• The 38th annual AIDS Walk was in Golden Gate Park Sunday and raised nearly $1 million, but attendance was quite low compared to previous years. There were only about 2,000 people participating in the year’ AIDS Walk, compared to numbers more like 20,000 as recently as seven years ago. [KPIX]  
  • Within less than 24 hours of Joe Biden dropping out of the presidential race, the new Kamala Harris campaign pulled in $49.6 million in online donations Sunday. And the campaign has officially changed its name to “Harris for President” in Federal Election Commission filings. [Axios]
  • The new minor league baseball team the Oakland Ballers fired their manager Sunday, despite the team having a pretty solid 29-25 record. SF native and former MLB outfielder Micah Franklin was fired without explanation, and Antich native and  one-time St. Louis Cardinals Aaron Miles takes over as interim manager. [Bay City News]  
  • Fremont Police Chief Sean Washington put out a statement Sunday addressing a spate of violence in the city, after three homicides occurred in the span of a week. [KRON4]
  • It could take years for San Francisco Unified School District's planned school closures to generate any savings, in fact, the consultant costs might be greater than the savings in the first year or two. [Mission Local]
  • Once again, the Silicon Valley town of Atherton clocks in as the nation’s wealthiest zip code. [SF Business Times]
  • The tech-funded political action group TogetherSF, who are behind the “That’s Fentalife!” ads, endorsed Mark Farrell for San Francisco mayor. [Chronicle]

Image: Joe Kukura, SFist