Will SF Prop D win? (Affordable Homes Now, Nov 2022)
12
19
180
resolved Nov 17
Resolved
NO

Refers to Proposition D, in the San Francisco, CA 2022 November general election, according to https://sfelections.sfgov.org/.

This proposition is currently titled "Affordable Homes Now" and requires a bare majority to pass. From the Affordable Homes Now website:

What is the Affordable Homes Now Initiative?

A new ballot measure that will make it faster and easier to build new homes in San Francisco that are affordable to low and middle income San Franciscans, public school teachers, and others who work in public schools or at community colleges.

Why is Affordable Homes Now necessary?

Because San Francisco has a severe shortage of affordable housing, and that’s in large part because it takes too long for the City to approve permits for new homes. (By “too long” we mean four to seven years!) Those delays then drive up the overall cost of housing and SF becomes even more unaffordable.

How does Affordable Homes Now solve this problem?

By streamlining the permitting and approval process so that it becomes faster and easier to build affordable and middle-income housing for our lower and middle income workers such as teachers, nurses, firefighters, small business owners, nonprofit workers, and others.

Will the Affordable Homes Now measure have labor standards for the construction workers building the new housing?

Yes. This ballot measure requires that builders pay construction workers family-supporting prevailing wages and cover the workers’ family health care costs. It also requires contractors to create opportunities for apprentices who are starting out their careers in the construction trades.

Affordable Homes Now in the press

  • "S.F.’s newest housing measure is NIMBYism masquerading as progress" - SF Chronicle

  • "Mayor Breed-backed affordable housing measure to appear on November ballot - The Business Journals

  • "Mayor Breed-backed S.F. affordable housing measure expected to qualify for the ballot, sparking fight with progressives" - SF Chronicle

  • Affordable Homes Now kick off rally - YouTube

  • "Advocates kick off campaign for S.F. affordable housing ballot measure" - SF Chronicle

  • "Blocked by Supes, housing charter amendment sets sight on voters" - Mission Local

  • "After being rejected by S.F. supervisors, a charter to streamline housing could go to the voters" - SF Chronicle

  • Affordable Homes Now press release

Aug 20, 11:59am: [Austin] Added context from their website

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sold Ṁ22 of YES

https://www.sfchronicle.com/election/article/Competing-measures-to-speed-up-S-F-housing-17587680.php

Two ballot measures to speed up housing construction in San Francisco — where residential projects can take years to plan and develop — both fell short as voters struggled to reconcile the competing proposals.

With about 95% of ballots from last week’s election counted as of Tuesday afternoon, neither ballot measureachieved the majority needed to pass: 48.8% of voters approved Proposition D, and 45.5% were in favor of Proposition E.

predicted NO
predicted YES

@EvanConrad3b7e tough but fair

bought Ṁ30 of NO

predicted YES

What happens if Prop D gets 55% of the vote but Prop E (with the poison pill) gets 60% of the vote?

@MCMillennium This will still resolve yes in that case. we'd need a different market as to whether Prop D will take effect, or as to whether it'll get more votes than E

From the Affordable Homes Now website:

What is the Affordable Homes Now Initiative?

A new ballot measure that will make it faster and easier to build new homes in San Francisco that are affordable to low and middle income San Franciscans, public school teachers, and others who work in public schools or at community colleges.

Why is Affordable Homes Now necessary?

Because San Francisco has a severe shortage of affordable housing, and that’s in large part because it takes too long for the City to approve permits for new homes. (By “too long” we mean four to seven years!) Those delays then drive up the overall cost of housing and SF becomes even more unaffordable.

How does Affordable Homes Now solve this problem?

By streamlining the permitting and approval process so that it becomes faster and easier to build affordable and middle-income housing for our lower and middle income workers such as teachers, nurses, firefighters, small business owners, nonprofit workers, and others.

Will the Affordable Homes Now measure have labor standards for the construction workers building the new housing?

Yes. This ballot measure requires that builders pay construction workers family-supporting prevailing wages and cover the workers’ family health care costs. It also requires contractors to create opportunities for apprentices who are starting out their careers in the construction trades.

Affordable Homes Now in the press

  • "S.F.’s newest housing measure is NIMBYism masquerading as progress" - SF Chronicle

  • "Mayor Breed-backed affordable housing measure to appear on November ballot - The Business Journals

  • "Mayor Breed-backed S.F. affordable housing measure expected to qualify for the ballot, sparking fight with progressives" - SF Chronicle

  • Affordable Homes Now kick off rally - YouTube

  • "Advocates kick off campaign for S.F. affordable housing ballot measure" - SF Chronicle

  • "Blocked by Supes, housing charter amendment sets sight on voters" - Mission Local

  • "After being rejected by S.F. supervisors, a charter to streamline housing could go to the voters" - SF Chronicle

  • Affordable Homes Now press release