
San Francisco has taken a few baby steps, and that’s good. This race is an ultramarathon; we need to be sprinting flat out right now.
San Francisco has taken a few baby steps, and that’s good. This race is an ultramarathon; we need to be sprinting flat out right now.
with half a brain realizes that the status of this roadway, as well as that of JFK Drive, should be up to the voters of San Francisco, who reside here and pay taxes here and try to get around here as best they can.
As Outer Sunset/Parkside residents for 20+ years, we feel it is incumbent upon us to share our concerns about the current Upper Great Highway (UGH) policies and closures.
I still think the car closure is a good idea for a city that is very car friendly based on the amount of infrastructure intended for car traffic vs. bicycle or pedestrian traffic.
New reports say the Sierras will be snow-free in 25 years, and that the Antarctic Ice Sheet has passed the tipping point.
It is unfathomable that the needs of the elderly and the disabled and those multi-generational families from outlying neighborhoods are being dismissed.
The Great Highway has always been a safe, shared space among drivers, bicyclists, pedestrians and others.
I’ve done a little research into the many violations of vehicle codes and the SF Transportation Code by the Thursday evening “Slow Ride” participants.
I just got word of a proposed six-story, 60-foot-plus-tall building at the southeast corner of Clement Street and 32nd Avenue.
Climate change is real and change MUST happen, and fast. However, closing a highway does not make the vehicles disappear.
You obviously did not read my precise reasoning about why government needs to invest where private investment cannot.
I, my brother and a friend of my wife are not allowed to visit or call my wife at Laguna Honda Hospital.
is a model of this program, which has shown that it can reduce hospitalizations and emergency department visits …
I don’t buy the notion that the cycling community is all about avoiding the perilous automobiles.
Joe’s Ice Cream and Cards and Comics Central are teaming up to bring San Franciscans some Halloween fun this year on Oct. 31, from noon-6 p.m.