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		<title>Jack London &#8220;Story Of An Eyewitness&#8221;</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Mar 2024 21:53:49 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>The Story Of An Eyewitness by Jack London, Collier&#8217;s special Correspondent Upon receipt of the first news of the earthquake, Collier&#8217;s telegraphed  Mr. Jack London &#8211; who lived only forty miles from San Francisco &#8211; requesting him to go to the scene of the disaster and write the story of what he saw. Mr. London started at &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/jack-london-story-of-an-eyewitness/">Jack London &#8220;Story Of An Eyewitness&#8221;</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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<p align="center"><strong><br />The Story Of An Eyewitness </strong>by <strong>Jack London,</strong> Collier&#8217;s special Correspondent</p>
<p align="left"><strong>Upon receipt of the first news of the earthquake, Collier&#8217;s telegraphed  Mr. Jack London &#8211; who lived only forty miles from San Francisco &#8211; requesting him to go to the scene of the disaster and write the story of what he saw. Mr. London started at once, and he sent the following dramatic description of the tragic events he witnessed in the burning city.<br /></strong><br />(First published in Collier&#8217;s Magazine, May 5, 1906)  (All photos by Jack and Charmain London) (These glass print photographs were taken immediately after the San Francisco Earthquake and are part of the collection at Jack London State Historic Park.)</p>
<p><strong>The earthquake shook down in San Francisco hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of walls and chimneys</strong>. But the conflagration that followed burned up hundreds of millions of dollars&#8217; worth of property There is no estimating within hundreds of millions the actual damage wrought. Not in history has a modern imperial city been so completely destroyed. San Francisco is gone. Nothing remains of it but memories and a fringe of dwelling-houses on its outskirts. Its industrial section is wiped out. Its business section is wiped out. Its social and residential section is wiped out. The factories and warehouses, the great stores and newspaper buildings, the hotels and the palaces of the nabobs, are all gone. Remains only the fringe of dwelling houses on the outskirts of what was once San Francisco.</p>
<p align="center"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" style="WIDTH: 456px; HEIGHT: 346px" height="358" alt="San Francisco City Hall, 1906. Photo by Jack London." hspace="0" src="https://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/24204/images/london_cityhall_destroyed_640_414_sfquake.jpg" width="476" align="baseline" border="0" linktype="img" data="https://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/24204/images/london_cityhall_destroyed_640_414_sfquake.jpg"/></p>
<p>Within an hour after the earthquake shock the smoke of San Francisco&#8217;s burning was a lurid tower visible a hundred miles away. And for three days and nights this lurid tower swayed in the sky, reddening the sun, darkening the day, and filling the land with smoke. </p>
<p>On Wednesday morning at a quarter past five came the earthquake. A minute later the flames were leaping upward In a dozen different quarters south of Market Street, in the working-class ghetto, and in the factories, fires started. There was no opposing the flames. There was no organization, no communication. All the cunning adjustments of a twentieth century city had been smashed by the earthquake. The streets were humped into ridges and depressions, and piled with the debris of fallen walls. The steel rails were twisted into perpendicular and horizontal angles. The telephone and telegraph systems were disrupted. And the great water-mains had burst. All the shrewd contrivances and safeguards of man had been thrown out of gear by thirty seconds&#8217; twitching of the earth-crust. <br /> </p>
<p align="center"><strong><img decoding="async" style="BORDER-RIGHT: 1px solid; BORDER-TOP: 1px solid; BORDER-LEFT: 1px solid; WIDTH: 307px; BORDER-BOTTOM: 1px solid" height="241" alt="" at="" that="" time="" i="" watched="" the="" vast="" conflagration="" from="" out="" on="" bay.="" it="" was="" dead="" calm.="" not="" a="" flicker="" of="" wind="" stirred.="" hspace="7" src="https://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/24204/images/jack_london_sfbay_640_424_1906quake_photo.jpg" vspace="7" border="1" linktype="img" data="https://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/24204/images/jack_london_sfbay_640_424_1906quake_photo.jpg"/></strong></p>
<p>The Fire Made its Own Draft </p>
<p>By Wednesday afternoon, inside of twelve hours, half the heart of the city was gone. At that time I watched the vast conflagration from out on the bay. It was dead calm. Not a flicker of wind stirred. Yet from every side wind was pouring in upon the city. East, west, north, and south, strong winds were blowing upon the doomed city. The heated air rising made an enormous suck. Thus did the fire of itself build its own colossal chimney through the atmosphere. Day and night this dead calm continued, and yet, near to the flames, the wind was often half a gale, so mighty was the force. </p>
<p>Wednesday night saw the destruction of the very heart of the city. Dynamite was lavishly used, and many of San Francisco proudest structures were crumbled by man himself into ruins, but there was no withstanding the onrush of the flames. Time and again successful stands were made by the fire-fighters, and every time the flames flanked around on either side or came up from the rear, and turned to defeat the hard-won victory. </p>
<p>An enumeration of the buildings destroyed would be a directory of San Francisco. An enumeration of the buildings undestroyed would be a line and several addresses. An enumeration of the deeds of heroism would stock a library and bankrupt the Carnegie medal fund. An enumeration of the dead-will never be made. All vestiges of them were destroyed by the flames. The number of the victims of the earthquake will never be known. South of Market Street, where the loss of life was particularly heavy, was the first to catch fire. </p>
<p>Remarkable as it may seem, Wednesday night while the whole city crashed and roared into ruin, was a quiet night. There were no crowds. There was no shouting and yelling. There was no hysteria, no disorder. I passed Wednesday night in the path of the advancing flames, and in all those terrible hours I saw not one woman who wept, not one man who was excited, not one person who was in the slightest degree panic stricken. </p>
<p>Before the flames, throughout the night, fled tens of thousands of homeless ones. Some were wrapped in blankets. Others carried bundles of bedding and dear household treasures. Sometimes a whole family was harnessed to a carriage or delivery wagon that was weighted down with their possessions. Baby buggies, toy wagons, and go-carts were used as trucks, while every other person was dragging a trunk. Yet everybody was gracious. The most perfect courtesy obtained. Never in all San Francisco&#8217;s history, were her people so kind and courteous as on this night of terror. </p>
<p><strong>A Caravan of Trunks</strong> </p>
<p>All night these tens of thousands fled before the flames. Many of them, the poor people from the labor ghetto, had fled all day as well. They had left their homes burdened with possessions. Now and again they lightened up, flinging out upon the street clothing and treasures they had dragged for miles. </p>
<p>They held on longest to their trunks, and over these trunks many a strong man broke his heart that night. The hills of San Francisco are steep, and up these hills, mile after mile, were the trunks dragged. Everywhere were trunks with across them lying their exhausted owners, men and women. Before the march of the flames were flung picket lines of soldiers. And a block at a time, as the flames advanced, these pickets retreated. One of their tasks was to keep the trunk-pullers moving. The exhausted creatures, stirred on by the menace of bayonets, would arise and struggle up the steep pavements, pausing from weakness every five or ten feet. </p>
<p>Often, after surmounting a heart-breaking hill. they would find another wall of flame advancing upon them at right angles and be compelled to change anew the line of their retreat. In the end, completely played out, after toiling for a dozen hours like giants, thousands of them were compelled to abandon their trunks. Here the shopkeepers and soft members of the middle class were at a disadvantage. But the working-men dug holes in vacant lots and backyards and buried their trunks. </p>
<p align="center"><strong><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" style="BORDER-RIGHT: 1px solid; BORDER-TOP: 1px solid; BORDER-LEFT: 1px solid; WIDTH: 276px; BORDER-BOTTOM: 1px solid" height="279" alt="" i="" walked="" through="" miles="" and="" of="" magnificent="" buildings="" towering="" skyscrapers.="" hspace="7" src="https://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/24204/images/jack_london_649_588__buildings_1906quake.jpg" width="397" vspace="7" border="1" linktype="img" data="https://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/24204/images/jack_london_649_588__buildings_1906quake.jpg"/></strong></p>
<p>The Doomed City </p>
<p>At nine o&#8217;clock Wednesday evening I walked down through the very heart of the city. I walked through miles and miles of magnificent buildings and towering skyscrapers. Here was no fire. All was in perfect order. The police patrolled the streets. Every building had its watchman at the door. And yet it was doomed, all of it. There was no water. The dynamite was giving out. And at right angles two different conflagrations were sweeping down upon it. </p>
<p>At one o&#8217;clock in the morning I walked down through the same section.  Everything still stood intact. There was no fire. And yet there was a change. A rain of ashes was falling. The watchmen at the doors were gone. The police had been withdrawn. There were no firemen, no fire-engines, no men fighting with dynamite. The district had been absolutely abandoned. I stood at the corner of Kearney and Market, in the very innermost heart of San Francisco.<br /> </p>
<p>Kearny Street was deserted. Half a dozen blocks away it was burning on both sides. The street was a wall of flame. And against this wall of flame, silhouetted sharply, were two United States cavalrymen sitting their horses, calming watching. That was all. Not another person was in sight. In the intact heart of the city two troopers sat their horses and watched. </p>
<p><strong>Spread of the Conflagration</strong> </p>
<p>Surrender was complete. There was no water. The sewers had long since been pumped dry. There was no dynamite. Another fire had broken out further uptown, and now from three sides conflagrations were sweeping down. The fourth side had been burned earlier in the day. In that direction stood the tottering walls of the Examiner building, the burned-out Call building, the smoldering ruins of the Grand Hotel, and the gutted, devastated, dynamited Palace Hotel </p>
<p>The following will illustrate the sweep of the flames and the inability of men to calculate their spread. At eight o&#8217;clock Wednesday evening I passed through Union Square. It was packed with refugees. Thousands of them had gone to bed on the grass. Government tents had been set up, supper was being cooked, and the refugees were lining up for free meals </p>
<p>At half past one in the morning three sides of Union Square were in flames. The fourth side, where stood the great St. Francis Hotel was still holding out. An hour later, ignited from top and sides the St. Francis was flaming heavenward. Union Square, heaped high with mountains of trunks, was deserted. Troops, refugees, and all had retreated. </p>
<p><strong>A Fortune for a Horse!</strong> </p>
<p>It was at Union Square that I saw a man offering a thousand dollars for a team of horses. He was in charge of a truck piled high with trunks from some hotel. It had been hauled here into what was considered safety, and the horses had been taken out. The flames were on three sides of the Square and there were no horses. </p>
<p>Also, at this time, standing beside the truck, I urged a man to seek safety in flight. He was all but hemmed in by several conflagrations. He was an old man and he Was on crutches. Said he: &#8220;Today is my birthday. Last night I was worth thirty thousand dollars. I bought five bottles of wine, some delicate fish and other things for my birthday dinner. I have had no dinner, and all I own are these crutches.&#8221; </p>
<p>I convinced him of his danger and started him limping on his way. An hour later, from a distance, I saw the truck-load of trunks burning merrily in the middle of the street. </p>
<p align="center"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" style="WIDTH: 480px; HEIGHT: 325px" height="336" alt="" all="" about="" were="" the="" palaces="" of="" nabob="" pioneers="" forty-nine.="" to="" east="" and="" south="" at="" right="" angles="" advancing="" two="" mighty="" walls="" flame="" nob="" hill="" mansion="" photo="" by="" jack="" london.="" hspace="0" src="https://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/24204/images/quake_nobhill_mansion_destroyed_448_273.jpg" width="528" align="baseline" border="0" data="https://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/24204/images/quake_nobhill_mansion_destroyed_448_273.jpg" linktype="img"/></p>
<p>On Thursday morning at a quarter past five, just twenty-four hours after the earthquake, I sat on the steps of a small residence on Nob Hill. With me sat Japanese, Italians, Chinese, and negroes&#8211;a bit of the cosmopolitan flotsam of the wreck of the city. All about were the palaces of the nabob pioneers of Forty-nine. To the east and south at right angles, were advancing two mighty walls of flame </p>
<p>I went inside with the owner of the house on the steps of which I sat. He was cool and cheerful and hospitable. &#8220;Yesterday morning,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I was worth six hundred thousand dollars. This morning this house is all I have left. It will go in fifteen minutes. He pointed to a large cabinet. &#8220;That is my wife&#8217;s collection of china. This rug upon which we stand is a present. It cost fifteen hundred dollars. Try that piano. Listen to its tone. There are few like it. There are no horses. The flames will be here in fifteen minutes.&#8221; </p>
<p>Outside the old Mark Hopkins residence a palace was just catching fire. The troops were falling back and driving the refugees before them. From every side came the roaring of flames, the crashing of walls, and the detonations of dynamite </p>
<p align="center"><strong><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" style="BORDER-RIGHT: 1px solid; BORDER-TOP: 1px solid; BORDER-LEFT: 1px solid; WIDTH: 228px; BORDER-BOTTOM: 1px solid" height="273" alt="City Hall... " there="" was="" no="" better="" exhibit="" of="" the="" destructive="" force="" earthquake.="" most="" stone="" had="" been="" shaken="" from="" great="" dome="" leaving="" standing="" naked="" framework="" steel.="" jack="" london="" hspace="7" src="https://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/24204/images/london_cityhall_170_222.jpg" width="194" vspace="7" border="1" linktype="img" data="https://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/24204/images/london_cityhall_170_222.jpg"/></strong></p>
<p>The Dawn of the Second Day </p>
<p>I passed out of the house. Day was trying to dawn through the smoke-pall. A sickly light was creeping over the face of things. Once only the sun broke through the smoke-pall, blood-red, and showing quarter its usual size. The smoke-pall itself, viewed from beneath, was a rose color that pulsed and fluttered with lavender shades Then it turned to mauve and yellow and dun. There was no sun. And so dawned the second day on stricken San Francisco. </p>
<p>An hour later I was creeping past the shattered dome of the City Hall. Than it there was no better exhibit of the destructive force of the earthquake. Most of the stone had been shaken from the great dome, leaving standing the naked framework of steel. Market Street was piled high with the wreckage, and across the wreckage lay the overthrown pillars of the City Hall shattered into short crosswise sections. </p>
<p>This section of the city with the exception of the Mint and the Post-Office, was already a waste of smoking ruins. Here and there through the smoke, creeping warily under the shadows of tottering walls, emerged occasional men and women. It was like the meeting of the handful of survivors after the day of the end of the world. </p>
<p><strong>Beeves Slaughtered and Roasted</strong> </p>
<p>On Mission Street lay a dozen steers, in a neat row stretching across the street just as they had been struck down by the flying ruins of the earthquake. The fire had passed through afterward and roasted them. The human dead had been carried away before the fire came. At another place on Mission Street I saw a milk wagon. A steel telegraph pole had smashed down sheer through the driver&#8217;s seat and crushed the front wheels. The milk cans lay scattered around. </p>
<p>All day Thursday and all Thursday night, all day Friday and Friday night, the flames still raged on. </p>
<p>Friday night saw the flames finally conquered. through not until Russian Hill and Telegraph Hill had been swept and three-quarters of a mile of wharves and docks had been licked up. </p>
<p align="center"><img decoding="async" style="BORDER-RIGHT: 1px solid; BORDER-TOP: 1px solid; BORDER-LEFT: 1px solid; WIDTH: 347px; BORDER-BOTTOM: 1px solid; HEIGHT: 250px" height="340" alt="San Francisco, at the present time, is like the crater of a volcano, around which are camped tens of thousands of refugees.  Photo by Jack London, 1906." hspace="7" src="https://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/24204/images/london_sfquake_tentcity_640_413.jpg" vspace="7" border="0" data="https://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/24204/images/london_sfquake_tentcity_640_413.jpg" linktype="img"/></p>
<p><strong>The Last Stand</strong> </p>
<p>The great stand of the fire-fighters was made Thursday night on Van Ness Avenue. Had they failed here, the comparatively few remaining houses of the city would have been swept. Here were the magnificent residences of the second generation of San Francisco nabobs, and these, in a solid zone, were dynamited down across the path of the fire. Here and there the flames leaped the zone, but these fires were beaten out, principally by the use of wet blankets and rugs. </p>
<p>San Francisco, at the present time, is like the crater of a volcano, around which are camped tens of thousands of refugees At the Presidio alone are at least twenty thousand. All the surrounding cities and towns are jammed with the homeless ones, where they are being cared for by the relief committees. The refugees were carried free by the railroads to any point they wished to go, and it is estimated that over one hundred thousand people have left the peninsula on which San Francisco stood. </p>
<p>The Government has the situation in hand, and, thanks to the immediate relief given by the whole United States, there is not the slightest possibility of a famine. The bankers and business men hare already set about making preparations to rebuild San Francisco. </p>
