The government of the City and County of San Francisco utilizes the "strong mayor" form of mayoral/council government, composed of the Mayor, Board of Supervisors, several elected officers, and numerous other entities. It is the only consolidated city-county in California, and one of only thirteen charter counties of California. The fiscal year 2017-18 city and county budget was approximately $10 billion.
Video Government of San Francisco
Organization
San Francisco utilizes the "strong mayor" form of mayoral/council government, composed of the mayor, Board of Supervisors, several elected officers, and numerous other entities. San Francisco voters use ranked-choice voting to elect the mayor, supervisors, and other elective officers.
Current Mayor
The Mayor of San Francisco is the head of the executive branch of the city and county government. The mayor has the responsibility to enforce all city laws, administer and coordinate city departments and intergovernmental activities, set forth policies and agendas to the Board of Supervisors, and prepare and submit the city budget at the end of each fiscal year. The mayor has the powers to either approve or veto bills passed by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, participate in meetings of the Board of Supervisors and its committees, appoint a replacement to fill vacancies in all city elected offices until elections, appoint a member of the Board as acting mayor in his/her absence, and to direct personnels in the case of emergency. The mayor serves a four-year term and is limited to two successive terms. If the mayor dies or resigns, the President of the Board of Supervisors assumes the office, as Dianne Feinstein did after the assassination of George Moscone in 1978.
Mayors of San Francisco
- John W. Geary - 1850
- Charles James Brenham - 1851;1852
- Stephen Randall Harris - 1852
- C. K. Garrison - 1853
- Stephen Palfrey Webb - 1854
- James Van Ness - 1855
- George J. Whelan - 1856
- Ephraim Willard Burr - 1856
- Henry F. Teschemacher - 1859
- Henry Perrin Coon - 1863
- Frank McCoppin - 1867
- Thomas Henry Selby - 1869
- William Alvord - 1871
- James Otis - 1873
- George Hewston - 1875
- Andrew Jackson Bryant - 1875
- Isaac Smith Kalloch - 1879
- Maurice Carey Blake - 1881
- Washington Bartlett - 1883
- Edward B. Pond - 1887
- George Henry Sanderson - 1891
- Levi Richard Ellert - 1893
- Adolph Sutro - 1985
- James D. Phelan - 1897
- Eugene Schmitz - 1902
- Charles Boxton - 1907
- Edward Robeson Taylor - 1907
- P. H. McCarthy - 1910
- James Rolph - 1912
- Angelo Joseph Rossi - 1931
- Roger Lapham - 1944
- Elmer Robinson - 1948
- George Christopher - 1956
- John F. Shelley - 1964
- Joseph Alioto - 1968
- George Moscone - 1976
- Dianne Feinstein - 1978
- Art Agnos - 1988
- Frank Jordan - 1992
- Willie Brown (politician) - 1996
- Gavin Newsom - 2004
- Edwin M. Lee - 2011
Board of Supervisors
The legislative body is composed of the 11-member Board of Supervisors which acts as both a board of supervisors and a city council, with "[a]ll rights and powers of a City and County which are not vested in another officer or entity" by the charter. The Board of Supervisors is headed by a president and is responsible for passing laws and budgets. The members of the Board of Supervisors are elected as representatives of specific districts within the city.
Other elected officers
In addition, there are other citywide elected officers of San Francisco:
Departments and agencies
Entities under the authority of the Board of Supervisors include the:
- Assessment Appeals Board
- San Francisco County Transportation Authority
- San Francisco Youth Commission
- Clerk of the Board of Supervisors
- Budget and Legislative Analyst
- Office of Legislative Analyst
- San Francisco Local Agency Formation Commission
- Sunshine Ordinance Task Force
Entities under the authority of the San Francisco County Superior Court include the:
- Adult Probation
Entities under the authority of the City Administrator include the:
Independent and semi-independent entities include the:
Other entities and programs include:
Maps Government of San Francisco
Finance
Taxes
As of November 2010, San Francisco's sales tax rate was 9.5%, distributed as follows:
- 8.25% - State
- 6.00% - State - General Fund
- 0.25% - State - Fiscal Recovery Fund
- 0.50% - State - Local Revenue Fund
- 0.50% - State - Local Public Safety Fund
- 1.00% - Bradley-Burns Uniform Local Tax Law
- 0.25% - Local County - Transportation funds
- 0.75% - Local City/County - Operational funds
- 0.50% - AB 1077 (1977) Transportation formula - Bay Area Rapid Transit, San Francisco Municipal Railway, AC Transit
- 0.50% - Local/regional transportation
- Proposition B (1989) - 1989-2009: SF County Transportation Authority (60% transit including San Francisco Municipal Railway, 30% street and traffic safety, 8% paratransit, 2% transportation system management.
- Proposition K (2003) - 2009-2034: Different formula for local streets and local and regional public transit.
