City Administrator Naomi Kelly is San Francisco’s highest ranking unelected official and the fourth department head to step down since a sprawling federal probe into City Hall corruption was revealed nearly one year ago.
SAN FRANCISCO (CN) Less than two months after her husband, a former city department head, was arrested on federal bribery charges and forced to resign, San Francisco’s highest-ranking unelected official announced Tuesday that she, too, will step down.
City Administrator Naomi Kelly, who oversees 25 departments and divisions that employ 2,700 city workers, will leave her $329,000-per-year job on Feb. 1, she wrote in a letter to the mayor Tuesday.
Xinhua world economic news summary at 0930 GMT, Jan 13 oklahomacitysun.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from oklahomacitysun.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Gov. Gavin Newsom unveiled his proposed budget for the 2021-22 fiscal year Friday, touting record investments in education and a $15 billion budget surplus in spite of the economic uncertainty wrought by the coronavirus pandemic.
2021-01-06 23:05:54 GMT2021-01-07 07:05:54(Beijing Time) Xinhua English
SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 6 (Xinhua) U.S. San Francisco Mayor London Breed on Wednesday announced the city s regionally tracked roadway condition score hit its 10-year goal, demonstrating the benefits of a systematically planned and executed public infrastructure investment strategy to improve the streets of San Francisco.
The Pavement Condition Index, or PCI, is tracked by the Metropolitan Transportation Commission, the regional transportation planning and funding agency that monitors the condition of Bay Area roads.
San Francisco s PCI score for 2020 hit 75 out of 100, exceeding the region-wide average of 67. A PCI score of 75 puts the roads collectively in good condition, requiring mostly preventative maintenance. A score of 100 is assigned to a newly paved road, according to the announcement.
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) Many Bay Area lawmakers were inside the U.S. Capital building when people stormed in on Wednesday. Some of them described what they saw and heard. Then they were pounding on the door so they told us to lie down in the marble floors which we did and then there was a shot that I heard, California District 14 Congresswoman Jackie Speier describing the moment when people stormed into the U.S. Capital building Wednesday. Speier says she quickly learned that there are gas masks under each seat of the house chamber. There was an announcement made that the Capitol had been breached and we should sit in our seats and wait, that we should get out the gas mask and I have one here to show you. It s in this packing like this and then when you open it up you can hear this thing taking off, said Speier.