• With the resignation of SFMTA chief Ed Reiskin set to take effect in a few weeks, the transit agency has just named an interim director: Tom Maguire. Maguire currently runs the agency's Sustainable Streets Division, and will take over the lead role until a new director is named in the coming months. [Examiner]
  • Angry residents from near the Embarcadero have come through with the lawsuit they promised over that planned homeless Navigation Center. As they argued in their failed appeal to the city last month, the lawsuit, which was filed in Sacramento, claims the city failed to get necessary approval for the project from the State Lands Commission. [Chronicle]
  • The Juul-funded Coalition for Reasonable Vaping Regulations succeeded in getting the necessary 9,400 signatures to get its measure to overturn SF's vape-sales ban on the November ballot. Juul, which recently purchased a huge new building downtown, is hoping to succeed where Big Soda and Big Tobacco have failed at the SF ballot box. [Examiner]
  • San Francisco-based tech pundit Kara Swisher suggests that with this week's court decision, Twitter is in bed with Trump for the long haul. Reportedly there is some red line that Trump could cross (declaring nuclear war via tweet?) that could get him kicked off of Twitter, but the company won't say what that is. [New York Times]
  • In order to curb drug use, or something, BART has put up signs on station bathrooms that say "max use 10 min." [SFGate]
  • Retired Chronicle columnist Leah Garchik went on KQED today to talk about her 47 years at the paper. [KQED]