<p>&#8211; Collier&#8217;s, May 5, 1906</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/jack-london-story-of-an-eyewitness/">Jack London &#8220;Story Of An Eyewitness&#8221;</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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		<title>Story of Joe the Plumber springs many leaks</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Dec 2023 06:32:10 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Plumbing]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Forget Joe the plumber for a sec, who is the best plumber in the Bay Area?J.D. Pooley/Getty ImagesSupporters of Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., are dressed as Joe the Plumber as they stand outside the Roanoke Civic Center where a rally for Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., takes place in Roanoke, &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/story-of-joe-the-plumber-springs-many-leaks/">Story of Joe the Plumber springs many leaks</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs14 c-gray700 oy-hidden mh104px"><span>Forget Joe the plumber for a sec, who is the best plumber in the Bay Area?</span></span><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs13 c-gray600 block mt2 mr72 y24px"><span>J.D. Pooley/Getty Images</span></span><img decoding="async" title="Supporters of Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., are dressed as Joe the Plumber as they stand outside the Roanoke Civic Center where a rally for Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., takes place in Roanoke, Va., Friday, Oct. 17, 2008. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)" alt="Supporters of Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., are dressed as Joe the Plumber as they stand outside the Roanoke Civic Center where a rally for Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., takes place in Roanoke, Va., Friday, Oct. 17, 2008. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)" loading="lazy" src="data:image/jpeg;base64,/9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAQEASABIAAD/2wBDAA0JCgsKCA0LCgsODg0PEyAVExISEyccHhcgLikxMC4pLSwzOko+MzZGNywtQFdBRkxOUlNSMj5aYVpQYEpRUk//2wBDAQ4ODhMREyYVFSZPNS01T09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT0//wAARCAAJAAgDASIAAhEBAxEB/8QAFgABAQEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAYH/8QAIRAAAQMDBAMAAAAAAAAAAAAAAQACAwQFERMzQnOhscH/xAAVAQEBAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAf/EABURAQEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAR/9oADAMBAAIRAxEAPwCkivM0lrfWB9HMIBqOLXkA4ZkjHHz9RZTPuVHa70iRK//Z" style="aspect-ratio:3 / 2" class="x100 y100 opc bgpc ofct bgsct block bg-black mnh0px fill"/><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs14 c-gray700 oy-hidden mh104px"><span>Supporters of Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., are dressed as Joe the Plumber as they stand outside the Roanoke Civic Center where a rally for Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., takes place in Roanoke, Va., Friday, Oct. 17, 2008. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)</span></span><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs13 c-gray600 block mt2 mr72 y24px"><span>Jae C. Hong/AP</span></span><img decoding="async" title="*** CORRECTS SPELLING OF PLUMBER *** Joe Wurzelbacher, or as Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain dubbed him during Wednesday's presidential debate, &quot;Joe The Plumber&quot;, laughs while chatting with the press outside of his home in Holland, Ohio, Thursday Oct. 16, 2008. Wurzelbacher was cited by the GOP presidential candidate as an example of someone who wants to buy a plumbing business but would be hurt by Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama's tax plans. Wurzelbacher said he was surprised that his name was mentioned so many other times. (AP Photo/Madalyn Ruggiero)" alt="*** CORRECTS SPELLING OF PLUMBER *** Joe Wurzelbacher, or as Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain dubbed him during Wednesday's presidential debate, &quot;Joe The Plumber&quot;, laughs while chatting with the press outside of his home in Holland, Ohio, Thursday Oct. 16, 2008. Wurzelbacher was cited by the GOP presidential candidate as an example of someone who wants to buy a plumbing business but would be hurt by Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama's tax plans. Wurzelbacher said he was surprised that his name was mentioned so many other times. (AP Photo/Madalyn Ruggiero)" loading="lazy" src="data:image/jpeg;base64,/9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAQEASABIAAD/2wBDAA0JCgsKCA0LCgsODg0PEyAVExISEyccHhcgLikxMC4pLSwzOko+MzZGNywtQFdBRkxOUlNSMj5aYVpQYEpRUk//2wBDAQ4ODhMREyYVFSZPNS01T09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT0//wAARCAAGAAgDASIAAhEBAxEB/8QAFQABAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAL/xAAhEAABBAEDBQAAAAAAAAAAAAABAAIDEQUEEhMUITFB0f/EABUBAQEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAB/8QAFREBAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH/2gAMAwEAAhEDEQA/ALxs88HWZCN3MzRM3xRvcWAWSa7XY8+/iIikK//Z" style="aspect-ratio:3 / 2" class="x100 y100 opc bgpc ofcv bgscv block bg-black mnh0px fill"/><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs14 c-gray700 oy-hidden mh104px"><span>*** CORRECTS SPELLING OF PLUMBER *** Joe Wurzelbacher, or as Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain dubbed him during Wednesday&#8217;s presidential debate, &#8220;Joe The Plumber&#8221;, laughs while chatting with the press outside of his home in Holland, Ohio, Thursday Oct. 16, 2008. Wurzelbacher was cited by the GOP presidential candidate as an example of someone who wants to buy a <a class="wpil_keyword_link" href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/bay-spaces-150-yr-outdated-water-pipe-drawback-nbc-bay-space/"   title="plumbing" data-wpil-keyword-link="linked">plumbing</a> business but would be hurt by Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama&#8217;s tax plans. Wurzelbacher said he was surprised that his name was mentioned so many other times. (AP Photo/Madalyn Ruggiero)</span></span><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs13 c-gray600 block mt2 mr72 y24px"><span>Madalyn Ruggiero/AP</span></span><img decoding="async" title="Plumber Joe Wurzelbacher watches the presidential candidate debate in his home in Ohio Wednesday Oct. 15, 2008. Sen. McCain referred repeatedly to Joe Wurzelbacher, a plumber from Toledo, Ohio. Wurzelbacher watched Wednesday night's debate and said he still thinks Senator Obama's plan would keep him from buying the small business that employs him. About Senator McCain: &quot;He's got it right as far as I go.&quot; Even so, Mr. Wurzelbacher declined to say who was getting his vote. He said he was surprised that he was called &quot;Joe the Plumber&quot; repeatedly during the debate. &quot;It's pretty surreal, man, my name being mentioned in a presidential campaign.&quot; (AP Photo/Toledo Blade - Lori King) OUT MAGS, PORT CLINTON NEWS HERALD, BOWLING GREEN SENTINEL-TRIBUNE, FINDLAY COURIER, FREMONT NEWS MESSANGER, TIFFIN ADVERTISER TRIBUNE, MONROE EVENING NEWS, TOLEDO FREE PRESS, NO SALES, NO MAGS" alt="Plumber Joe Wurzelbacher watches the presidential candidate debate in his home in Ohio Wednesday Oct. 15, 2008. Sen. McCain referred repeatedly to Joe Wurzelbacher, a plumber from Toledo, Ohio. Wurzelbacher watched Wednesday night's debate and said he still thinks Senator Obama's plan would keep him from buying the small business that employs him. About Senator McCain: &quot;He's got it right as far as I go.&quot; Even so, Mr. Wurzelbacher declined to say who was getting his vote. He said he was surprised that he was called &quot;Joe the Plumber&quot; repeatedly during the debate. &quot;It's pretty surreal, man, my name being mentioned in a presidential campaign.&quot; (AP Photo/Toledo Blade - Lori King) OUT MAGS, PORT CLINTON NEWS HERALD, BOWLING GREEN SENTINEL-TRIBUNE, FINDLAY COURIER, FREMONT NEWS MESSANGER, TIFFIN ADVERTISER TRIBUNE, MONROE EVENING NEWS, TOLEDO FREE PRESS, NO SALES, NO MAGS" loading="lazy" src="data:image/jpeg;base64,/9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAQEASABIAAD/2wBDAA0JCgsKCA0LCgsODg0PEyAVExISEyccHhcgLikxMC4pLSwzOko+MzZGNywtQFdBRkxOUlNSMj5aYVpQYEpRUk//2wBDAQ4ODhMREyYVFSZPNS01T09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT0//wAARCAAFAAgDAREAAhEBAxEB/8QAFAABAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAABP/EAB0QAAIBBAMAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAECAwAREjEFE2H/xAAUAQEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAD/8QAFxEAAwEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAECEf/aAAwDAQACEQMRAD8AEvIz9RliSJHQixwy3YHZ9oZlCU3mn//Z" style="aspect-ratio:3 / 2" class="x100 y100 opc bgpc ofcv bgscv block bg-black mnh0px fill"/><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs14 c-gray700 oy-hidden mh104px"><span>Plumber Joe Wurzelbacher watches the presidential candidate debate in his home in Ohio Wednesday Oct. 15, 2008. Sen. McCain referred repeatedly to Joe Wurzelbacher, a plumber from Toledo, Ohio. Wurzelbacher watched Wednesday night&#8217;s debate and said he still thinks Senator Obama&#8217;s plan would keep him from buying the small business that employs him.  About Senator McCain: &#8220;He&#8217;s got it right as far as I go.&#8221;  Even so, Mr. Wurzelbacher declined to say who was getting his vote.  He said he was surprised that he was called &#8220;Joe the Plumber&#8221; repeatedly during the debate. &#8220;It&#8217;s pretty surreal, man, my name being mentioned in a presidential campaign.&#8221;  (AP Photo/Toledo Blade &#8211; Lori King) OUT MAGS, PORT CLINTON NEWS HERALD, BOWLING GREEN SENTINEL-TRIBUNE, FINDLAY COURIER, FREMONT NEWS MESSANGER, TIFFIN ADVERTISER TRIBUNE, MONROE EVENING NEWS, TOLEDO FREE PRESS, NO SALES, NO MAGS</span></span><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs13 c-gray600 block mt2 mr72 y24px"><span>Lori King/AP</span></span><img decoding="async" title="Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., facing camera, talks to plumber Joe Wurzelbacher in Holland, Ohio, Sunday, Oct. 12, 2008. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)" alt="Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., facing camera, talks to plumber Joe Wurzelbacher in Holland, Ohio, Sunday, Oct. 12, 2008. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)" loading="lazy" src="data:image/jpeg;base64,/9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAQEASABIAAD/2wBDAA0JCgsKCA0LCgsODg0PEyAVExISEyccHhcgLikxMC4pLSwzOko+MzZGNywtQFdBRkxOUlNSMj5aYVpQYEpRUk//2wBDAQ4ODhMREyYVFSZPNS01T09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT0//wAARCAAFAAgDAREAAhEBAxEB/8QAFAABAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAABv/EAB4QAAIBAwUAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAECAwQRQQAFEyEx/8QAFQEBAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAQL/xAAYEQADAQEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARECEv/aAAwDAQACEQMRAD8APVO8GqcmeDkjKhWV3uzWzcD3rA1Swh7ch//Z" style="aspect-ratio:3 / 2" class="x100 y100 opc bgpc ofcv bgscv block bg-black mnh0px fill"/><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs14 c-gray700 oy-hidden mh104px"><span>Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., facing camera, talks to plumber Joe Wurzelbacher in Holland, Ohio, Sunday, Oct. 12, 2008. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)</span></span><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs13 c-gray600 block mt2 mr72 y24px"><span>Jae C. Hong/AP</span></span><img decoding="async" title="US Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) (L) speaks to Joe Wurzelbacher as he canvasses a neighbourhood in Holland, Ohio in this October 12, 2008 file photo. Wurzelbacher, a plumber, was mentioned several times in the final presidential debate between Obama and Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) on October 15, 2008. REUTERS/Jim Young/Files (UNITED STATES) US PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION CAMPAIGN 2008 (USA)" alt="US Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) (L) speaks to Joe Wurzelbacher as he canvasses a neighbourhood in Holland, Ohio in this October 12, 2008 file photo. Wurzelbacher, a plumber, was mentioned several times in the final presidential debate between Obama and Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) on October 15, 2008. REUTERS/Jim Young/Files (UNITED STATES) US PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION CAMPAIGN 2008 (USA)" loading="lazy" src="data:image/jpeg;base64,/9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAQEASABIAAD/2wBDAA0JCgsKCA0LCgsODg0PEyAVExISEyccHhcgLikxMC4pLSwzOko+MzZGNywtQFdBRkxOUlNSMj5aYVpQYEpRUk//2wBDAQ4ODhMREyYVFSZPNS01T09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT0//wAARCAAGAAgDASIAAhEBAxEB/8QAFQABAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAX/xAAbEAACAgMBAAAAAAAAAAAAAAABAgADBBESIf/EABQBAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAD/xAAWEQEBAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAASH/2gAMAwEAAhEDEQA/AJuDaudgWVBStTo+kJ650APCdmIiLNH/2Q==" style="aspect-ratio:3 / 2" class="x100 y100 opc bgpc ofcv bgscv block bg-black mnh0px fill"/><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs14 c-gray700 oy-hidden mh104px"><span>US Democratic presidential nominee Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) (L) speaks to Joe Wurzelbacher as he canvasses a neighbourhood in Holland, Ohio in this October 12, 2008 file photo. Wurzelbacher, a plumber, was mentioned several times in the final presidential debate between Obama and Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) on October 15, 2008.  REUTERS/Jim Young/Files    (UNITED STATES) US PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION CAMPAIGN 2008 (USA)</span></span><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs13 c-gray600 block mt2 mr72 y24px"><span>Jim Young, File/Reuters</span></span></p>
<p>A couple of things about Joe the Plumber, the icon of the authentic working-class voter who was declared the &#8220;winner&#8221; of the final presidential debate.</p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://cdn-channels-pixel.ex.co/events/0012000001fxZm9AAE?integrationType=DEFAULT&amp;template=design%2Farticle%2Fplatypus_two_column.tpl" alt="" class="x1px y1px vh abs" aria-hidden="true" width="1" height="1"/></p>
<p>His first name isn&#8217;t really Joe. It&#8217;s Samuel.</p>
<p>He&#8217;s not really a plumber &#8211; at least, not a licensed one.</p>
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<p>He&#8217;s concerned about increased taxes &#8211; but hasn&#8217;t paid his own income taxes.</p>
<p>And he&#8217;s not exactly just a guy from Ohio.</p>
<p>He&#8217;s lived in Arizona &#8230; and Alaska.</p>
<p>And as for that unscripted moment that ended up on Fox News, the one at a rally where he questioned Sen. Barack Obama about the American Dream &#8211; and whether he&#8217;d have to pay higher taxes under Obama&#8217;s plan?</p>
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<p>Seems Joe, who is actually Samuel J. Wurzelbacher, told the conservative Web site familysecuritymatters.org that catching the Democratic presidential candidate off guard &#8220;was actually my intent.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Looks like there&#8217;s a crack in Joe the Plumber&#8217;s story,&#8221; said Bob Mulholland, the Democratic party activist and adviser, after some details of Wurzelbacher&#8217;s life emerged Thursday.</p>
<p>In an election that has starred all sorts of celebrities &#8211; remember Paris Hilton? Britney Spears? &#8211; Wurzelbacher got his 15 minutes of fame after being referenced 26 times during Wednesday&#8217;s presidential debate, 21 times by Sen. John McCain.</p>
<p>On Thursday, McCain even happily declared &#8220;Joe the Plumber&#8221; to be &#8220;the winner&#8221; of the debate.</p>
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<p>&#8220;Joe the Plumber&#8217;s story sprang a few leaks Thursday,&#8221; said an Associated Press story.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s after the AP, bloggers, investigators and librarians &#8211; and The Chronicle &#8211; turned up court documents and birth records.</p>
<p>For one, Wurzelbacher&#8217;s expressed concern about paying more taxes looked a bit tarnished with the revelation that he owes Ohio about $1,200 in personal income taxes, according to the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas records. And there&#8217;s a 2007 civil filing that shows a record for a $1,200 owed to a creditor, St. Charles Mercy Hospital.</p>
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<p>So Wurzelbacher has an active lien on his property filed in January 2007, records from the Ohio Department of Taxation show.</p>
<p>The Toledo Blade, examining Lucas County Building Inspection records, reported that his employer, the A.W. Newell Corp., &#8220;does maintain a state plumbing license, and one with the City of Toledo, but would not be allowed to work in Lucas County outside of Toledo without a county license.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Mr. Wurzelbacher said he works under Al Newell&#8217;s license, but according to Ohio building regulations, he must maintain his own license to do plumbing work,&#8221; the newspaper said. &#8220;He is also not registered to operate as a plumber in Ohio- which means he&#8217;s not a plumber.&#8221;</p>
<p>What else did Americans learn about Wurzelbacher this week?</p>
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<p>Among the factoids gleaned from state and county records:</p>
<p>&#8212; He is registered as a Republican, and voted in the state&#8217;s GOP primary in March, county elections records show. But he was previously registered, dating back to 2007, in the Natural Law Party.</p>
<p>&#8212; He has lived in McCain&#8217;s home state of Arizona &#8211; in both Mesa and Tucson.</p>
<p>&#8212; He lived in GOP vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin&#8217;s home state of Alaska &#8211; in North Pole, from September 1992 to July 1993.</p>
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<p>And as comic Bill Maher pointed out, in his 15 minutes of fame, Wurzelbacher has already done more interviews than Palin.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/story-of-joe-the-plumber-springs-many-leaks/">Story of Joe the Plumber springs many leaks</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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		<title>The story behind why there are such a lot of break up loos in SF</title>
		<link>https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/the-story-behind-why-there-are-such-a-lot-of-break-up-loos-in-sf/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Daily SF News]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 10 Dec 2023 22:43:14 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Plumbing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bathrooms]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[split]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[story]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/?p=41280</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>The split bathroom may have stemmed from the Victorian era’s obsession with hygiene. Siva Raj I’ll never forget apartment hunting for the first time in San Francisco. My husband and I saw a dizzying amount of places that day, unsure of what neighborhood we wanted to live in and mostly dazed with sticker shock at &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/the-story-behind-why-there-are-such-a-lot-of-break-up-loos-in-sf/">The story behind why there are such a lot of break up loos in SF</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs14 c-gray700 ya block"><span></p>
<p>The split bathroom may have stemmed from the Victorian era’s obsession with hygiene.</p>
<p></span></span><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs13 c-gray600 block mt2 mr48"><span>Siva Raj</span></span></p>
