• A new report released Friday breaks down the housing numbers that would be impacted with a Mission development moratorium. [Examiner]
  • Remember the case of Tom Smith, the BART Police officer who was accidentally killed in the line of duty by a colleague last year? His family is now suing BART alleging that they failed to properly train officers for high-risk situations. And apparently Smith had an inkling that he was going to end up in danger before he died. [CBS 5]
  • A 37-year-old man was arrested after stealing a BMW from a Howard Street dealership early this morning and driving it, and another vehicle, out through the plate glass windows. The thing is he successfully fled that scene, and a subsequent hit and run, before getting nabbed after reports of a domestic abuse at 6:30 this morning. [ABC 7]
  • Against efforts by an L.A. assemblyman, Uber and Lyft drivers won’t need to take drug tests, after the failure of some legislation in Sacramento. [SF Business Times]
  • We don't have a soda tax, but now the Board of Supervisors is discussing new regulations around how soda gets labeled and advertised in San Francisco. [KTVU]
  • City and SF school officials are leading an effort to keep African American teenagers from fleeing San Francisco by trying to get them workforce training and jobs here. [Chronicle]
  • Gay street artist Jeremy Novy, best known for those sidewalk koi stencils, has had a Pride Month exhibition in the Castro canceled after domestic abuse allegations surface. [Examiner]
  • Spain's El Celler de Can Roca is "the world's best restaurant" according that vaguely sourced list sponsored by San Pellegrino, and The French Laundry just barely made the Top 50 this year. In the bottom 50, though, Saison made it in at #56. [Chron, Eater]
  • The mayor unveiled the new city budget today, with big budget boosts for more police and transit employees. [Chron]