SF News Department Of Labor Accuses Google Of Extreme Systemic Disparity In Pay Based On Gender In January, the US Department of Labor filed a lawsuit against Alphabet subsidiary Google to force the company to provide information on payments to employees in order to maintain the company's federal contracts.
Arts & Entertainment The 'Hamilton' Cast Is At The Giants Home Opener And The Team Made These Jerseys For them The Giants, who are off to a slow 2 and 5 start this season, are pulling out all the stops for their home opener this afternoon. One group of fans is not throwing
SF News Illegal Gambling Den Finally Booted From The Fizzary Space Reappears In The Bayview Former Fizzary spot turned nightclub vandalized this weekend https://t.co/hQKKxnZZIC pic.twitter.com/ZMlElsgYQl— Capp Street Crap (@cappstreetcrap) December 7, 2015 The illegal gambling den that subleased space in the former
SF News [Update] SFO Can Now Record License Plates From Every Car That Visits The Airport Another reason to take BART to SFO? Privacy concerns. An Airport Commission vote last month gave San Francisco International Airport the go-ahead to use license plate readers to record the information from every
SF News Day Around The Bay: Kids Aren't Tenants Follow SFist on Twitter and Instagram, and like us on Facebook. You can also get the top stories mailed to you—sign up here. A SoMa hotel agrees to pay the city millions
SF News SFPD Might Sue Pepsi Over That Kendall Jenner Ad By now you've probably cleansed your palate of the sour taste that you got from that vacuous, ill-advised Pepsi ad starring Kendall Jenner — but there's actually another, somewhat ironic aftertaste that could linger
SF News Chronicle Publishes Op-Ed By Jeff Sessions Saying Sanctuary Cities Killed Kate Steinle In the spirit of discourse and hearing both sides, the Chronicle published opposing voices on the subject of sanctuary cities today, two for, and two against the system of non-cooperation with federal customs
SF News Whale With Head Entangled In Metal Frame Headed To Big Sur, Volunteers Sought This is no ordinary whale watch in the Monterey area. Instead, it's what could be a life or death rescue mission. A gray whale last sighted off Piedras Blancas on Wednesday and expected
SF News California Drought Officially Over, Governor Declares via GIPHY After an exceptionally wet winter brought rains and record snowpack to the Sierra Nevada mountains, "This drought emergency is over," Governor Jerry Brown declared today, calling an official end to drought
SF News Protesters Are Eating Pizza In Muni Shelters After A Citation Was Given To Homeless Person For Doing That Solidarity can be as simple as eating pizza, or so a lighthearted protest organized for today seems to suggest. The action comes in response to a police officer who gave an elderly homeless
SF News Twitter Sues Trump Administration For Ordering It To Unmask Anti-Trump Account In March, Twitter received a US Department of Homeland Security summons asking it to help identify the user or users behind one of the many "ALT" or resistance Twitter accounts that proliferated to
SF News Uptick In Coyote Sightings Due To Pupping Season, Rains San Francisco Animal Care and Control has received a spike in calls from citizens reporting coyote sightings, and so last night called a meeting with SF Rec and Parks, community members, and wildlife
SF News Genetic Testing Co. 23andMe Gets Long-Sought FDA Clearance To Assess Disease Risk In 2013, 23andMe founder Ann Wojcicki received a warning letter from the FDA asking her popular company to halt services that told customers they were at genetic risk of disease. "You are marketing
SF News Disability Rights Advocates Sue BART For Broken, Gross Elevators, BART Blames Homelessness Crisis A lawsuit filed in San Francisco federal court yesterday points out what any BART rider already knows: Elevators and escalators on the regional transit system are chronically broken or unusably filthy. But for
SF Restaurants, Food & Drink Bill Seeks To Add 25 SF Liquor Licenses To Longtime Fixed Number A 1939 California law tying the number of liquor licenses for restaurants and bars per county to that county's population had to make an exception for San Francisco. Our impressive number of booze-peddling
SF News Day Around The Bay: SFPD Exam Irregularities Leaves Vacancies On Force Follow SFist on Twitter and Instagram, and like us on Facebook. You can also get the top stories mailed to you—sign up here. The owner of a Bernal Heights granite company has
SF News Working Group Ponders Fate Of 22nd Street Caltrain Station The future of the Dogpatch/Potrero HIll Caltrain stop at 22nd Street is not assured, and according to Socketsite's speculation, "the odds of the existing Caltrain Station at 22nd Street surviving appear to
SF News Leading Architect Says SF Planning 'Doesn't Understand Architecture' Stanley Saitowitz, an architect whose significant star power extends beyond his Bay Area home, is not mincing words when it comes to our city's culture of what he might but didn't quite call
Arts & Entertainment Photo Du Jour: This Art Is Crap A months-old feces smear — or should we call it a fresco? — on a block of Russian Hill is now a work of public art thanks to a small museum-style label, likely placed there
Arts & Entertainment Group Behind Bay Lights Is Fundraising For Trippy Conservatory Of Flowers Light Projections Entering the Conservatory of Flowers gives Ben Davis butterflies. "You step inside, and you're filled with awe a million times over," he tells SFist. As the founder of the nonprofit arts group behind
SF News Evictions Down By 21% Since Last Year In First Decrease Since 2010 From the beginning of March 2016 to the end of February 2017, a total of 1,881 evictions notices were filed with the Rent Board, a 21 percent decrease from last year’s
SF News Muni Bans All Political, Offensive, And Violent Advertising On Buses And Trains People with cool, provocative political messages will have to save it for their bumper stickers. As of today, political ads on Muni buses and trains are are prohibited, ABC 7 reports, following a
SF News Day Around The Bay: International Applications To UC Schools Drop For First Time In Decade Correction: An earlier version of this post incorrectly stated that UC schools had seen "sharp" drops in international student applications. The drop was small, but nonetheless represents the first decline in a decade.
SF News Police Search For Man Accused Of Series Of Sexual Assaults On Muni .@sfpd says be on the lookout for this man who they say is rubbing himself against unsuspecting women on @sfmta_muni. #SanFrancisco pic.twitter.com/8soiDQpyDO— Lilian Kim (@liliankim7) April 4, 2017 A
SF News Supervisors Propose Penalties For Wrongful Owner Move-In Evictions Landlords like the one who evicted Angelique Rochelle and her three children from a San Francisco apartment in 2014 under the false pretense of an owner move-in eviction — the landlord simply raised the