<p>I’ll never forget apartment hunting for the first time in San Francisco.</p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://cdn-channels-pixel.ex.co/events/0012000001fxZm9AAE?integrationType=DEFAULT&amp;template=design%2Farticle%2Fplatypus_two_column.tpl" alt="" class="x1px y1px vh abs" aria-hidden="true" width="1" height="1"/></p>
<p>My husband and I saw a dizzying amount of places that day, unsure of what neighborhood we wanted to live in and mostly dazed with sticker shock at each new place. But the staggering prices weren’t what stood out most that day — it was one of the first spots we saw in Noe Valley. An old Victorian flat, I was immediately charmed by the bay window and tall ceilings. Then, I opened what I assumed would be a hall closet door.</p>
<p>There sat a lonely pink toilet — the only thing in the narrow space. My confused reaction apparent, the real estate agent showing us around knew we weren’t from here and immediately said, “It’s a split bathroom.”</p>
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<p>More than five years later, I’ve seen countless split bathrooms at friends&#8217; homes, and most are just like the first one I saw — no sink, with the sink and shower in a separate room next door. The occasional “lucky few” have a small sink squeezed in a corner or mounted on a wall, but that was likely an addition to the tiny room in later years, said Bonnie Spindler, a real estate agent and &#8220;the Victorian Specialist&#8221; of San Francisco.</p>
<p>When most homes in the Victorian era were constructed, there was no toilet in the home at all, since most people would have still used an outhouse and/or chamber pots. Indoor <a class="wpil_keyword_link" href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/bay-spaces-150-yr-outdated-water-pipe-drawback-nbc-bay-space/"   title="plumbing" data-wpil-keyword-link="linked">plumbing</a> was just becoming common, so Bay Area residents may have had their sinks and tubs installed years before they had added an indoor toilet. Once they were able to add the toilet, it may have made more sense to convert a nearby closet into a toilet room rather than build into the existing bathroom.</p>
<p>More likely, though, it stemmed from the Victorian era’s new obsession with hygiene. “The idea was separating where you clean yourself and where you defecate,” Spindler said. “They would have thought it was highly uncleanly to defecate in the same room you take a bath in and shave in.”</p>
<p><img decoding="async" title="Article Image" alt="A split bathroom in North Beach." loading="lazy" src="data:image/jpeg;base64,/9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAQEBLAEsAAD/2wBDAA0JCgsKCA0LCgsODg0PEyAVExISEyccHhcgLikxMC4pLSwzOko+MzZGNywtQFdBRkxOUlNSMj5aYVpQYEpRUk//2wBDAQ4ODhMREyYVFSZPNS01T09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT0//wAARCAAFAAgDASIAAhEBAxEB/8QAFQABAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAP/xAAdEAABBQADAQAAAAAAAAAAAAABAAIDBBESITGR/8QAFQEBAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAwT/xAAXEQADAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAQIx/9oADAMBAAIRAxEAPwCEhlstsMdI0ZWhIPAHNcR199REU7prBplPT//Z" style="aspect-ratio:3 / 2" class="x100 y100 opc bgpc ofcv bgscv block mnh0px fill"/><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs14 c-gray700 ya block"><span></p>
<p>A split bathroom in North Beach.</p>
<p></span></span><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs13 c-gray600 block mt2 mr48"><span>Ben Ramirez</span></span></p>
<p>Spindler also said most toilets at the time didn’t have what are called “backflow preventers,” which block sewage from coming back up through the toilet and spilling onto the floor. Thus, any incidents would have been confined to the small room. She said the Victorians are also responsible for the proliferation of tile in bathrooms and kitchens, since it’s an easy material to clean.</p>
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<p>Rob Thomson, president of the Victorian Alliance of San Francisco, said Victorian era residents were eager adopters of new technology, and in the residential sphere there was no bigger story in the second half of the 19th century than indoor plumbing. “This trend in residential buildings was given a boost by the advent of consistent municipal water supplies and sewage systems — these were the fiber data networks of the 1870s,” he said.</p>
<p>Open, multiuse floor plans like the ones common today were unheard of. “Inside homes, Victorian and Edwardian San Franciscans were very conscious of separating space for different uses and users: double parlors, separate stairs and entries for servants, formal dining rooms all had their particular role in both architecture and society,” Thomson said.</p>
<p>While split bathrooms are particularly common in San Francisco, they can also be found everywhere from Europe to Australia.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" title="Article Image" alt="Victorian and Edwardian San Franciscans were very conscious of separating space for different uses. The split bathroom is a good example of that." loading="lazy" src="data:image/jpeg;base64,/9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAQEASABIAAD/2wBDAA0JCgsKCA0LCgsODg0PEyAVExISEyccHhcgLikxMC4pLSwzOko+MzZGNywtQFdBRkxOUlNSMj5aYVpQYEpRUk//2wBDAQ4ODhMREyYVFSZPNS01T09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT0//wAARCAAFAAgDASIAAhEBAxEB/8QAFQABAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAT/xAAcEAADAAEFAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAQIDBAUREnH/xAAUAQEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAF/8QAFxEAAwEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAMyBP/aAAwDAQACEQMRAD8Alw6nJO9q2+XU9H4AATTYkiT/2Q==" style="aspect-ratio:3 / 2" class="x100 y100 opc bgpc ofcv bgscv block mnh0px fill"/><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs14 c-gray700 ya block"><span></p>
<p>Victorian and Edwardian San Franciscans were very conscious of separating space for different uses. The split bathroom is a good example of that.</p>
<p></span></span><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs13 c-gray600 block mt2 mr48"><span>Caroline Smith</span></span></p>
<p>Modern home design has its own version of the split bath in the form of a water closet, though those are usually contained within a larger bathroom. Many San Francisco home owners opt to convert split bathrooms into one large bathroom during a renovation, Spindler said.</p>
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<p>But more than a hundred years later, many homeowners and landlords alike with these old San Francisco homes have chosen to keep the split bath setup simply because it’s often more convenient for families or roommates.</p>
<p>Keeping a keg in the tub is also a great pro to split bathrooms.</p>
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<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/the-story-behind-why-there-are-such-a-lot-of-break-up-loos-in-sf/">The story behind why there are such a lot of break up loos in SF</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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		<title>The story behind the sink within the bed room of your condominium and why so many SF houses have them</title>
		<link>https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/the-story-behind-the-sink-within-the-bed-room-of-your-condominium-and-why-so-many-sf-houses-have-them/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Daily SF News]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 09 Dec 2023 06:31:50 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Plumbing]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Bedroom]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/?p=41218</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>A sink hidden within a closet in the historic Haas-Lilienthal House in San Francisco.  Pam Larson / Haas-Lilienthal House Searching for a new San Francisco apartment is always an adventure. One showing you might encounter a mysterious kitchen cabinet with its own window, while in another you might discover a random sink in the corner &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/the-story-behind-the-sink-within-the-bed-room-of-your-condominium-and-why-so-many-sf-houses-have-them/">The story behind the sink within the bed room of your condominium and why so many SF houses have them</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs14 c-gray700 ya block"><span></p>
<p>A sink hidden within a closet in the historic Haas-Lilienthal House in San Francisco. </p>
<p></span></span><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs13 c-gray600 block mt2 mr48"><span>Pam Larson / Haas-Lilienthal House</span></span></p>
<p>Searching for a new San Francisco apartment is always an adventure. One showing you might encounter a mysterious kitchen cabinet with its own window, while in another you might discover a random sink in the corner of a bedroom.</p>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://cdn-channels-pixel.ex.co/events/0012000001fxZm9AAE?integrationType=DEFAULT&amp;template=design%2Farticle%2Fplatypus_two_column.tpl" alt="" class="x1px y1px vh abs" aria-hidden="true" width="1" height="1"/></p>
<p>It may seem a little dorm room-esque to have a sink in your bedroom, but it was actually quite common during the Victorian era in San Francisco. Before 1900, indoor <a class="wpil_keyword_link" href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/bay-spaces-150-yr-outdated-water-pipe-drawback-nbc-bay-space/"   title="plumbing" data-wpil-keyword-link="linked">plumbing</a> was still a luxury, and most residents would have been using buckets to bring water in from outdoor wells to wash themselves and any household items. But as the modern innovation of indoor water became more accessible, it became a customary addition to homes as soon as a homeowner could afford it. If the house was originally built without indoor plumbing, it was the first renovation feature on a homeowner’s list. </p>
<p>Even if indoor plumbing was integrated into these early homes, they typically only had one full bathroom in the house, so the sinks were also a convenient way to be able to clean up in your private space while someone else was using the main bathroom. </p>
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<p>“Indoor residential plumbing was one of the great technological marvels of the Victorian age, so having sinks in bedrooms was quite a convenient amenity,” said Rob Thomson, president of the Victorian Alliance of San Francisco. “Think of it as akin to having an iPhone charger at your bedside today.”</p>
<p>If the sinks aren’t out in the open of a room, they may be hidden within a small closet. Most people didn’t have a lot of clothes back then, explains Bonnie Spindler, a real estate agent and &#8220;the Victorian Specialist&#8221; of San Francisco, so closets were used to conceal these types of amenities.</p>
<p>“Indoor plumbing was an innovation in the Victorian era,” said Pam Larson, San Francisco Heritage&#8217;s museum and docent coordinator. “In middle class homes, having a separate room for bathing was often a luxury. Bathroom sinks situated in bedrooms to serve as a washing station were common. For the staff bedrooms at the Haas-Lilienthal House, this was the case. Because most of the staff had access to one full bathroom, having a sink in their bedroom was a convenient feature.”</p>
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<p>The Haas-Lilienthal House was built in 1886 and is a San Francisco Designated Landmark and listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. It operates as a Victorian era home museum, which just reopened for tours, and is full of period furniture and artifacts. Larson said there used to be a total of five sinks in various bedrooms, but now only three remain.</p>
<p>But these weren’t just for the wealthy Victorians. Even middle class residents had them in their homes as soon as they could afford them, Spindler said. The science of germs had been picking up steam in the 19th century, and Victorians prioritized cleanliness in a way previous generations did not. </p>
<p><img decoding="async" title="Article Image" alt="Other Bay Area homes sometimes have sinks in the bedroom. Here, a home in San Pablo has a large sink in the master bedroom." loading="lazy" src="data:image/jpeg;base64,/9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAQEAYABgAAD/2wBDAA0JCgsKCA0LCgsODg0PEyAVExISEyccHhcgLikxMC4pLSwzOko+MzZGNywtQFdBRkxOUlNSMj5aYVpQYEpRUk//2wBDAQ4ODhMREyYVFSZPNS01T09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT09PT0//wAARCAAFAAgDASIAAhEBAxEB/8QAFQABAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAT/xAAbEAACAwADAAAAAAAAAAAAAAABAgADBUFRkf/EABQBAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAP/xAAWEQEBAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAABAAL/2gAMAwEAAhEDEQA/AIE2L78xK0Va2cMpYcAdexEQklyt/9k=" style="aspect-ratio:3 / 2" class="x100 y100 opc bgpc ofcv bgscv block mnh0px fill"/><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs14 c-gray700 ya block"><span></p>
<p>Other Bay Area homes sometimes have sinks in the bedroom. Here, a home in San Pablo has a large sink in the master bedroom.</p>
<p></span></span><span class="ff-fontG fw-fontG fs-fontG lh12 fs13 c-gray600 block mt2 mr48"><span>San Francisco Chronicle/Hearst via Getty Images</span></span></p>
<p>David Parry, a real estate agent with Sotheby’s International Realty, hypothesized that monthly water usage cost may have played a part in these extra sinks as well. He referenced two water applications, one from 1891 and another from 1904, where you can see the price difference between different types of water appliances. In one application, the cost of a wash basin was only $0.05 per month, while a toilet was $0.22 per month and a bathtub was $0.32 per month.</p>
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<p>Still, he believes the singular full bathroom was the primary driver. “Typically, in the Victorian-era homes there was only one bathroom on the bedroom level, accessed from the hallway, so the convenience of being able to privately wash one’s face before getting into bed, without going out into the hall, must have played a part in the design,” Parry said. </p>
<p>Even with the modern addition of multiple bathrooms in a home, Spindler has seen plenty of Victorian remodels, and she said she doesn’t think she’s ever seen anyone remove the sinks from the bedrooms if they’re still intact. Most people, especially families, see the convenience of having an extra sink, even if it’s just to wash a child’s paintbrushes in. </p>
<p>Often, if they have been removed by a previous owner, she said, you can still see the water pipes poking out of the walls. “Most people see [the sinks] and think they’re great,” Spindler said. “But by the time split baths came on the scene, you don’t see the sinks in homes much anymore.”</p>
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<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/the-story-behind-the-sink-within-the-bed-room-of-your-condominium-and-why-so-many-sf-houses-have-them/">The story behind the sink within the bed room of your condominium and why so many SF houses have them</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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		<title>Actor in Broadway Reveals ‘West Aspect Story’ and Extra – The Hollywood Reporter</title>
		<link>https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/actor-in-broadway-reveals-west-aspect-story-and-extra-the-hollywood-reporter/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Nov 2023 18:51:45 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/?p=39937</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Harvey Evans in 2017 Walter McBride/Getty Images Harvey Evans, an actor, singer and dancer who had a knack for landing roles in the original Broadway productions of such classics as West Side Story, Follies, Hello, Dolly! and Gypsy, has died. He was 80. Evans died Christmas Eve at the Actors Fund Home in Englewood, New &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/actor-in-broadway-reveals-west-aspect-story-and-extra-the-hollywood-reporter/">Actor in Broadway Reveals ‘West Aspect Story’ and Extra – The Hollywood Reporter</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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<p>	<img class="i-amphtml-fill-content i-amphtml-replaced-content" decoding="async" alt="Harvey Evans in 2017" src="https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/harveyevans.jpg?w=1024" srcset="https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/harveyevans.jpg 1296w, https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/harveyevans.jpg?resize=125,70 125w, https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/harveyevans.jpg?resize=200,113 200w, https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/harveyevans.jpg?resize=295,166 295w, https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/harveyevans.jpg?resize=435,245 435w, https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/harveyevans.jpg?resize=1000,563 1000w, https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/harveyevans.jpg?resize=681,383 681w, https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/harveyevans.jpg?resize=450,253 450w" sizes="(min-width: 87.5rem) 1000px, (min-width: 78.75rem) 681px, (min-width: 48rem) 450px, (max-width: 48rem) 250px"/></p>
<p>					<span class="image-caption"></p>
<p>Harvey Evans in 2017</p>
<p>			</span><br />
				<span class="image-credit" title="Walter McBride/Getty Images">Walter McBride/Getty Images</span>	</p>
<p class="p1">Harvey Evans, an actor, singer and dancer who had a knack for landing roles in the original Broadway productions of such classics as West Side Story, Follies, Hello, Dolly! and Gypsy, has died. He was 80.</p>
<p class="p1">Evans died Christmas Eve at the Actors Fund Home in Englewood, New Jersey, said Lawrence Leritz, a friend and Broadway actor, dancer, singer, producer and director. “He was dearly loved by the Broadway community. Very kind, embracing, funny and always had a smile on his face. I can never remember not being hugged by this loving man,” Leritz said.</p>
<p class="p1">Evans was rarely cast in leading Broadway roles but found a place in timeless shows. He starred opposite Angela Lansbury in Anyone Can Whistle and played Barnaby in Hello, Dolly! opposite Carol Channing, then Betty Grable and then Eve Arden.</p>
<p class="p1">“When I look back,” Evans told Playbill in 2007, “I think I’ve had some kind of angel on my shoulder, leading me toward the best shows of Broadway’s golden years. I didn’t pick and choose them — they just came around that way.”</p>
<p class="p1">Evans, who was born Harvey Hohnecker, grew up in Cincinnati and fell in love with musical theater after seeing a touring production of “Song of Norway.” “My entire childhood was spent waiting to graduate from high school so I could go to New York and be in a Broadway show,” he told Playbill.</p>
<p class="p1">Evans made it to New York in 1955 and would become friendly with choreographers Bob Fosse and Jerome Robbins. Evans’ first musical as a dancer on Broadway was New Girl in Town, which starred Gwen Verdon and was choreographed by Fosse.</p>
<p class="p1">He changed his name while filming a small role in 1962’s Experiment in Terror directed by Blake Edwards and starring Glenn Ford and Lee Remick. He and fellow actress Taffy Paul decided to remake themselves — he became Evans and she became Stefanie Powers.</p>
<p class="p1">Evans also was cast by Fosse for Redhead, with Verdon, and the movie of The Pajama Game. Other highlights were starring on Broadway with Henry Fonda and Margaret Hamilton in a revival of Our Town in 1969 and being a standby for Jim Dale in Barnum in the early 1980s. He was a chimney sweep when Julie Andrews immortalized Mary Poppins on film in 1964.</p>
