Well, now we know who "Us" is. It's not San Francisco's homeless people or San Franciscans who want something done to help this population.
It's her buddies in San Francisco's elite.
San Francisco's elected officials who similarly owe their offices to big tech money, State Senator Wiener and Assemblymember Chiu, also are showing their true allegiances by opposing the measure to fund homeless services.Breed comes out against homeless tax measure Proposition C
Citing “the long-term impacts on our city,” Mayor London Breed announced Friday she is opposing Proposition C on the November ballot that would raise $300 million annually for homeless services by taxing San Francisco’s largest businesses. ...
... Analysis by the City Controller’s Office, released Sept. 24, said that the tax would have a minimal impact on the economy and would cost The City about 875 jobs over the next two decades.
... The San Francisco Chamber of Commerce is leading the campaign against Proposition C.
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Meanwhile, in New York, the mayor rebuffs a homeless woman who approached him during his workout to ask about affordable housing.
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