Now is a great time to tell the SF Board of Supervisors to implement the city's new plan to accommodate 82,000 new homes so the city doesn't lose desperately needed funding for affordable housing. Send a pre-written email via the following link. (You can also edit the text as you see fit before sending. Lord knows I did.)

https://actionnetwork.org/letters/tell-the-sf-board-of-supervisors-listen-to-hcd-and-implement-the-housing-element

Tell the SF Board of Supervisors: listen to HCD and implement the housing element!

Your voice is urgently needed. The Board of Supervisors faces a critical decision regarding the city's eight-year housing plan—called the housing element—to accommodate 82,000 new homes by 2031. Last week, the California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) wrote a letter to the Board's land use committee to demand that they need to a pass Mayor London Breed's landmark housing element implementation law in 30 days. If the supervisors refuse, they risk the possibility of HCD revoking San Francisco's eligibility for affordable housing grant funds. Supervisor Myrna Melgar, who chairs the Board’s land use committee, is putting San Francisco on a dangerous road by pushing back against the HCD's letter. She wrongly claiming that they have misinterpreted the legality of amendments she introduced to water down Mayor Breed's bill. In a San Francisco Standard article, Melgar called HCD's instructions “political noise.” It's alarming to see such dismissive attitudes towards feedback that is meant to address our city's pressing housing needs. HCD's recently published Housing Policy and Practice Review report outlines concrete steps San Francisco needs to take and warned San Francisco that there will be consequences if changes are not made. If the Board of Supervisors fails to act, San Francisco will lose affordable housing and transit funds it desperately needs. Send a pre-written letter now to prevent that. After that, give public comment at City Hall Room 250 at 1:30 PM on Monday, October 30. Demand that the land use committee to listen to HCD. Hundreds of millions of dollars in critical funding may depend on this bill. Your letter could make the difference.