<p class="p1">“I’ve had my name above the title and I’ve had it way down low,” he told Playbill. “It doesn’t matter to me. It’s just wonderful to be part of this community.”</p>
<p class="p1">His later Broadway credits include the mid-1990s revival of Sunset Boulevard, The Scarlet Pimpernel and as an understudy in Oklahoma! in 2002. He also snagged a cameo in the film Enchanted with Amy Adams in 2007. He was on Broadway in the original West Side Story and later in the 1961 film version.</p>
<p class="p1">“Really hard to put into words what Harvey Evans meant to me,” said Tony Yazbeck on Twitter. “He was kindness personified. So funny and supportive. He came to every show I ever did and inspired me to keep going! A true triple threat who’s heart was as big as his incredible career.”</p>
<p class="p1">Bebe Neuwirth added: “One of the kindest, most delightful, loveliest gentlemen I’ve ever had the blessing to know.” Betty Buckley also sent her regards: “With so much love.”</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/actor-in-broadway-reveals-west-aspect-story-and-extra-the-hollywood-reporter/">Actor in Broadway Reveals ‘West Aspect Story’ and Extra – The Hollywood Reporter</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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		<title>The within story of how the navy spent billions on the ‘little crappy ship’</title>
		<link>https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/the-within-story-of-how-the-navy-spent-billions-on-the-little-crappy-ship/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 10 Sep 2023 09:48:25 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>This story was originally published by ProPublica. In July 2016, warships from more than two dozen nations gathered off the coasts of Hawaii and Southern California to join the United States in the world’s largest naval exercise. The United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Japan, South Korea and others sent hundreds of destroyers, aircraft carriers and warplanes. &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/the-within-story-of-how-the-navy-spent-billions-on-the-little-crappy-ship/">The within story of how the navy spent billions on the ‘little crappy ship’</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p>
<p>This story was originally published by  ProPublica.</p>
<p>In July 2016, warships from more than two dozen nations gathered off the coasts of Hawaii and Southern California to join the United States in the world’s largest naval exercise. The United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Japan, South Korea and others sent hundreds of destroyers, aircraft carriers and warplanes. They streamed in long lines across the ocean, symbols of power and prestige.</p>
<p>The USS Freedom had its own special place within the armada. It was one of a new class of vessels known as littoral combat ships. The U.S. Navy had billed them as technical marvels — small, fast and light, able to combat enemies at sea, hunt mines and sink submarines.</p>
<p>In reality, the LCS was well on the way to becoming one of the worst boondoggles in the military’s long history of buying overpriced and underperforming weapons systems. Two of the $500 million ships had suffered embarrassing breakdowns in previous months. The Freedom’s performance during the exercise, showing off its ability to destroy underwater mines, was meant to rejuvenate the ships’ record on the world stage. The ship was historically important too; it was the first LCS built, the first in the water, commissioned just eight years prior.</p>
<p>But like the LCS program’s reputation, the Freedom was in bad shape. Dozens of pieces of equipment on board were undergoing repairs. Training crews for the new class of ships had proven more difficult than anticipated. The sailors aboard the Freedom had not passed an exam demonstrating their ability to operate some of the ship’s most important systems.</p>
<p>As the day to launch approached, the pressure mounted. Top officers visited the ship repeatedly. The Freedom’s sailors understood that theirs was a “no fail mission” with “‘no appetite’ to remain in port,” according to Navy documents obtained by ProPublica.</p>
<p>The Freedom’s Capt. Michael Wohnhaas consulted with his officers. Despite crippling problems that had left one of the ship’s engines inoperable, he and his superiors decided the vessel could rely on its three others for the exercise.</p>
<p>The Freedom completed its mission, but the accomplishment proved hollow. Five days after the ship returned to port, a maintenance check revealed that the faltering engine had suffered “galloping corrosion” from saltwater during the exercise. A sailor described the engine room as “a horror show” with rust eating away at the machinery. One of the Navy’s newest ships would spend the next two years undergoing repairs at a cost of millions.</p>
<p>It took investigators months to unravel the mystery of the engine’s breakdown. But this much was clear at the outset: The Freedom’s collapse was another unmistakable sign that the Navy had spent billions of dollars and more than a decade on warships with rampant and crippling flaws.</p>
<p>The ongoing problems with the LCS have been well documented for years, in news articles, government reports and congressional hearings. Each ship ultimately cost more than twice the original estimate. Worse, they were hobbled by an array of mechanical failures and were never able to carry out the missions envisaged by their champions.</p>
<p>ProPublica set out to trace how ships with such obvious shortcomings received support from Navy leadership for nearly two decades. We reviewed thousands of pages of public records and tracked down naval and shipbuilding insiders involved at every stage of construction.</p>
<p>Our examination revealed new details on why the LCS never delivered on its promises. Top Navy leaders repeatedly dismissed or ignored warnings about the ships’ flaws. One Navy secretary and his allies in Congress fought to build more of the ships even as they broke down at sea and their weapons systems failed. Staunch advocates in the Navy circumvented checks meant to ensure that ships that cost billions can do what they are supposed to do.</p>
<p>Contractors who stood to profit spent millions lobbying Congress, whose members, in turn, fought to build more ships in their home districts than the Navy wanted. Scores of frustrated sailors recall spending more time fixing the ships than sailing them.</p>
<p>Our findings echo the conclusions of a half-century of internal and external critiques of America’s process for building new weapons systems. The saga of the LCS is a vivid illustration of how Congress, the Pentagon and defense contractors can work in concert — and often against the good of the taxpayers and America’s security — to spawn what President Dwight D. Eisenhower described in his farewell address as the “military industrial complex.”</p>
<p>“There is a lot of money flowing through this vast ecosystem, and somehow the only thing all these people can agree on is more, more, more,” said Lyle Goldstein, a former professor at the U.S. Naval War College who is now investigating the costs of war at Brown University. “Unfortunately, I just think it might be in the nature of our system.”</p>
<p>This year, the Defense Department asked Congress to approve a staggering $842 billion — nearly half of the federal government’s discretionary spending — to keep America safe in what the Pentagon says is an ever more perilous world. As House and Senate leaders negotiate the final number, it is unlikely they will spend much time discussing ways to prevent future debacles like the LCS.</p>
<p>Such a conversation would cover hundreds of billions of misspent taxpayer money on projects from nearly every branch of the military: The F-35 fighter jet, deployed by the Navy, Marines and Air Force, is more than a decade late and $183 billion over budget. The Navy’s newest aircraft carrier, the Gerald R. Ford, cost $13 billion and has yet to prove it can reliably launch planes. And the Army’s Future Combat System was largely abandoned in 2009 after the military had dedicated more than $200 billion on a battlefield intelligence network meant to link troops, tanks and robots.</p>
<p>The LCS program offers another clear lesson, one seen in almost every infamous procurement disaster. Once a massive project gains momentum and defense contractors begin hiring, it is politically easier to throw good money after bad.</p>
<p>Stopping a weapons program in its tracks means people losing work and admitting publicly that enormous sums of taxpayer money have been wasted. In the case of the LCS, it took an array of naval leaders and two consecutive defense secretaries to finally stop the program. Yet even after the Navy said it only needed 32 littoral combat ships, far fewer than the more than 50 originally planned, members of Congress forced the Pentagon to buy three more.</p>
<p>Former Lt. Renaldo Rodgers remembered laboring in San Diego from sunrise to sunset for months to ready the Freedom for a 2012 trial mission to San Francisco, only to have the ship break down during pretrial tests. Rodgers initially thought the futuristic ship looked like something out of “Star Trek.” But he soon learned it was no Starship Enterprise. It became the laughingstock of the waterfront, with other sailors deriding it as “Dry Dock One,” because it so rarely left port.</p>
<p>“It sucks,” he said. The LCS was “a missed opportunity.”</p>
<p>The Navy has tried to retire many of the littoral combat ships years before they reach their expected lifespan. Ships designed to last 25 years are being mothballed after seeing less than a decade of service.</p>
<p>In response to questions, the Navy acknowledged the LCS was not suitable for fighting peer competitors such as China. The LCS “does not provide the lethality or survivability needed in a high-end fight.”</p>
<p>“The Navy needs a more ready, capable, and lethal fleet more than a bigger fleet that’s less ready, less capable, and less lethal,” the statement read, saying the money would be better spent on higher-priority alternatives.</p>
<p>The cost of the program has gnawed at John Pendleton, who for years was a top military analyst at the Government Accountability Office and has studied the rise and fall of the LCS as closely as anyone in Washington.</p>
<p>Now retired, but unable to shake what he views as one of the most wasteful projects he’d encountered in his nearly 35-year career, Pendleton reviewed budgetary documents and GAO reports for ProPublica going back decades. His conclusion: The lifetime cost of the LCS class may reach $100 billion or more.</p>
<p>“In the end,” he said, “the taxpayers get fewer than 30 limited-survivability, single-mission ships.”</p>
<p>Pendleton is hardly alone in his assessment. Many regard the tortured path of the LCS as evidence of a damaging strain of hubris that runs rampant in the world of military innovation.</p>
<p>“It’s this zombie program phenomenon where everybody knows deep down we are going in the wrong direction,” said Dan Grazier, a former Marine Corps captain, who now works on Pentagon reform for the nonprofit Project on Government Oversight. “But because so much money is involved and so much political capital is invested, you can’t stop the train until the problems are so overwhelming that no one can feign support for it.”</p>
<p>The two narratives of the ship — unstoppable in Congress, imperiled at sea — intertwined alarmingly during one 10-month stretch beginning in December 2015. During that period, five of the vessels broke down across the globe, each illuminating a new set of problems and effectively proving the critics right.</p>
<p>The Freedom was the third ship to fail. Captured in a Navy investigation more than 600 pages long, the incident stands out as a particularly devastating and detailed example of the Navy’s plight.</p>
<h3 class="c7">An Admiral’s Vision</h3>
<p>In 2002, Adm. Vernon Clark stared down from the deck of a Danish warship at a pier in Denmark and watched a demonstration that would shape the future of the U.S. Navy.</p>
<p>A large deck gun sat below. On the orders of a Danish navy official, a crane hoisted it off the pier and installed it on the ship. Within 40 minutes, sailors were rotating the weapon to prepare it for operation.</p>
<p>No American ship could swap weapons on and off deck like that. But the Danes made reconfiguring a vessel to carry out different missions look easy. Clark, the head of the U.S. Navy at the time, marveled at the technology.</p>
<p>“This is it. Of course, this is it,” Clark remembered telling himself. “I didn’t know that they could do that.”</p>
<p>For Clark, the Danish demonstration crystalized his idea for a new ship that would be different from anything the Navy had done before. It would be small, relatively lightly armed and operated by about 40 sailors — far less than the average warship crew size. The weapons systems would not be permanently installed.</p>
<p>Instead, he envisioned a sort of Swiss army knife for the Navy. Armed with one set of weaponry, it could hunt and destroy submarines. But if the threat shifted, it could be quickly outfitted to detect and clear underwater mines or to fight other warships.</p>
<p>As Clark envisaged it, the new ships could be deployed in coastal, or littoral, waters, where the Navy needed to expand its presence around the world: in the Persian Gulf to participate in the war in Iraq, in the Caribbean to track down gunrunners and in Southeast Asia to help smaller allied navies. They would be one of the fastest warships in the world — able to fight near shore, outrun larger vessels or hunt down the small ones increasingly popular with foes like Iran. The ships would be built quickly, in large numbers and at low cost.</p>
<p>The first red flags emerged here, at the conception of the LCS. As Clark began sharing his vision, concerns began to brew among Navy shipbuilding experts, who feared it was overly ambitious and technologically infeasible. Clark was unbowed.</p>
<p>He was an unlikely candidate to begin a revolution in shipbuilding. With an undergraduate degree from Evangel College, a small Christian school in Missouri, and an MBA from the University of Arkansas, he hardly fit the mold of a prototypical chief of naval operations who was groomed for leadership from his earliest days at the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland.</p>
<p>A self-professed “radical,” at times irreverent and impassioned, he wanted to run the Navy like a business, streamlining training, rooting out misspent dollars, retaining sailors who shined and getting rid of those who did not.</p>
<p>He believed the Navy needed a more cost-effective and technologically advanced fleet. Many of the Navy’s ships had been built during the Cold War. Massive carriers, destroyers, battleships and cruisers were facing retirement, in part because updating them with modern technology was prohibitively expensive, Clark said.</p>
<p>In keeping with his business background, Clark wanted as few people on the new ships as possible. “What I really want is an unmanned ship that’s got R2-D2 in it,” he said, recalling his thinking at the time.</p>
<p>Doubt dogged Clark’s dream from the start. Congress agreed to begin developing the ship in 2003 — despite a House Appropriations Committee report that warned that there was “no ‘road map’ of how the Navy will achieve the system required.”</p>
<p>One former admiral who worked on plans for the ship said Clark’s insistence on speed — up to 45 knots, or about 50 miles per hour — created immediate problems. A ship cannot go that fast for very long without running out of gas, which meant it could never stray far from its fuel supply. Its small size — many in the Navy joked that LCS stood for Little Crappy Ship — limited the weapons it could carry.</p>
<p>The former admiral said he raised concerns with his superiors but wished he had been more vocal. “As a subordinate naval officer, when your boss tells you, ‘Here’s a shovel, go dig the hole,’ you go dig the hole.”</p>
<p>The Navy pushed ahead. In May 2004, it awarded contracts to two teams of defense contractors to build up to two prototypes, each of their own design.</p>
<p>Both teams had lobbied heavily to win the contracts. Lockheed Martin, which partnered with the Marinette Marine shipyard in Wisconsin, plastered the Washington, D.C., Metro system with advertisements extolling the ability of its proposed ship.</p>
<p>The other team, a joint venture between General Dynamics and Australian shipbuilder Austal, planned to build its version at a shipyard in Alabama.</p>
<p>In response to the Navy’s goals, the contractors both based their original ship designs partly on high-speed ferries for cars or passengers, an unusual choice for a vessel meant for war not transportation.</p>
<p>With an emphasis on speed and dexterity, the ships were not designed to withstand much damage. Clark saw them fighting under the protection of larger, more lethal ships. To him, investing too much in protecting the ship with extensive armor would make it too heavy to operate near shore.</p>
<p>“Show me a ship that can take a direct hit with today’s modern weaponry and survive,” he said. “Why spend all this money pretending?”</p>
<p>This argument disquieted lawmakers. Toward the end of Clark’s tenure, members of Congress began to ask whether this meant the Navy had deemed LCS sailors expendable.</p>
<p>After Clark left the Navy in July 2005, the Navy responded to the concerns, redrawing the blueprints for the ships as they were being built to better protect sailors.</p>
<p>Costs began to rise dramatically. The ships were originally supposed to cost no more than $220 million dollars each, which had helped sell them to Congress in the first place. But the final price tag rose to about $500 million each.</p>
<p>Robert Work, a former deputy defense secretary who became a key proponent of the ship, said many in the Navy thought the initial estimate was unrealistic. “The Navy never believed it, at least the people who had to build the ship,” he said.</p>
<p>Despite the rising costs, the LCS soon gained a new champion so devoted to its construction that he led a yearslong campaign to resist efforts by two secretaries of defense to scale back the program.</p>
<h3 class="c7">A “Foreseeable” Disaster</h3>
<p>On the morning of Nov. 23, 2015, the USS Milwaukee set out across the frigid waters of the Great Lakes for its maiden voyage. The cost overruns had made headlines, but with the fifth ship in the water, Navy officials were hoping the vessel’s performance would lessen the growing doubts about the project.</p>
<p>The Navy planned to sail the Milwaukee from the shipyard on the shores of Lake Michigan in Marinette, Wisconsin, to its new home port of San Diego. From there, it would eventually join its sister ship, the USS Fort Worth, in helping to counter the Chinese navy’s expanding presence in the Western Pacific.</p>
<p>In a press tour days before the launch, Cmdr. Kendall Bridgewater evinced confidence, proclaiming that the enemy “would be hard pressed to find a vessel that could come up against us.”</p>
<p>But the ship wouldn’t need a fight to suffer its first defeat. Its worst enemy would be its own engine.</p>
<p>On Dec. 11, about three weeks into the two-month journey, a software failure severely damaged the Milwaukee’s combining gear — a complex mechanism that connects the ship’s diesel engines and its gas turbines to the propulsion shafts, producing the power necessary for it to reach top speeds.</p>
<p>A Navy salvage ship had to tow it some 40 miles for repairs at a base near Norfolk, Virginia. The ship hadn’t made it halfway down the East Coast — let alone to the South China Sea — before breaking down. If the Milwaukee were a brand new car, this would be the equivalent of stalling on its way out of the dealership.</p>
