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Published May 17, 2021 at 8:16 AM PDT Courtesy of San Francisco Marin Food Bank / Tensions are rising over incentives for residential solar installations. Are they a subsidy for the wealthy? Or are they necessary tool to achieve California s ambitious climate agenda? Plus, as the Bay Area starts to emerge from the pandemic, will hunger finally subside? And finally, State of the Bay frequent contributor Lara Bazelon talks about her new novel, A Good Mother. Hosts: Ethan Elkind, Grace Won Producer: Wendy Holcombe, Chris Nooney Guests: Segment 2: Severin Borenstein, Director of the Energy Institute at Haas School of Business. ....
Skip to main content There is no vaccine for hunger : Pandemic urgency pushes S.F.-Marin Food Bank to start $40 million expansion FacebookTwitterEmail 1of6 Henry Randolph, shop floor manager at the S.F.-Marin Food Bank, sorts a pallet of new donations Monday.Photos by Stephen Lam / The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less 2of6 Workers in the warehouse at the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank.Stephen Lam / The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less 3of6 4of6 Pallets of fresh zucchini and bell peppers are seen at the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank in San Francisco.Stephen Lam / The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less 5of6 Tanis Crosby, executive director at the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank, points to pallets of goods on the upper storage racks inside the nonprofit’s warehouse in San Francisco.Stephen Lam / The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less ....