San Francisco cannot praise frontline workers as essential one moment and then treat us like we are expendable in the next. We need a budget that immediately tackles the pandemic’s surge in our city and aggressively invests in the public services that will fuel a recovery for all.
But the budget submitted by the Mayor’s office on July 21 doesn't do that. It instead attempts to balance the budget on the backs of the public workers risking their lives to provide disaster services.
To ensure that our city can address the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on communities ...
San Francisco cannot praise frontline workers as essential one moment and then treat us like we are expendable in the next. We need a budget that immediately tackles the pandemic’s surge in our city and aggressively invests in the public services that will fuel a recovery for all.
But the budget submitted by the Mayor’s office on July 21 doesn't do that. It instead attempts to balance the budget on the backs of the public workers risking their lives to provide disaster services.
To ensure that our city can address the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on communities of color and the likely recession we will face, we need the Board of Supervisors to stand up for San Francisco's vital public services and the frontline workers who provide them.