<p>Some former officers look back on the breakdown and those that followed as a clear violation of a cardinal principle in Navy shipbuilding: to “buy a few and test a lot.” But with the LCS, the Navy was doing the opposite. Commanders were learning about the flaws of the ships as they were being deployed.</p>
<p>“This is a totally foreseeable outcome,” said Jay Bynum, a former rear admiral who served as an assistant to the vice chief of naval operations as the ships were entering the fleet. “Just think about it, Toyota checks out all of this before the car hits the showroom floor. What if the engineering guys there said, ‘Well, we think this is how the engine will work, but let’s just start selling them.’”</p>
<h3 class="c7">“Do We Want This Ship to Survive?”</h3>
<p>On a breezy Friday in March 2011, Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus addressed a crowd of sharp-dressed politicians and begrimed workers gathered at a shipyard in Mobile, Alabama.</p>
<p>Mabus, tall and dapper, announced the names for two of the Navy’s newest littoral combat ships. One would be called the USS Jackson — a reference to the capital of his home state, Mississippi.</p>
<p>As he looked out at the waters of Mobile Bay, Mabus lauded the new class of ships that had emerged from Clark’s vision a decade before.</p>
<p>“It’s a drug runner’s worst nightmare, it’s a submarine’s worst nightmare,” he declared, speaking in his soft Southern drawl. “It’s anybody who wants to do harm to the United States of America or the United States Navy, it’s their worst nightmare.”</p>
<p>In fact, the LCS was on its way to becoming one of the Navy’s worst nightmares — and Mabus was its biggest cheerleader.</p>
<p>Better known for his political acumen than his military experience, Mabus served three years in the Navy in the early ’70s, including time at sea as a lieutenant junior grade on board the USS Little Rock.</p>
<p>Afterward, he rose through Democratic ranks to become governor of Mississippi, an ambassador to Saudi Arabia and eventually the longest-serving Navy secretary since World War I.</p>
<p>During his tenure as the Navy’s civilian leader, he put his stamp on the service by pursuing a range of progressive policies including gender integration and the use of renewable fuels. He also took advantage of a unique perk: tossing out the ceremonial first pitch at major league stadiums across the country.</p>
<p>His most transformative view on U.S. military strategy was his belief in the need for more ships.</p>
<p>The fleet had shrunk to less than half the 600 it wielded toward the end of the Cold War. China was rapidly expanding its navy and Russia was investing heavily in new submarines.</p>
<p>Mabus, who became secretary in 2009, pursued a plan that would make him one of the Navy’s most prodigious shipbuilders.</p>
<p>In an interview with ProPublica, he reiterated the “sheer importance of numbers” for the fleet. He backed the LCS, he said, because it would help meet an array of the Navy’s needs as fast as possible.</p>
<p>Even as a growing number of senior officers began to criticize the ships, Mabus expanded the program, drawing on his political connections and savvy dealmaking to defend the LCS against powerful opponents on the Hill and in the Pentagon.</p>
<p>Mabus acknowledged that his support of the LCS project put him at odds with some of the Navy’s top officers and the nation’s civilian military leadership. He recalled resistance from what he dubbed the “Alumni Association,” powerful former Navy officers who he said reflexively and unfairly disliked the ship because it was so different from anything else the Navy had built. For Mabus, his key role as civilian leader of a tradition-bound military service was overcoming its hostility to change and innovation.</p>
<p>Chief among the old-school critics, he said, was Sen. John McCain, a Republican from Arizona and decorated Navy veteran whose father and paternal grandfather had both been Navy admirals. He, along with Sen. Carl Levin, a Michigan Democrat, had emerged as skeptics of the LCS as leaders of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Both were alarmed by the costs, which had soared to more than $750 million apiece for the initial ships.</p>
<p>In response to such concerns, the Navy lowered the price by pitting the two teams of contractors against each other in a bidding war. Austal and Lockheed Martin turned in two different ship designs with similar price tags. Navy leaders dithered over which to select.</p>
<p>In the fall of 2010, Work, the Navy undersecretary at the time, said Mabus gathered senior naval leaders together to ask a blunt question: “Do we want this ship to survive?”</p>
<p>When the group answered yes, Mabus proposed a politically adroit solution: The Navy would select both companies to build the new ships in two shipyards, one in Alabama and one in Wisconsin.</p>
<p>Mabus calculated that he would win the support of congressional delegations from both places by delivering thousands of jobs and millions in spending to each, Work recalled. Spreading the wealth would increase the ships’ chances of survival. But it would also make the program harder to kill when problems arose.</p>
<p>“He was looking at the problem in a different way than we were looking at it because he was a professional politician,” Work said.</p>
<p>Mabus’ plan concerned some Navy leaders. The Austal ship, which was the basis for the Independence class, would be an aluminum trimaran — a ship with three hulls. The Lockheed Martin ship, which formed the basis for the Freedom class, would be a more conventional monohull forged of steel. The radically different designs meant that the ships could not trade parts or sailors, making them more expensive to maintain and crew. In addition, the contracts called for the contractors to build a total of 20 vessels, a large commitment for a relatively unproven warship.</p>
<p>But Mabus and his team argued that those additional costs would be dwarfed by the savings the Navy would enjoy in the long run — one top official found that the Navy would save $2.9 billion by awarding long-term contracts to both companies.</p>
<p>To Mabus, it was a win-win for all involved: each ship had its own benefits, taxpayers would get a better price, the Navy would get more ships faster and the shipyards would get more jobs.</p>
<p>He told ProPublica that keeping the shipyards active was always a “consideration, but it wasn’t the main driver” behind the decision. The real incentive, he said, was price, not politics.</p>
<p>But the political payoff soon became evident.</p>
<p>McCain held a hearing, where he excoriated the Navy. “The story of this ship is one that makes me ashamed and embarrassed as a former Navy person and as a person who’s responsible to the taxpayers of my state,” he said. (McCain died in 2018.)</p>
<p>But in a last-minute budget bill to keep the government open in late December, Sen. Richard Shelby, the Alabama Republican, inserted language to buy ships from both shipyards.</p>
<p>“He made sure it happened,” a Shelby spokesman said at the time.</p>
<p>And Levin, the Michigan Democrat once critical of the ships, now supported them. The Marinette shipyard is just over the Michigan border in Wisconsin. Levin called the plan to build 10 ships there “a major boost for the region’s economy” and applauded the Navy in its efforts to bring costs down. (Levin died in 2021).</p>
<p>As one former vice admiral put it, “politics is king in the shipbuilding business.”</p>
<h3 class="c7">“We Ask for Help, but There Isn’t Enough”</h3>
<p>Just a month after the USS Milwaukee stalled in Virginia, the ship it was supposed to join in the South China Sea suffered its own embarrassing breakdown.</p>
<p>The USS Fort Worth was nearing the end of an otherwise successful deployment. It had helped with a search-and-rescue operation following an Indonesian commercial plane crash and participated in joint exercises with several allied navies.</p>
<p>But the Navy had decided to frequently rotate the small LCS crews in order to reduce burnout and, in November 2015, a new, inexperienced crew took over.</p>
<p>Even the commanding officer, Michael Atwell, had “few opportunities to gain valuable at sea experience” before his deployment, according to a later Navy investigation.</p>
<p>On Jan. 5, hundreds of gallons of fuel spilled into the ship’s main machinery room. The sailors had to spray chemical foam on the fuel to prevent it from catching fire. Then, in grueling, filthy shifts, they took turns crawling into the tight compartment to clean it up with rags and pumps.</p>
<p>The day after the spill, the Fort Worth pulled into a port in Singapore for a week of scheduled maintenance.</p>
<p>There it became clear that the ship had been “ridden hard,” according to officers interviewed in the Navy investigation. Leaks had sprung out of various parts, the engines were in bad shape, the electric generators needed work and the crew was exhausted. There was “no break, no reprieve, just increasing daily tasking,” one sailor said of their time on board.</p>
<p>The ship’s executive officer, the second in command, complained of a lack of support from superiors.</p>
<p>“We ask for help, but there isn’t enough,” he said, adding that he was told “they don’t have the bodies.”</p>
<p>The ship was originally supposed to leave by Jan. 12 for a “high visibility” port visit in Hong Kong. Atwell and his executive officer described a “tremendous amount of pressure” to make it happen, according to the Navy investigation.</p>
<p>The crew took shortcuts as it scrambled to test the engine. One of the sailors in charge of starting it skipped a routine step, failing to properly lubricate the combining gears.</p>
<p>“I messed up everything because I was going too fast,” the sailor later explained.</p>
<p>The mistake damaged the ship’s combining gear, forcing it to sit for seven months while waiting on replacement parts.</p>
<p>Navy leaders deemed Atwell unfit for command and removed him from his position.</p>
<p>Reached by phone, Atwell declined to comment.</p>
<p>The breakdowns on the Milwaukee and Fort Worth formed the beginning of a pattern that came to punctuate the life of the LCS program:</p>
<p>Ships were rushed to sea with faltering equipment. Shorthanded crews and captains without sufficient training or support tried to make them work. Breakdowns ensued. Then, the pressure to perform and restore the reputation of the program intensified anew and the cycle repeated itself.</p>
<p>Soon it would be the USS Freedom’s turn.</p>
<p>“We Were Essentially Telling a Lie”</p>
<p>In early 2012, sitting beneath the fluorescent glow of a Pentagon briefing room, Rear Adm. Sam Perez received a stern warning.</p>
<p>Weeks earlier, Chief of Naval Operations Jonathan Greenert had asked Perez to produce a report that would help him figure out how best to use the dozens of littoral combat ships that would be delivered to the Navy in the coming years.</p>
<p>The results were grim.</p>
<p>Discussing the details around a conference table, one fellow officer raised a finger to his own temple and mimicked a gun going off: Perez, he signaled, was about to risk career suicide.</p>
<p>It was a pattern with the LCS. Officers who criticized the ships faced consequences. An assignment to an undesirable post. Even dismissal.</p>
<p>Perez had found that the crews were too small. Some were stretched so thin that commanding officers had to spend time sweeping the decks, when they could have been studying intelligence reports and focusing on navigating the ship.</p>
<p>Contrary to what Clark observed in Denmark, the various weapons systems would not be easy to swap out. The Navy hadn’t factored in the weeks it could take for all the contractors, sailors and others who were needed to fly in from around the world to help outfit the vessels for different missions.</p>
<p>The two versions of the LCS complicated the problems. The designs were vastly different: They could exchange neither parts nor sailors. Perez and his staff worried that the ships would wind up sidelined because they lacked either equipment or trained crew members.</p>
<p>Comparing the LCS to the fleets of potential adversaries, Perez concluded that the vessels were only capable of fighting against lightly armed small, fast attack boats.</p>
<p>A fellow officer warned him that painting this kind of damning portrait for the highest ranking officer in the Navy, the chief naval officer, could hurt his career. At that point, the Navy had already committed to buying at least 20 more ships worth billions of dollars.</p>
<p>Perez had already shared some of his findings with Vice Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Mark Ferguson, the second highest ranking official in the Navy.</p>
<p>According to a former senior officer familiar with the events, Ferguson told Perez that he was looking at the vessels the wrong way. The small ship’s performance should be compared to a patrol boat.</p>
<p>Perez objected. Patrol boats aren’t supposed to clear mines, fight submarines or attack surface warships. They are far smaller, designed primarily for surveillance and interdiction.</p>
<p>The staffers worked on the comparison for about two weeks before they began “tearing each other up because we were essentially telling a lie,” according to the former officer who worked on the project. After a vote, they decided to stop comparing the LCS to a patrol boat.</p>
<p>Immediately after Perez delivered the report, he received a call from Bynum, a former rear admiral who at the time worked for Ferguson. Bynum told Perez to classify the report secret.</p>
<p>“That was absolutely my recommendation,” Bynum said in an interview with ProPublica. The report, he said, included a “host of vulnerabilities that didn’t need to be shared in the open press.”</p>
<p>At a PowerPoint presentation of his findings, Ferguson was curt. The former officer said Ferguson only allowed Perez about two words per slide, instructing him to flip to the next image before he could finish the last one.</p>
<p>In an interview with ProPublica, Ferguson did not recall asking Perez to compare the LCS to a patrol boat, but he acknowledged he was disappointed by key aspects of the report. Known to have a brusque style, he said he may well have sped through his presentation.</p>
<p>“I didn’t dispute any of the critique,” Ferguson said. “LCS had serious issues. But I wanted more in the way of recommendations on how to go forward; how to integrate them into the fleet.”</p>
<p>Soon after, Perez was assigned to the international relations department of the Navy. About a year after that, he became liaison to the State Department. Neither are regarded as ideal assignments for an admiral who had spent a career carrying out missions at sea.</p>
<p>Perez declined to comment.</p>
<p>For his part, Greenert said the idea that Perez was punished for speaking up was “nonsense.” On the contrary, he said it helped prompt him to increase the staffing and budget for LCS.</p>
<p>Around the same time, Greenert asked another senior officer, three-star Adm. Tom Copeman, to evaluate the LCS as part of a larger report on the surface fleet.</p>
<p>Copeman, then in charge of the fitness of the Navy’s vessels for combat, echoed concerns about the ship’s combat abilities. He thought the LCS was not lethal enough. The Navy’s contract called for 24 ships, with plans to build more than 50. Copeman recommended that the Navy halt building the ships after fulfilling the contract.</p>
<p>In March 2013, the memo was leaked to the trade press. Copeman immediately received calls from one of Mabus’ top staffers. He told Copeman that Mabus was extremely disappointed that Copeman had publicly disagreed with him. Copeman told him that the memo was never intended for public consumption and that he didn’t know how it got out.</p>
<p>As ProPublica previously reported, Greenert asked Copeman to retire early in mid-2013 after he had publicly expressed concerns over the fitness of the Navy’s ships for combat.</p>
<p>Greenert said Copeman was not asked to retire early. He said Copeman helped to convince him to ask for more weapons on the LCS.</p>
<p>Copeman declined to comment.</p>
<p>The Navy needed a lot more ships, and the LCS program was going to help provide them.</p>
<p>Freedom’s Troubles</p>
<p>About six months after two of its sister ships were docked for repairs, it was the Freedom’s turn in the spotlight.</p>
<p>But on July 7, 2016, the day before the ship was supposed to begin its part in the global Navy exercise, a string of equipment failures forced its captain into a bad spot: Wohnhaas had to submit a “fail to sail” message to his superiors — an embarrassing signal that the ship was not ready to go.</p>
<p>Working through the night, engineers on the Freedom eventually realized a part called a cannon plug used in the ship’s complicated propulsion system needed to be replaced. Without it, the ship couldn’t go anywhere.</p>
<p>They discovered one in Port Hueneme, about an hour north of Los Angeles. The engineer battled through five hours of Southern California traffic to pick it up and bring it back. The ship departed its port in San Diego a day late, then suffered another setback.</p>
<p>Three miles outside Mexican territorial waters, a loud metallic noise clanged out, startling the crew. Wohnhaas slowed the ship down but it began to drift. The crew dropped anchor to stop the ship and then steamed back to port.</p>
<p>He was sent back out to sea and senior officers later criticized him for holding up the mission.</p>
<p>Then on the evening of July 11, a leak erupted inside the main machinery room, the mechanical heart of the ship, spraying the electrical system with seawater. An inch or two pooled on the floor. If the leak wasn’t stopped immediately, it could cause short-circuiting or even a fire.</p>
<p>One sailor searched for the source of the leak by hand, burning his arm on a hot pipe before finding a hole seeping water. The sailors plugged the hole, but the repair backfired. It forced water to burst through a rubber seal that kept seawater out of the ship’s lubrication oil system. The water mixed with the oil, pumping a kind of emulsified goo through one of the ship’s four engines.</p>
<p>Two days later, the crew, again, had to return the ship to dock in San Diego. The engineer responsible for the ship while in port determined that a full repair of the engine could take as long as two weeks. Wohnhaas’ superiors rejected the idea. Time was running out for the ship to participate in the Rim of the Pacific exercise, or RIMPAC.</p>
<p>A Navy diesel engine expert proposed a procedure to block further corrosion of the engine with a special rinse.</p>
<p>A Navy expert in Philadelphia, referred to as “the guru” in the Navy investigation, approved that approach, which would allow the ship to get back to sea more quickly and complete the mission by using the ship’s three remaining engines.</p>
<p>Throughout the exercise, a parade of high-ranking Navy officials — including two rear admirals, a Marine Corps general, and a commodore — visited the vessel to turn up the heat on the crew and its captain.</p>
<p>They made clear that the Freedom’s participation in RIMPAC was “crucially important” to the entire LCS program and that there was “no appetite” for the Freedom to delay its departure. Freedom’s performance, they believed, would “perhaps modulate some of the program’s critics,” the investigation said.</p>
<p>Given what happened on the Fort Worth and the Milwaukee months earlier, top Navy leaders “felt pressure to deliver a ‘win’ for the program,” according to the investigation, which called the pressure on Wohnhaas “severe.”</p>
<p>One senior officer invoked the commander of the Pacific Fleet, Adm. Scott Swift, as wanting to use the region as a “testing grounds” for the Navy.</p>
