• A unanimous SF Board of Supervisors, with the mayor's backing, passed the sweeping Mental Health SF initiative at their Tuesday meeting. The initiative is expected to cost over $100 million annually and will focus on the roughly 4,000 people in SF with severe cases of mental or behavioral illness. [SF Weekly]
  • The Board of Supervisors also took its initial vote to establish the Office of Emerging Technologies. The new City Hall office will oversee private companies that want to test their technologies on SF streets or in public. [SF Business Times]
  • Supervisor Shamman Walton introduced an ordinance today to give $2.7 million to City College of San Francisco to pay for 300 courses that have been dropped from the curriculum this spring due to budget cuts. [Examiner]
  • The two suspects in a string of home-invasion robberies in the East Bay appeared in court Tuesday and had their bail set at $9 million. [KTVU]
  • The owners of one of the puppies still missing from the van stolen in Fremont Sunday night and recovered in Oakland yesterday is pleading for his safe return. [ABC 7]
  • A light rain is expected to fall over the Bay this evening as part of a weak storm system. [SFGate]
  • Palo Alto city officials are considering establishing a fine for public vaping now. [Chronicle]
  • The San Francisco Ballet is celebrating its 75th year of staging The Nutcracker for the holiday season. [CBS SF]