- 0.25% - San Francisco Unified School District
Budget
The fiscal year 2007-08 city and county budget is as follows:
Law
The government of the City and County of San Francisco is defined by the Charter of the City and County of San Francisco, which is similar to the other counties of California. Pursuant to its charter, San Francisco causes to be published several codified version of its ordinances and regulations, the San Francisco Municipal Codes. Every act prohibited or declared unlawful, and every failure to perform an act required, by the ordinances are misdemeanor crimes, unless otherwise specified as infractions.
San Franciscans also make use of direct ballot initiatives to pass legislation.
San Francisco's municipal authority extends beyond city/county limits through its operation of the San Francisco International Airport and the vast tracts of land supporting the Hetch Hetchy Water System.
Health Commission
The Department of Public Health works through two Divisions of the government - the San Francisco Health Network and Population Health and Prevention. The San Francisco Health Networks includes the health system with locations at multiple hospitals and primary care centers. The Population Health and Prevention Division focuses on the communities in SF and consists of three branches - Community Health and Safety Branch, Community Health Promotion and Prevention Branch, and the Community Health Services Branch.
San Francisco plague of 1900 - 1904
In the 1890's San Francisco received heavy ship traffic from Asian cities that were currently dealing with the bubonic plague. In 1989 a ship from Hong Kong was found to have two cases of bubonic plague on board, the bodies washed up on the bay later, but no immediate outbreak occurred at this initial finding. In 1900 a city health officer autopsied a Chinese man and found evidence of the plague. With Anti-Chinese feelings already running rampant throughout the city the Department of Public Health quickly moved to quarantine Chinatown. Initially the quarantine was protested, not to protect the Chinese, but because of fear and doubt that the plague was indeed in the city. Mayor at the time, James D. Phelan, had created the board of health which included multiple doctors on the board, he demanded that the board of health have 100 physicians search the 12 block area that made up Chinatown for more cases of the plague. When more victims were found the city Board of Health announced the plague and the Chinatown quarantine was again set into place.
Health officials shut down Chinese-owned businesses and any Chinese attempting to leave the city had to go through inoculation first with an experimental drug, this led to the court case between Mr. Wong Wai and the Department of Public Health. Mr. Wai won the court case and the Department of Public Health was ordered to stop the inoculations but city officials got the support from the board of supervisors to continue. Health authorities also attempted to set up a detention camp for those of Asian descent on Mission Rock in the Bay but the idea was protested and shot down, partially due to fear about opening admitting the plague in San Francisco.
Fear of the plague and prejudice against the Chinese was so high that many City officials debated burning down Chinatown. The idea was talked about with popularity, especially since this had been done in Honolulu. To prevent their homes from being burnt down and to get the quarantine broken the Chinese banded together the Chinese Six Companies, multiple attorneys, and China's minister (diplomat). Together, they were ultimately able to get the quarantine lifted again, this was again in part due to the government's fear of publicly confirming plague.
Health authorities from twenty-one states eventually passes a resolution about California's neglect of duties to take care of the plague in San Francisco and threatened to close all trade with California. This caused San Francisco businessmen to take action and brought together the Chamber of Commerce, Board of Trade, Merchants' Association, and other civil rights groups in the city to clear San Francisco of plague. The city was purged of plague due to the efforts of these groups along with the Marine Hospital Service,health officials of San Francisco and new governor, George C. Pardee.
Other governments
In addition, several regional governmental units in San Francisco operate independently of the municipal government. Five regional agencies--the Association of Bay Area Governments, Metropolitan Transportation Commission, Bay Area Air Quality Management District, San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Control Board, and Bay Conservation and Development Commission--have jurisdiction over San Francisco and the other Bay Area counties, and San Francisco appoints representatives to their governing boards.
There are several school districts that are co-extensive with San Francisco. The San Francisco Unified School District is governed by the elected seven-member San Francisco Board of Education. The community college district of the City College of San Francisco is governed by an elected seven-member Board of Trustees.
Several transit agencies provide transit service within San Francisco and adjacent counties, including the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART), of which residents elect Board of Directors for districts 7, 8, and 9, Golden Gate Transit, Caltrain, the San Francisco Bay Area Water Emergency Transportation Authority, and the Metropolitan Transportation Commission. Also notable are the independent police forces of the University of California, San Francisco and the Park Police of the Presidio Trust and the Golden Gate National Recreation Area.
The San Francisco Democratic Central Committee (SFDCC), the governing body of the San Francisco Democratic Party, is a county central committee of the California Democratic Party for San Francisco. The SFDCC is elected from the two Assembly districts in San Francisco and consists of 24 members, with a 14/10 member split between the two Assembly districts based on number of registered Democrats.
See also
- Government of California
References
External links
- SFGov.org, official site of City and County of San Francisco
- San Francisco Voter Pamphlets and Propositions dating back to 1907 at the San Francisco Public Library
- San Francisco Charter and Municipal Codes from American Legal Publishing
- San Francisco Decoded (unofficial Charter and Municipal Codes) from the OpenGov Foundation
- San Francisco Data
- "San Francisco". U.S. City Open Data Census. UK: Open Knowledge Foundation.
Source of article : Wikipedia