<p>Reached by phone, Swift said he was a “believer in the LCS” and acknowledged that he had encouraged the Navy to test new weapons systems in the Pacific. But he emphasized that it was not an order to deploy ships at any cost.</p>
<p>“We made it clear if you want to take them off line, take them off line, but I am not surprised that people further down the chain didn’t feel they had that option,” he said. “The offer could have been perceived as an order, or taken advantage of by those that wanted to push harder to get a win out of LCS.”</p>
<p>“As a four star, if you ask for something too often people think of it as a requirement,” he said.</p>
<p>On the morning of July 17, 2016, the ship finally seemed ready to go.</p>
<p>The contractors completed the rinse and were packing up to leave. But when the chief engineer looked at samples taken from inside the engine, he was deeply worried.</p>
<p>“Holy shit,” he thought, according to an interview in a Navy investigation. “There’s still water in the engine.”</p>
<p>He sent a message to Wohnhaas that he later acknowledged was misleading because it suggested the ship was ready to go. He blamed the mistake on “not proof-reading” the text prior to sending it.</p>
<p>“Sir, the flush is done,” he wrote at 9:50 a.m. “I [assess] that we are still on track for tomorrow.”</p>
<p>Wohnhaas took this as good news and passed it on to his superiors:</p>
<p>“Everything is tracking toward an on-time departure,” he said in an email sent to his commodore, Warren Buller, at 11:36 a.m.</p>
<p>In fact, the procedure approved by the Philadelphia guru hadn’t solved the problem. Investigators would later determine the procedure could not have worked — it was meant to remove grit, not seawater, from engine oil.</p>
<p>The following morning, as the Freedom was preparing to depart, a senior enlisted engineer ran into a contractor he knew as Joe.</p>
<p>Joe told him that the engine was still contaminated.</p>
<p>Alarmed, the engineer discussed the situation with his supervisor, the chief engineer, who was smoking a cigarette on the front deck of the ship.</p>
<p>If they went to sea, the engine would rust, the engineer said. The chief engineer told him he knew it and he was on his way to tell Wohnhaas.</p>
<p>In an interview with investigators, the chief engineer said he told Wohnhaas something to the effect of “we can’t get underway like this, we gotta do something.”</p>
<p>Wohnhaas declined to comment for this story. In his interview with investigators, he said that when he learned of the contaminated samples from the chief engineer, he understood the engine was inoperable. But he was confident he could avoid further damage and complete the mission by relying on the ship’s other engines.</p>
<p>“There was a strong sense that we couldn’t have another LCS not meet mission,” Wohnhaas said. He did not tell his superior officers the uncomfortable fact that the engine was still contaminated because of the pressure to get underway, the investigation said.</p>
<p>The Freedom sailed out and detected mines in the water. The mission was a success — at least so everyone thought.</p>
<p>But on Aug. 3, five days after Wohnhaas returned the ship, a routine inspection revealed major damage to the engine, corrosion so extensive that the ship was docked in repairs for two years. The engine needed to be replaced.</p>
<p>The Navy investigation found that one failure led to another on the Freedom: The inexperienced crew used the wrong procedure to stop the leak; the Navy’s “technical community” then recommended another incorrect procedure to flush the engine; contractors executed it, providing “false hope” that it would prevent the corrosion.</p>
<p>Wohnhaas’ key error, according to the investigation: He failed to tell his superiors that the engine was still contaminated by seawater.</p>
<p>Wohnhaas was removed from command over the incident. Others, whose names and titles are redacted from the Navy report, were also recommended for discipline.</p>
<h3 class="c9">“It Just Felt Like a Big Joke”</h3>
<p>By early 2017, Lt. Jett Watson was beginning to wonder whether he had signed up to squander his naval career.</p>
<p>He was in the middle of training to serve as an LCS officer, spending hours inside virtual reality simulators set up in San Diego to make participants feel as if they were driving the ship.</p>
<p>The digital experience was impressive, but getting a real LCS out to sea was more complicated.</p>
<p>“I’m sure it was funny to watch us get underway just to have a big cloud of smoke go out because an engine went down and then have the tugboats pull us right back into the pier, which happened very often,” he said in an interview with ProPublica. “I mean, it was almost a game just to watch.”</p>
<p>Becoming a full-fledged surface warfare officer in the Navy requires hundreds of hours at sea. In interviews with current and former officers, the LCS program was described as a place where careers go to die. The ships broke down so frequently that officers spent key years in which they were supposed to gain experience at sea sitting around waiting for repairs to be completed.</p>
<p>Watson felt deceived.</p>
<p>A couple of years earlier, he had come under the spell of the LCS as a student at the Naval Academy.</p>
<p>There, recruiters for the program spread the gospel of its small crew size and purportedly aggressive deployment schedule, convincing him that the ship suited only the most elite sailors and officers.</p>
<p>Watson was so taken by the promise of the ship that he became a kind of “LCS evangelist,” convincing his friends at the academy to join the program with him.</p>
<p>He remembered sweltering beneath the Maryland sun during his graduation ceremony, where Mabus delivered a kind of a final exhortation to the newly sworn in officers.</p>
<p>“We are America’s away team,” Mabus said. “You didn’t come to Annapolis to sit at home when you leave here, and you won’t be sitting at home. Sailors and Marines, equally in times of peace and at war, are deployed around the world.”</p>
<p>Hailing from Lubbock, Texas, Watson thought the LCS would be his ticket to a meaningful and exciting career in the Navy.</p>
<p>He went on to serve on three littoral combat ships, each belonging to the less problematic Independence class.</p>
<p>“I would hesitate to say we ever did a mission,” he said.</p>
<p>Instead, he and others had to stomach what one current senior noncommissioned officer described as “a big shit sandwich” when they first came on board.</p>
<p>General Dynamics and Lockheed Martin considered much of the data and equipment on the LCS proprietary — a problem that the GAO has identified throughout the military. As a result, only their employees were allowed to do certain repairs, former officers said. This sometimes meant that contractors would go overseas to help, adding millions in travel costs and often delaying missions. The Navy recently purchased some of the data. A Navy spokesperson would not disclose the price “due to proprietary reasons.”</p>
<p>Watson and others spent much of their time escorting contractors while on board because so many areas on the ship were considered classified, reducing their ability to do their own jobs, according to interviews with multiple officers who had served on the LCS.</p>
<p>Cumbersome negotiations meant it could sometimes take weeks to get contractors on board. The delays were especially frustrating when trying to fix the computer network that connected everything from the radars, to the weapons systems, to the ship’s canteen. That system, another former lieutenant said, frequently shut down because of software glitches.</p>
<p>“You can’t ask for help from your superior commands” on shore, said the former lieutenant, who worked as a communications officer on Independence-class ships. “And you can’t even go buy yourself a soda.”</p>
<p>The ships needed constant repairs. But technical manuals were sometimes written only in the native language of the contractor that built the equipment. One former officer said that a manual for a davit, a type of crane used to lower a search-and-rescue boat, was written in Norwegian. He said the Navy had to spend thousands of dollars to fly in a contractor from Norway to change two fuses.</p>
<p>The Navy has recently increased the amount of maintenance performed by sailors.</p>
<p>“It just felt like a big joke,” said Watson, who left the Navy in 2021. He said many of the highly qualified sailors he worked with sought mental health assistance because they felt that their time on an LCS was a waste, affording them little opportunity to apply their skills or learn new ones.</p>
<p>“An average week would consist of 90 to 100 hours in port doing, honestly, nothing,” Watson said. “It felt ridiculous. Many times we were there just because we had to be there.”</p>
<p>At one point, a senior Navy official addressed a group of more than 50 LCS sailors assembled in an auditorium and asked how many would volunteer to come back. Two former officers familiar with the presentation said only a handful said yes.</p>
<h3 class="c9">A Fight over the Future</h3>
<p>The ships’ mounting problems drew attention from the highest reaches of the Pentagon, eventually prompting two successive defense secretaries to try to halt their construction.</p>
<p>The first, in 2014, was Chuck Hagel, a former Army infantry squad leader and U.S. senator. The military was fighting wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, but it also needed to save money. Hagel’s advisers told him he could do that by keeping the LCS fleet to 32 ships, abandoning plans to build 52 of them.</p>
<p>He’d be cutting what was already understood to be a deeply troubled vessel. Studies showed that the ship couldn’t continue to fight after a missile strike and that the interchangeable warfighting packages — an idea originally at the heart of the LCS — were failing to perform.</p>
<p>“Do we want one-fifth of the future Navy fleet to be a ship that can’t take a hit and continue its mission?” one adviser recalled thinking at the time.</p>
<p>In February 2014, Hagel pledged to make the cut to 32 and asked the Navy to come up with a design for a new frigate — a larger, tougher type of warship. But Mabus pushed back. A Navy task force suggested that the LCS could be transformed into a frigate. The Pentagon’s top weapons tester told Hagel that was infeasible. But Hagel agreed with the task force, because the Navy was “going to have to live with it, and justify it. And count on it,” he said in an interview with ProPublica.</p>
<p>In December 2014, in one of his final acts as secretary of defense, Hagel agreed to allow the Navy to build up to 52 smaller ships: a mix of the littoral combat ships and the new frigates, which would be based on the LCS design, but with more weapons.</p>
<p>In response to critics who said he had capitulated, Hagel characterized his decision as a “compromise” based on the advice of the government’s top experts.</p>
<p>“We brought in a lot of different people on both sides of it,” he said. “That’s the only responsible way you can evaluate these big projects as secretary of defense, because you can’t know everything about this. It’s just, no one person is that smart.”</p>
<p>The Navy later awarded a contract to the shipbuilder Fincantieri Marine Group to build a new line of frigates based on a different design.</p>
<p>Defense Secretary Ash Carter, who followed Hagel, also took aim at the LCS.</p>
<p>In a sharply worded December 2015 memo to Mabus, Carter said the Navy was guilty of “prioritizing quantity over lethality.” He told the Navy to limit future purchases to 40 ships, including littoral combat ships and frigates.</p>
<p>Mabus told ProPublica that he was blindsided by the change of course and that it led to “heated discussions” with Carter in private.</p>
<p>In public, he opposed his boss too: first at a naval symposium, then before Congress, then at a Wisconsin shipyard where he assured LCS builders they were working on the best ship in the world. In March 2016, under questioning from Rep. Bradley Byrne, an Alabama Republican who called the LCS his “favorite topic,” Mabus told the House Armed Services Committee that the Navy had a “validated need” for the 52 ships.</p>
<p>Even as Mabus testified, the ships were breaking down at sea with increasing frequency.</p>
<p>Mabus downplayed the severity of the incidents.</p>
<p>“We took it seriously,” he said. “But it did not seem, from what we were looking at, that it was a systemic problem.”</p>
<p>The contractors who built the ships defended their performance.</p>
<p>Eric Dent, a spokesperson for the Italian-based shipbuilder Fincantieri, which also built the Freedom ships in Marinette, said it did so to a design from Lockheed Martin and the Navy, referring questions to both.</p>
<p>Lockheed Martin spokesperson Patrick McNally said the company is proud of its work with the Navy and is focused on delivering “affordable improvements to the platform.”</p>
<p>Australian-based shipbuilder Austal, which constructs the Independence class of ships, and General Dynamics, which built the infrastructure for the ship’s computers, both declined to comment for this story.</p>
<p>The weapons systems were failing as badly as the ship’s engines.</p>
<p>Without them, the LCS was “only a box floating in the ocean,” said former Lt. Cmdr. Mark West, who helped lead the Navy’s development of the warfighting packages for years in uniform and as a civilian.</p>
<p>To help the LCS find mines, an important mission in 21st-century warfare, the Navy built a remotely operated minisubmarine designed to detect underwater explosives. West and others said it turned out to be too difficult to operate. The Navy is now dependent on an aging fleet of minesweepers that often cannot deploy.</p>
<p>“Imagine a 25-year-old sailor trying to remotely control a [minisubmarine] in the water that weighs 20,000 pounds as the ship is going 4 or 5 knots,” one current senior enlisted sailor said. “Then trying to bring it to the surface as a crane lowers a saddle on top of it to get it out of the water. It was damn near impossible.”</p>
<p>After 15 years of development and more than $700 million invested in the remote minehunting system, the Navy canceled it in March 2016.</p>
<p>To hunt submarines, the defense contractors created a sonar device the ship dragged through the water on a long cable from the stern. When the device detected a submarine, it was supposed to send a signal to the ship, which then dispatched a helicopter to hover over the ocean and plunge another sonar device into the water. The helicopter then dropped a torpedo to destroy the sub.</p>
<p>None of these components effectively communicated with one another. And the wake of the LCS made it extremely difficult to launch and recover the sonar, according to one former commodore with direct knowledge of the program.</p>
<p>After pouring hundreds of millions into the module, the Navy shifted the function to its new frigate.</p>
<p>In an interview, West said the Navy never gave the modules the same priority as the ships. They always played “second fiddle,” West said. Those working on them had to “fight and claw” to get the time and money necessary to “ensure their success.”</p>
<p>Coronado and Montgomery</p>
<p>About a month after the Freedom’s engine failed, a fourth LCS, the USS Coronado, broke down on its way to Singapore and had to limp back to Hawaii.</p>
<p>The breakdowns had become routine by this point. First came the fanfare over a newly christened ship, with all the requisite flag waving, handshaking, speechmaking and celebratory Champagne bottle breaking. Later, a perilous journey: a few days or weeks at sea, followed by another busted part and another tow back to port.</p>
<p>This time, on the Coronado, a part called a coupling would be the culprit. The device, which helped connect the water jets to the engine, had failed, hindering the ship’s complicated propulsion system. The Navy discovered it was a problem on several other littoral combat ships, too.</p>
<p>The GAO, which has produced dozens of reports criticizing the ships, later learned that the Coronado failed to sail six times between 2016 and 2017 because “it did not not have correct parts on board to fix simple problems.”</p>
<p>Important items like “circuit card assemblies, washers, bolts, gaskets, and diaphragms for air conditioning units were not on board,” the report found. “The LCS may not have adequate space onboard to stock these items.”</p>
<p>In August 2016, the Navy ordered a 30-day stand down of all littoral combat ships to retrain the engineering crews and improve the fleet’s performance.</p>
<p>A month later, a fifth ship, the USS Montgomery, suffered a series of mishaps. Over a two-month stretch, its engine malfunctioned, it collided with a tugboat and it then cracked its hull after striking a lock in the Panama Canal.</p>
<h3 class="c9">“The Navy doesn’t want them”</h3>
<p>On May 4, 2017, about three months into the administration of President Donald Trump, the director of the White House Office of Management and Budget at the time, Mick Mulvaney, sat for an interview with conservative talk radio show host Hugh Hewitt.</p>
<p>They talked about “Game of Thrones,” the repeal of Obamacare and a new hire at the OMB before turning to Trump’s promise to increase the Navy’s fleet to 350 ships. How, Hewitt wanted to know, was the president going to achieve that?</p>
<p>Mulvaney said that the day before he had missed a meeting on the Paris Agreement — the international treaty to avert the catastrophic consequences of climate change — in order to discuss whether to buy more littoral combat ships.</p>
<p>“The Navy doesn’t want them,” Mulvaney said.</p>
<p>With the Navy on its way toward building the more powerful frigate, it appeared that the LCS program was on its last legs. The Navy requested funding for only one LCS that year.</p>
<p>But once again, politics intervened.</p>
<p>Tammy Baldwin, the Democratic senator from Wisconsin, fought for more. She wrote to Trump on May 12, casting the LCS as a rare opportunity for her and the president to work together. Both support American workers making American products, she said, but too few of the vessels in the budget would cause her state’s shipyard to lay off hundreds of workers.</p>
<p>On May 24, in a move that shocked the defense community, the Trump administration inserted one more ship into the budget after it had already been sent to Congress.</p>
<p>The Trump administration had suddenly placed a $500 million order for a new ship that the Navy didn’t ask for.</p>
<p>In an email to ProPublica, Baldwin said she takes “great pride in representing Wisconsin’s shipbuilding industry,” adding that she supported the LCS because it “provided new capabilities and capacity to the Navy.”</p>
<p>Over the next year, Congress funded yet more ships, leaving the force with 35, three more than the Navy said it needed. The additions cost taxpayers more than $1.5 billion.</p>
<p>In the years since, both variants of the LCS have continued to grapple with major problems. The Independence version has shown cracks in the hulls of nearly half the class. The Navy determined that a flaw in the combining gear affected the entire Freedom class. The Navy came up with a fix at a reported cost of $8 million to $10 million per ship — an expense split with Lockheed Martin.</p>
<p>Naval experts worry that the failures of the LCS have put the Navy at a greater disadvantage against China, which boasts the largest Navy in the world with some 340 ships and submarines, according to the Pentagon’s most recent report to Congress on the state of the Chinese military. By comparison, the Navy has roughly 294 ships and submarines.</p>
<p>The Navy has begun to mothball littoral combat ships far before the end of their expected lifespans.</p>
<p>In March 2022, the Navy announced plans to retire nine Freedom-class vessels early because of their inability to hunt submarines.</p>
