families’ in San Francisco’ study here
TAG : Academic Research Paper
Esiah Thompson lives in HOPE SF’s Potrero Hill site. In his graduation speech at Starr King Elementary School, he referred to himself as a “young Einstein.” Esiah’s face was beaming, as he expressed his hopes and dreams for a better future for himself and his family. He proudly proclaimed, “I am grateful for my teachers and staff who supported me all these years and am grateful to my parents and family members who supported me up to this moment. I promise to become the full adult who will serve as an example for others as well...
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TAG : Stories: Residents and Partners
San Francisco’s latest project to help close the much-discussed digital divide is the expected launch of free wireless internet service for residents at the Sunnydale and Potrero public housing sites. The City in 2018 halted plans for an ambitious project to provide fiber-based broadband service to all residents and businesses that would have cost more than $1 billion. Instead it has prioritized bringing free access to select affordable housing sites. The Sunnydale and Potrero public housing sites are now slated to be equipped with wireless access by the Department of Technology. The San Francisco Housing Authority Commission on Thursday...
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TAG : Stories: Residents and Partners
Resident Story
“I love Hunters View. This community is strong.”
Kiere Garrett
Dear Friends- In two weeks, on April 2nd, I will step down as Director of HOPE SF, following nearly 7 years of service in the Office of the Mayor. Leading this extraordinary public-private Partnership for HOPE SF has been the greatest and most all-encompassing professional honor of my life. Together, on the shoulders of residents and with support from committed leaders and institutions, we worked relentlessly to acknowledge the harm of generations of racialized inequality on families in public housing in San Francisco. And we remained intentional on chipping away for restitution desired by residents for their...
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TAG : Four Communities
Crews arrived this week in Potrero Hill to start building the infrastructure for the next phase of Rebuild Potrero, a 25-year plan to replace the eastern San Francisco neighborhood’s 619 public housing units with new apartments and nearly triple the density by adding almost 1,100 new homes. In a city struggling with a housing shortage, the $29 million in infrastructure work is hard for some people to get excited about. The laying of water lines, sewer mains and fiber-optic utilities is hardly creating a place you can lay your head at night. But for residents...
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TAG : Stories: Residents and Partners
What makes you 'Black...
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TAG : Stories: Residents and Partners
I attended the Renaissance Entrepreneurship HOPE SF graduation and business showcase on January 26, 2021, where I met and interviewed Jeanette Au—an artist, a designer, and an educator who values her HOPE SF community. Brianna: Tell me about your small business and what inspired you. Jeanette: I have a knitting business called 'Tigrette'. I have been knitting for over 20 years. I learned from my grandmother in my late teens. In my 20’s, it became a form of art therapy. Years later, I earned my master’s degree in knitwear from The Academy of Arts in San Francisco. As a single mom living in HOPE SF Potrero Terrace, I knit clothing for my children. Tigrette,...
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TAG : Stories: Residents and Partners