- A big rig carrying cooking oil caught fire on the westbound I-580 to I-80 connector this morning, causing major traffic. The Bay Bridge approach was heavily impacted in Oakland. [CBS SF]
- PG&E's new CEO and board of directors are being made by a judge to tour the towns of Paradise and San Bruno. The judge wants the executives to physically see the damage the company has caused to the two communities. [NBC Bay Area]
- Unsurprisingly, Muni scored lower than any other city agency in a recent city survey. Muni got a C+, while things like Rec & Parks and the police scored a B-. [Examiner]
- The Chronicle's Heather Knight circles back with San Francisco Travel CEO Joe D’Alessandro one year after he called his own city "filthy" and "disgusting." He says he sees the city taking "some small steps forward," but the problem may be the conventions we lose that are getting booked 10 and 15 years out. [Chronicle]
- The SF Board of Supervisors will take a final vote today on the Stop Secret Surveillance Ordinance. The ordinance would ban the use of facial recognition technology on city property or by law enforcement, and make SF the first city in the country to do so. [CBS SF]
- The Port of Oakland voted unanimously on Monday to let the A's move forward with their plan for a stadium on the estuary. [CBS SF]
- California Attorney General Xavier Bacerra says he doesn't have enough staff to prosecute tech companies under the state's sweeping new privacy laws. [SF Business Times]