<p>In a predictable pattern, lawmakers representing states where the ships are based fought to keep more of the ships at sea. They allowed the Navy to decommission only four. The first of those, retired last month, is less than five years old. Three other LCS had already been mothballed.</p>
<p>The Navy is now trying to retire two more, including the USS Jackson, the ship named for the capital of Mabus’ home state. It wrapped up its first deployment last October. Meant to have a 25-year lifespan, the ship would last only nine.</p>
<p>ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for  The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.</p>
<p><h3 class="jp-relatedposts-headline">More articles from the BDN</h3></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/the-within-story-of-how-the-navy-spent-billions-on-the-little-crappy-ship/">The within story of how the navy spent billions on the ‘little crappy ship’</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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		<title>San Francisco tourism: The ‘doom loop’ isn’t the entire story</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Daily SF News]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 09 Sep 2023 13:48:58 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Moving]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[doom]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Francisco]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[isnt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[loop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[San]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>CNN  —  San Francisco is undeniably having a moment. Over the past year, headlines claiming the city is caught in a spiraling “doom loop” have become so prominent that a city commissioner decided to cash in on downtown San Francisco’s storefront vacancies, homelessness and opioid issues by anonymously advertising an hour-and-a-half long tour showcasing “doom and squalor.” For $30 a &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/san-francisco-tourism-the-doom-loop-isnt-the-entire-story/">San Francisco tourism: The ‘doom loop’ isn’t the entire story</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p>
<p>              <span class="source__location" data-editable="location"/><br />
              <span class="source__text" data-editable="source">CNN</span><br />
                 — </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/cllcndndk003e48p38dm9dzyb@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          San Francisco is undeniably having a moment.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmb6o4hj00003b6i2zuqshh1@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Over the past year, headlines claiming the city is caught in a spiraling “doom loop” have become so prominent that a city commissioner<strong> </strong>decided to cash in on downtown San Francisco’s storefront vacancies, homelessness and opioid issues by anonymously advertising an hour-and-a-half long tour showcasing “doom and squalor.” For $30 a person, you could see the city’s “open-air drug markets” and “abandoned tech offices” first-hand.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmb6oadt00023b6ijww0t3tr@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          However, just before it was scheduled to take place, the tour was canceled (and the commissioner ultimately resigned). Instead a more “positive” walk organized by a local nonprofit guided participants through the city’s Tenderloin, highlighting a neighborhood that’s long been a poster child for the city’s hardships.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmb6pq3r00063b6i0pok0lfr@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          While people sleeping on sidewalks and drug use were still visible, it focused on the community’s more positive attributes, including a rich history, art and a career center that’s working to get struggling San Franciscans back on their feet.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0d00033b6ij6wsop65@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Still, for many would-be visitors, it’s San Francisco’s more discernible difficulties that are the real deterrents.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmaza8eu00003b6ihv9qqp3c@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          “My clients who’ve recently been to San Francisco have never said they felt unsafe,” says Alana Scalise Livingston, owner of Wander Spokane tours in Spokane, Washington (and a former San Francisco resident). “They just say it’s not as nice as it used to be, and there are many homeless people flooding the streets.”
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0d00043b6i0a0emktw@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Joshua Hirsch, owner of Sidewalk Food Tours SF, has received much of the same feedback. “According to our tour participants, the homeless people in cities like San Francisco and New York seemed to have become more brazen and outspoken since the pandemic,” he says. “They think it’s their neighborhood, and you don’t even have the right to be walking on the sidewalk.”
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0d00053b6iwp1wclkj@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Additionally, there’s the city’s so-called “death spiral” or “doom loop” touted by news outlets (including the city’s own) – in which remote work leads to empty real estate, resulting in less foot traffic and then shuttered restaurants and reduced public services. This in turn leads to more overt drug activity as well as unhoused individuals congregating in front of unoccupied spaces.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0d00063b6ilfa1myx7@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          It’s not that the tales of downtown retail stores closing in bulk and vacant office buildings are untrue, nor are the stories of drugstore chains such as Walgreens locking up most everything in the store behind see-through cabinets, though the latter<strong> </strong>is occurring in other big cities nationwide.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0d00073b6i87n1r4y2@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          San Francisco has also been experiencing a rash of car break-ins, including this SF Whole Foods garage break-in video that went viral in Indonesia, that many fear could have long-lasting effects on the city’s tourism.
        </p>
<p>
            Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
          </p>
<p>
            To help curb auto break-ins, the San Francisco Police Department is beginning to deploy bait cars, notably in high tourist areas such Alamo Square, pictured here on August 9, 2023.
          </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0d00083b6ifvkdrnb8@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          This past June, the investment firm behind the Hilton San Francisco Union Square (at 1,921 rooms, it’s the city’s largest hotel) and the nearby Parc 55 hotels announced that it is stopping payments on a $725 million loan and surrendering the remaining debt to its lender. Tech companies such as Red Hat and the SF Bay Area’s own Meta have decided to cancel their 2024 conferences in San Francisco as well, citing ongoing concerns over safety and the cleanliness of downtown streets.
        </p>
<h2 class="subheader" data-editable="text" data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/subheader/instances/clmavod0d00093b6it4onv6qx@published" id="it-felt-vibrant-and-alive">
            ‘It felt vibrant and alive’<br />
        </h2>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0f000a3b6i4pbyomx4@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          It seems like everywhere you turn, the news about San Francisco just keeps getting worse. Or is it just the news we’re reading?
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0f000b3b6i61m1kd5e@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          “We definitely feel like there is a significant misconception of what is really happening on the ground,” says Dina Belon, chief operating officer at Staypineapple Hotels, which has a property in San Francisco’s Union Square district.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0f000c3b6izhd4z1dt@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Yuki Hayashi, a Toronto-based marketing writer and editor who visited San Francisco in late July for the city’s annual marathon, agrees. “Based on what we saw on Reddit, my family and I thought the city had turned into some post-apocalyptic hell zone,” she says. “But instead it felt vibrant and alive.”
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0g000d3b6iafojduw2@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          The San Francisco hoteliers and restaurateurs interviewed for this article acknowledge that a drop in the city’s tourism this summer has been evident. That’s the result of a combination of factors, they say. They include the negative headlines and fewer full-time office workers, “which has significantly reduced our business and corporate travel,” says Belon. There’s also the absence of Chinese tourists — which pre-pandemic was one of the city’s top international markets — because of Covid and flight restrictions.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0g000e3b6i9c14g55z@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          But they also agree that many of the gloomy headlines have been misleading.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0g000f3b6i69osv67s@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          “Yes, there are parts of San Francisco that need work,” says Marc Zimmerman, owner and executive chef at Gozu, a modern Japanese eatery located in the city’s East Cut neighborhood. “I don’t think we should pretend that the city doesn’t have issues. But the whole idea that, you know, everybody’s just laying around every SF street with needles hanging out of their arms is definitely a stretch.”
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0g000g3b6i47hokrf8@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Ben Parks, board chair for San Francisco City Guides, feels similarly.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0g000h3b6ijlhkkatp@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          “It’s like, if the negative media coverage is all you pay attention to,” he says, “you just really miss out on everything the city has to offer.”
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0g000i3b6ioeb4hfa0@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          His all-volunteer organization has been leading free walking tours citywide for nearly five decades and currently has 79 offerings. Parks says that these days, their attendance has actually been increasing, with what the organization suspects are more local residents interested in learning about the city’s neighborhoods, which in many cases are where San Francisco continues to impress.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0g000j3b6i3qdzp60t@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          “There are so many good things happening in many of our neighborhoods and communities,” Grace Horikiri, executive director of San Francisco’s Japantown Community Benefit District, “and it often gets overshadowed by all the non-positive news.”
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmazwc1v00023b6itltjw467@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Within the past year, Japantown has welcomed new restaurants such as Copra and Fermentation Lab, saw the opening of the Kimpton Hotel Enso in its former Buchanan Hotel space and watched the growth of its popular monthly Mini Art Market in the community’s Japantown mall.
        </p>
<p>
            Michael Ho Wai Lee/SOPA Images/Shutterstock
          </p>
<p>
            People eat in San Francisco&#8217;s Japantown neighborhood on August 7, 2023.
          </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0h000l3b6ipdfe85jq@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          The city is also seeing new life in some of its major tourism hubs.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0h000m3b6i5rrvtkbz@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          This August, IKEA bucked the trend of major retailers moving out of downtown and opened a San Francisco store focusing on small-space living along Market Street (between Sixth and Fifth streets), while more than 15 local small businesses, including Devil’s Teeth bakery, Holy Stitch! apparel and The Mellow, are setting up pop-up shops in vacant downtown storefronts, beginning mid-September.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0h000n3b6igrbykxpj@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Over in Fisherman’s Wharf, San Francisco’s iconic Ghirardelli Chocolate Company hosted the grand reopening of its Original Ice Cream and Chocolate Shop in July after a six-month renovation. The city’s LUMA hotel, which opened in 2022 adjacent to the city’s Chase Center sports and entertainment area, even won Tripadvisor’s 2023 Travelers’ Choice Best of the Best award, despite San Francisco’s negative narrative.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0h000o3b6iy3pyd3rz@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Chinatown, a neighborhood especially hard-hit by the pandemic, is hosting a series of new festivals, including a Halloween Festival on October 28. In January, the community also saw the long-awaited opening of its Rose Pak Muni metro station, providing Muni light-rail riders direct access to the heart of Chinatown’s streets.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0h000p3b6i9gjfz805@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Whether it’s Golden Gate Park’s 1.5-mile stretch known as JFK Promenade, with its Adirondack chairs; street art and playable pianos, which became permanently vehicle-free during the pandemic; or city stalwarts such as Amoeba Records in the Haight-Ashbury (which Santa Cruz bookseller Liz Pollock says is still filled with people “flipping through LPs” every time she visits), the city is in many ways just going about its business.
        </p>
<h2 class="subheader" data-editable="text" data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/subheader/instances/clmavod0h000q3b6ig1y32bu7@published" id="we-needed-a-kick-and-we-got-it">
            ‘We needed a kick, and we got it’<br />
        </h2>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0i000r3b6irj4icdgw@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Homelessness has been an ongoing issue in San Francisco, with thousands of homeless people sleeping on the streets on any given night, and the effects of the pandemic have brought it even more to the city’s forefront. “The challenges that San Francisco has always had are just more visible,” says Belon.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0i000s3b6id2maqy2z@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          However, when it comes to violent crimes in US cities, San Francisco’s numbers are comparatively low. Larceny, such as car thefts and break-ins, is what really drives up crimes figures in the city and at the same time drives away visitors.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0i000t3b6i8dtnl36z@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          “We can’t just act like nothing is wrong,” says Zimmerman, “but for whatever reason, that’s the direction we went. But I feel like we needed a kick, and we got it. This is a great and resilient city, and now we’re seeing a big push to bring it all back.”
        </p>
<p>
            Don Feria/AP
          </p>
<p>
            Grammy winning musician Kelly Rowland and Ghirardelli Chocolate Co. CEO Joel Burrows participate in the grand reopening of The Original Ghirardelli Ice Cream &#038; Chocolate Shop at Ghirardelli Square on July 13, 2023.
          </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0i000u3b6it1gzthdb@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          To help curb auto break-ins, the San Francisco Police Department is beginning to deploy bait cars that can help identity and arrest thieves, notably in tourist areas such as the Palace of Fine Arts, Alamo Square and Fisherman’s Wharf.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0i000v3b6idzrzhh0a@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Getting homeless people off the streets and into places where they can get viable help (mental and physical) isn’t so easy, but that’s not to say efforts aren’t being made. In December 2022, a federal judge effectively barred the city from breaking up or sweeping tent encampments until there are more shelter beds than individuals, but the issue isn’t so cut and dry.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0j000w3b6i7eqde42i@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          While the San Francisco Homeless Outreach Team works collaboratively with the Department of Public Health’s Street Medicine team to address the medical and behavioral health needs of many of the city’s homeless residents and also to offer them volunteer overnight shelter, many would rather stay on the streets for reasons such as feeling unsafe in shelter and the inability to keep their belongings with them.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0j000x3b6il5i6khhq@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Still, says Zimmerman, “It’s a different experience for those of us who walk around San Francisco every day. Yes, there are parts of the city that need work. But just in the neighborhood of Gozu, you’ve got Salesforce Park that is beautiful. The ballpark is beautiful. This is the perfect opportunistic position for San Francisco to bounce back.”
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0j000y3b6i38ce1v4m@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          While raising capital for his newest venture, Yokai, a new hi-fi listening bar with cocktails and food that’s scheduled to open just a short walk from Gozu in mid-September, Zimmerman first heard a term that he’s since adopted as his own: “SF long,” which investors and other long-term San Francisco residents have been using to show their commitment to the city.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0j000z3b6i2ebv5sph@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          “It means, ‘we’re weathering this out together, and we’re not going anywhere. We’re in it for the long haul,’ ” Zimmerman said.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0j00103b6ijzaq3mwi@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          For all of San Francisco’s perceived and more evident troubles, the city still has a lot going for it.
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0j00113b6irbaoetaa@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          “We have the geography,” says Zimmerman, “the location — with both Napa and Sonoma both an hour north — the restaurant scene, some great museums, and this awesome cultural melting pot of people. The whole thing is very unique.”<strong> </strong>
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0j00123b6i76yj3mcr@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Others such as Belon, Pollock and Livingston feel the same. “It’s the whole experience of it,” says Pollock, “and you can’t find it anywhere except San Francisco.”
        </p>
<p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/clmavod0j00133b6ixdtpv792@published" data-editable="text" class="paragraph inline-placeholder">
          Laura Kiniry is a freelance journalist and 28-year resident of San Francisco. She lives in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood.
