London Breed's path to becoming San Francisco's first Black female mayor was as "bumpy," as she would say, as her upbringing.
A day before her successor was set to be sworn into office, San Francisco Mayor London Breed on Tuesday touted a 20-year low in the city's crime rate for 2024, including "historic" drops in the number of homicides and car break-ins.
Lauren Toms talks to London Breed about her time serving as mayor of San Francisco. President Biden stood next to Gov. Gavin Newsom and pledged full federal support as fires burned through Los Angeles County. President-elect Donald Trump took to social media and blamed 'Newscum.'
San Francisco is up to its ears in free concerts. Everybody likes them, but there are better, politically unsexy ways to boost the city's music scene.
San Francisco Mayor London Breed joined to ABC7 News at 3 p.m. for one last interview before she officially leaves office.
Outgoing San Francisco Mayor London Breed got the chance to say goodbye in a neighborhood that she always supported despite some of its political challenges. John Ramos reports.
The Milken Institute’s annual report gauges the best cities based on metrics including job and wage growth, affordability and other economic factors.
Supervisor Connie Chan, who requested this report, said she would work to bring nonprofits in line with the city’s standards.
In the midst of London Breed’s unpopular final year as mayor, she scored one policy win that her opponents couldn’t criticize. In 2024, Breed’s office funneled $2.5 million in state funds into SF Live,
KTVU reports that a 124-page long report and statement was released by AG Bonta to praise SFPD for its constitutional behavior. SFPD implemented 263 of the 272 reforms (96.7 percent) recommended by Bonta’s office, while the remaining nine forms are in progress.
Having led the San Francisco Department of Public Health over the last six years during several global health pandemics and a continued decline in local HIV cases, AIDS expert Dr. Grant Colfax is resigning next month.
City officials said that once completed, the addition of 300 charging stations will expand San Francisco’s total number of charging ports by 30% in garages, in lots and at curbside locations. The grant is the latest instance in officials’ ongoing efforts to eliminate barriers to access for residents who wish to own EVs.