        </p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/san-francisco-tourism-the-doom-loop-isnt-the-entire-story/">San Francisco tourism: The ‘doom loop’ isn’t the entire story</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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		<title>Audacy Revives San Francisco&#8217;s Legacy Various &#8216;Reside 105.&#8217; &#124; Story</title>
		<link>https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/audacy-revives-san-franciscos-legacy-various-reside-105-story/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Daily SF News]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Jun 2023 14:33:20 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[HVAC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alternative]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Audacy]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[legacy]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/?p=32141</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Another well-known traditional/alternative rock station is back. Following Cumulus Media revival of &#8220;99X&#8221;, Atlanta&#8217;s longtime home base for the genre, last December, and Audacy&#8217;s Conversion of the alternative flagship KROQ Audacy launched a year ago in Los Angeles and today relaunched &#8220;Live 105&#8221; KITS San Francisco. From 1986 to 2017, Live 105 was the premier &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/audacy-revives-san-franciscos-legacy-various-reside-105-story/">Audacy Revives San Francisco&#8217;s Legacy Various &#8216;Reside 105.&#8217; | Story</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p>
<p>Another well-known traditional/alternative rock station is back.</p>
<p>Following Cumulus Media <span style="color: #0000ff;">revival of &#8220;99X&#8221;,</span> Atlanta&#8217;s longtime home base for the genre, last December, and Audacy&#8217;s <span style="color: #0000ff;">Conversion of the alternative flagship KROQ</span> Audacy launched a year ago in Los Angeles and today relaunched &#8220;Live 105&#8221; KITS San Francisco.</p>
<p>From 1986 to 2017, Live 105 was the premier alternative rock destination in the City by the Bay.  After Audacy (then Entercom) merged with CBS Radio in 2017, the station kept the format but eventually changed its nickname to &#8220;Alt 105.3&#8221;. <span style="color: #0000ff;">Switch to adult hits &#8220;Dave FM&#8221;</span> in October 2021.</p>
<p>&#8220;People have spoken, and we&#8217;re excited to answer the call,&#8221; said Stacey Kauffman, regional vice president and market manager for Audacy San Francisco and Sacramento.  “After a six-year hiatus, Live 105 – the Bay Area alternative – is back on the air.  We&#8217;re proud to bring back this local favorite that offers our loyal listeners and favorite alternative artists from the &#8217;90s to today a place to call home again.&#8221;</p>
<p>Led by Audacy Regional VP of Programming John Allers as Brand Manager and KLLC Music Director Jayn, San Francisco&#8217;s hot AC sister Alice @ 97.3, the reboot of Live 105 will feature music from every era of the station&#8217;s history , featuring core artists such as Red Hot Chili Peppers, Linkin Park, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Blink-182, Foo Fighters and Depeche Mode.  On-air talent will be announced in the coming weeks.</p>
<p>&#8220;Our entire team has great respect and admiration for what Live 105 means to the Bay Area alternative community,&#8221; says Allers.  “We will continue to honor Live 105&#8217;s rich history and legacy by bringing back brand focuses like &#8216;Soundcheck&#8217; starring Aaron Axelsen and other well-known voices, while also collaborating with Live 105 alumnus &#8216;Miles The DJ&#8217; to advance the development of Live 105 into the future.” .”</p>
<p>In Nielsen&#8217;s April 2023 PPM rating book for San Francisco, &#8220;Dave FM&#8221; ranked 15th with a score of 2.0 among people ages 6 and older.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/audacy-revives-san-franciscos-legacy-various-reside-105-story/">Audacy Revives San Francisco&#8217;s Legacy Various &#8216;Reside 105.&#8217; | Story</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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		<title>An SF highschool pupil’s gorgeous story</title>
		<link>https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/an-sf-highschool-pupils-gorgeous-story/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Daily SF News]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 May 2023 15:37:58 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Plumbing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[high]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[School]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Students]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stunning]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/?p=31807</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Oliser Aguilar was 17 when he left his dirt shack in a small village in Guatemala and was determined to make it to the United States. On this day four years ago, he left his mother and grandmother without saying goodbye. &#8220;I just started running,&#8221; Aguilar said, adding he was penniless and didn&#8217;t speak English. &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/an-sf-highschool-pupils-gorgeous-story/">An SF highschool pupil’s gorgeous story</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p>
<p>Oliser Aguilar was 17 when he left his dirt shack in a small village in Guatemala and was determined to make it to the United States.</p>
<p>On this day four years ago, he left his mother and grandmother without saying goodbye. </p>
<p>&#8220;I just started running,&#8221; Aguilar said, adding he was penniless and didn&#8217;t speak English.</p>
<p>But he had an uncle in the Bay Area and had a choice between living in abject poverty and working in the fields, or having a bright future if he survived the journey.</p>
<p>This week, Aguilar will not only graduate from high school in San Francisco, but he will do so with near-fluent English and a 3.95 GPA, which he earned working two jobs.</p>
<p>Aguilar fended off his chances with hope and hard work.  Since his uncle gave him a home, he continued, undeterred by his lack of education, language skills, or money.  He had dreams.</p>
<p>&#8220;If someone told me when I started running, I&#8217;d be here in four years,&#8221; said Aguilar, who is a graduate of Thurgood Marshall High School.  &#8220;I can&#8217;t believe something like that.&#8221;</p>
<p>Aguilar was one of 69,488 unaccompanied minors who arrived in the United States in 2019, a number that reached nearly 129,000 in 2020, according to the federal Department of Health and Human Services.  In recent years, the vast majority have come from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.</p>
<p>San Francisco has 1,876 new students enrolled in the district this year, a number that has fluctuated over the years depending on federal policy and international circumstances.  The pandemic, for example, led to a significant drop in immigration numbers. </p>
<p>Because it is a city of refuge, officials do not ask about the immigration status of new students and families, or whether the young people were unaccompanied.  The focus is on meeting everyone&#8217;s needs, officials said.</p>
<p><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Oliser Aguilar, 21, will attend Skyline College in San Mateo to take courses in English, math and other majors.  He hopes to learn about the jobs of electrician and plumber.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M.James/The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>The now 20-year-old, like many others hoping to enter the country, embarked on an arduous journey that involved physical dangers into the United States, only to be met with political controversy over which new immigrants would be allowed to stay.</p>
<p>Upon arrival, some immigrants are homeless and often living in cramped conditions as they seek work and find their way back to school after years of not setting foot in a classroom.  Many have escaped violence, gangs and hunger, their young lives filled with tragedy in their homeland.</p>
<p>It may seem inconceivable to many in the United States that a child or young person could make the journey to the southern border alone or in the company of guides who prioritize money over safety.</p>
<p>They make the trip because, even at this young age, they are the breadwinners forced to support their families, said Angela Romano, school social worker and coordinator of San Francisco Unified&#8217;s immigration and refugee program.</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s not about you; it&#8217;s about your whole family,&#8221; she said. &#8220;A big part of their identity, self-esteem and success is supporting their family.&#8221;</p>
<p>Romano added that it can be difficult for people in the United States to grasp that having a real childhood is a privilege.</p>
<p>The district&#8217;s goal is to help new immigrant students navigate their education.  This starts with showing them how to open a locker, understanding what a cafeteria is and what is expected in classrooms, including reassurance that it&#8217;s good to join.</p>
<p>San Francisco offers several entry-level programs for students, including a specialty high school and a new program, El Camino Alternativo, which primarily offers online learning for older students who need a more flexible education to get work.  Other traditional schools offer a range of programs and English courses for newly immigrated students. </p>
<p>&#8220;We stand ready to confront students as they navigate this difficult transition, sometimes with sadness, anxiety and fear that some of their issues at home may follow,&#8221; said Daniela Funes, a high school counselor at Thurgood Marshall .  Her job, she said, is to help students like Aguilar feel safe so they can access an education.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="landscape" src="https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/33/07/02/23883953/3/1200x0.jpg" alt="Oliser Aguilar, 21 (right), a graduate of Thurgood Marshall Academic High School, receives his cap and gown May 26 in San Francisco from school counselor Daniela Funes.  "On day one I said I would take any opportunity, and four years later I did," Aguilar said."/><span class="caption"></p>
<p>Oliser Aguilar, 21 (right), a graduate of Thurgood Marshall Academic High School, receives his cap and gown May 26 in San Francisco from school counselor Daniela Funes.  &#8220;On day one I said I would take any opportunity, and four years later I did,&#8221; Aguilar said.</p>
<p></span><span class="credits">Yalonda M.James/The Chronicle</span></p>
<p>Like many others, Aguilar had what educators call an &#8220;interrupted education&#8221; — lacking any significant academic ability, but was sent to secondary school because of his age.</p>
<p>He got to Marshall and hid behind a hoodie.</p>
<p>“On my first day in Marshall, I was scared of school because my teacher and classmates spoke English.  I was just looking around,&#8221; he said.  &#8220;I did not know, what I should do.&#8221;</p>
<p>But he always smiled, said Funes.  And he wanted to get a clear one.</p>
<p>So he continued to go to school, even though he had two jobs on the side – in the restaurant in the evenings and as a janitor on the weekends. </p>
<p>To say his family was poor in Guatemala is an understatement.  They grew the food they ate but had no money or opportunity to earn anything and relied on neighbors to give them discarded clothing or shoes.</p>
<p>&#8220;A lot of kids here have a father and a mother and they don&#8217;t have to work, they have stuff and shoes,&#8221; Aguilar said.  &#8220;For me, this is a great opportunity.&#8221;</p>
<p>When the pandemic struck in March of his freshman year, Aguilar was presented with a laptop, the first time he&#8217;d ever touched one, he said.</p>
<p>&#8220;What is that?&#8221;  he asked then.  &#8220;I didn&#8217;t know anything about it.  I never held a computer in my hands.”</p>
<p>Undeterred, he learned to use Zoom and other online platforms to keep up in school.  He spent his sophomore year online.</p>
<p>In his senior year, Aguilar took advanced courses in English and concert band, where he plays drums, and ran a new club for indigenous Guatemalan students who, like him, speak the Mayan dialect Mam, Funes said, noting he is now trilingual. </p>
<p>He completed the first semester with a grade of 4.0.</p>
<p>On graduation day, Aguilar also learns that he has won several school awards, including the school&#8217;s highest honor, the Thurgood Marshall Way Award, given to the top two students who demonstrate leadership, determination, and motivation.</p>
<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m so proud of him,&#8221; Funes said.  &#8220;He&#8217;s an inspiration to me.&#8221;</p>
<p>On Wednesday, she said she will give up mascara because she will cry too hard.</p>
<p>&#8220;I want to break the stigma,&#8221; she said.  &#8220;Just because the odds are against you doesn&#8217;t mean it&#8217;s impossible.&#8221;</p>
<p>Aguilar isn&#8217;t the only one at San Francisco high schools who&#8217;s made it.</p>
<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s extraordinary and there are so many stories like his,&#8221; she said.  &#8220;He is not alone in battle and not alone in success.&#8221;</p>
<p>Aguilar is still writing his success story.</p>
<p>He plans to enroll in community college in the fall and is looking for an electrical or <a class="wpil_keyword_link" href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/bay-spaces-150-yr-outdated-water-pipe-drawback-nbc-bay-space/"   title="plumbing" data-wpil-keyword-link="linked">plumbing</a> degree.</p>
<p>His mother was overcome with pride, he said, adding, &#8220;Sometimes she can&#8217;t believe I would graduate from high school.&#8221;</p>
<p>He also has a hard time believing it and saying it doesn&#8217;t feel real, it feels like he&#8217;s dreaming.</p>
<p>&#8220;I want a better future,&#8221; he said.  &#8220;I have always said that I will seize this opportunity.&#8221;</p>
<p class="cci_endnote_contact" title="CCI End Note Contact">Reach Jill Tucker: jtucker@sfchronicle.com</p></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/an-sf-highschool-pupils-gorgeous-story/">An SF highschool pupil’s gorgeous story</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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		<title>Seth Taube&#8217;s San Francisco Story: Music, Entrepreneurship, and Innovation &#124; Musical Devices</title>
		<link>https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/seth-taubes-san-francisco-story-music-entrepreneurship-and-innovation-musical-devices/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Daily SF News]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2023 20:09:59 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Moving]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Entrepreneurship]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Francisco]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[instruments]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/?p=31340</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Credit: Seth Taube San Francisco is well known for its eclectic culture and vibrant artistic spirit. Not only did the city inspire iconic songs like &#8220;The Dock of the Bay&#8221; and &#8220;Lights,&#8221; it also catapulted the careers of legends like Carlos Santana, Grateful Dead, and Creedence Clearwater Revival. However, the city&#8217;s music scene has inspired &#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/seth-taubes-san-francisco-story-music-entrepreneurship-and-innovation-musical-devices/">Seth Taube&#8217;s San Francisco Story: Music, Entrepreneurship, and Innovation | Musical Devices</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p>
<p>                                <span class="expand hidden-print" data-toggle="modal" data-target=".modal-9eb4f998-f8d2-11ed-865e-3b0be804129b"><br />
                <span class="fas tnt-expand"/><br />
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<p>             <img decoding="async" src="https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/sfweekly.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/9/eb/9eb4f998-f8d2-11ed-865e-3b0be804129b/646bbb6605852.image.jpg?resize=200%2C267" alt="" aria-hidden="true" loading="lazy" height="267" width="200"/></p>
<p>                                <span class="credit"><br />
                                    <span itemprop="author" class="tnt-byline">Credit: Seth Taube</span><br />
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<p>San Francisco is well known for its eclectic culture and vibrant artistic spirit.  Not only did the city inspire iconic songs like &#8220;The Dock of the Bay&#8221; and &#8220;Lights,&#8221; it also catapulted the careers of legends like Carlos Santana, Grateful Dead, and Creedence Clearwater Revival.  However, the city&#8217;s music scene has inspired people to seek success beyond music, including financial legend Seth Taube.</p>
<p>At the North American level, Seth Taube is best known for his work as a philanthropist, entrepreneur, investor, and finance professional.  However, those familiar with the San Francisco music scene may know him better for his musical talent and passion.  Having started playing the violin 44 years ago, Taube has honed his skills throughout his life and developed a deep appreciation for music.  This was one of his reasons for becoming a resident of the San Francisco area.</p>
<p>&#8220;Choosing San Francisco was a conscious decision to immerse yourself in a community that inspires passion, fosters growth and sets the stage for exceptional achievement,&#8221; said Taube.  &#8220;The local music scene embodies a perfect blend of innovation, diversity and artistic energy that I just can&#8217;t get enough of.&#8221;</p>
<p>Anyone who knows Taube will immediately understand his fascination with San Francisco, as he often speaks about how music and technological innovation can help deal with some of the pressing existential threats humanity faces.  By forming several multi-million dollar companies and providing capital to over 500 other companies, San Francisco&#8217;s tech scene also happened to align with Taube&#8217;s vision of a better future.</p>
<p>“San Francisco has always been a place where innovation and collaboration are at the heart of every endeavor, be it artistic or entrepreneurial, making it the perfect playground for someone like me,” Taube explains.  &#8220;Moving here not only allowed me to meet and play with some of the most talented musicians I&#8217;ve ever met, but also the opportunity to mentor entrepreneurs who could change the world in the near future.&#8221;</p>
<p>Taube regularly collaborates with several chamber music and bluegrass groups, two genres he always admired as a child because they were compatible with his favorite instrument, the violin.  As part of the local music community, Taube has also focused many of his philanthropic efforts on helping young musicians develop their talent.</p>
<p>Paul Kantner of Jefferson Airplane once said, &#8220;San Francisco is 49 square miles and surrounded by reality,&#8221; describing it as an oasis for those who seek to transcend the constraints of everyday life.  Now, as uncertainty mounts by the hour, visionaries like Taube see it as a glimmer of hope and a catalyst for positive change.</p>
<p>“I firmly believe in the transformative power of music.  Not only is it closer than ever to a universal language, but it also has the ability to touch hearts, evoke emotion and bring people together,” Taube concludes.  “Music is about taking something relatively simple and making something incredible out of it, and that&#8217;s what philanthropy, entrepreneurship and life should be about.  The people here understand that.”</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com/seth-taubes-san-francisco-story-music-entrepreneurship-and-innovation-musical-devices/">Seth Taube&#8217;s San Francisco Story: Music, Entrepreneurship, and Innovation | Musical Devices</a> appeared first on <a href="https://dailysanfranciscobaynews.com">DAILY SAN FRANCISCO BAY NEWS</a>.</p>
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