Connie Chan | |
Office: | Member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors from District 1 |
Birth Place: | Hong Kong |
Predecessor: | Sandra Lee Fewer |
Termstart: | January 8, 2021 |
Party: | Democratic |
Native Name: | 陳詩敏 |
Native Name Lang: | zh |
Education: | University of California, Davis |
Website: | Board of Supervisors District 1 website |
Connie Chan is an American politician serving as a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors for District 1 since January 8, 2021,[1] after defeating Marjan Philhour, who ran for the seat in 2016, in a narrow race.[2] Chan is a progressive.[3] [4] District 1 includes the Richmond, Lone Mountain, Sea Cliff, and Presidio Terrace neighborhoods, and parts of Golden Gate Park.
Chan was born in Hong Kong and migrated to San Francisco at the age of thirteen with her family, who settled in Chinatown.[5] She attended high school at the Galileo Academy of Science and Technology and earned her bachelor's degree at the University of California, Davis.[5]
Chan was a spokesperson for the San Francisco Recreation and Parks Department and City College of San Francisco.[6] She also worked for the San Francisco Zoo and Gardens.[7] At various points, Chan was an aide to Supervisor Sophie Maxwell,[5] San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris,[5] and Supervisor Aaron Peskin.[7]
Two days after incumbent Supervisor Sandra Lee Fewer announced she would not seek re-election in 2020, Chan (a resident of the Richmond District) announced her candidacy for the open District 1 seat.[6] Fewer endorsed Chan to be her successor.[8] She also received the endorsement of two former supervisors who held the seat, Eric Mar and Jake McGoldrick.[6]
In the November 2020 general election, Chan won by 134 votes against challenger Marjan Philhour,[7] a senior adviser to Mayor London Breed.[6] Philhour, a centrist candidate,[9] had previously run for the seat in 2016, but was defeated by Fewer.[6]
Chan was sworn into office on January 8, 2021.
Chan supported legislation by Supervisor Dean Preston to create a city-run public bank.[10] In February 2021, Chan supported a plan to provide free Summer Activities for San Francisco's elementary school students.[11] [12]
In February 2021, Chan and Peskin called upon the city controller and Budget Analyst's Office to investigate the San Francisco Parks Alliance, amid a debate on whether to renew the city's contract with the Alliance to operate the SkyStar Wheel, a Ferris wheel at Golden Gate Park.[13] Chan and fellow Supervisor Aaron Peskin blocked a decision by the San Francisco Historic Preservation Commission to extend the wheel's stay through 2025, referring it to a vote in the Board of Supervisors.[14] Instead of the Commission's proposal for a four-year extension, Chan and Peskin proposed a one-year extension, citing complaints from Ferris wheel opponents regarding the wheel's bright lights and electric generator, which they said might injure wildlife, as well as the San Francisco Parks Alliance's linkage to a corruption investigation. The Board of Supervisors rejected the Chan/Peskin proposal on a 6–5 vote.[15] [16]
Peskin, as chairman of the Board of Supervisors, appointed Chan as chair of the Budget Committee,[17] [18] whose other members were Supervisors Myrna Melgar and Joel Engardio.[19] As Budget Committee chair, Chan supported extension of the COVID-19 pandemic-era CalFresh emergency benefits and called for eventually making the Muni system fare-free.[17]
Chan disagreed with several of Mayor Breed's key priorities.[19] Chan and other supervisors, along with the mayor, ultimately negotiated a $14.6 billion budget, which ended a $780 million deficit that had emerged in the two years of the pandemic,[20] and largely preserved Breed's major proposals on public safety and economic policy.[19] The budget included close to $63 million in additional funding for San Francisco Police Department, representing an 8.5% increase in the department's budget.[20] Chan opposed Breed's separate proposal for an additional $27 million supplemental appropriation to SFPD.[17] The budget also adopted a compromise negotiated between Breed and supervisors regarding funding of the San Francisco emergency homeless shelter network.[20] The budget adopted a limited version of Breed's proposal to offer tax incentives to firms opening new offices in downtown San Francisco.[20]
In 2020, while running for the Board of Supervisors, Chan expressed support for building more denser housing along Geary Boulevard and other major thoroughfares, but only if the new developments were affordable housing; Chan also argued that building more market-rate housing does not increase housing affordability.[8]
In 2021, Chan voted to block the development of 495-unit apartment complex (one-quarter of which were designated as affordable housing) on a Nordstrom's valet parking lot next to a BART station. The 8 - 3 vote in the Board of Supervisors was highly controversial.[21]
In 2021, Chan supported the reopening of the Great Highway (a two-mile stretch of road bypassing the Outer Sunset) to cars. Auto access to the Great Highway had been closed during the COVID-19 pandemic and turned into a walkway.[22]
In a 2022 vote in the Board of Supervisors' Rules Committee, Chan and Peskin voted down a proposal (supported by Supervisor Ahsha Safaí and Mayor London Breed) to place a referendum on the city ballot to streamline the permitting process for certain housing developments; San Francisco takes substantially longer to approve housing permits than other California municipalities.[23] [24] Breed described the vote as "obstructionism."
In 2022, Chan authored a bill that would have streamlined the development of 100% affordable housing that met the requirements laid out in the bill.[25] [26] [27] [28] Chan and the owners of the long vacant Alexandria Theatre announced the City and the building owner were exploring a development agreement to convert the former movie theatre into 76 housing units, with affordable housing units on-site.[29]
In December 2023, Chan and Peskin asked the city attorney to sue the State of California to challenge the implementation of SB 423, a new California law (sponsored by state Senator Scott Wiener of San Francisco) that allowed streamlined approval for housing development projects. In their letter, Chan and Peskin asserted that the law unfairly discriminated against San Francisco, and that San Francisco had sufficiently produced market-rate housing. Weiner criticized Chan's and Peskin's letter as an attempt to encourage the filing of a "frivolous lawsuit" and criticized city authorities for creating "extreme impediments" to resolving the San Francisco housing shortage.[30]
Chan is seeking reelection in 2024, running again against Philhour in a rematch of the 2020 race. The race is hotly contested.[31] [32] As was the case in the campaign four years earlier, Chan ran as a progressive while Philhour has run as a centrist/moderate.[9] [32]
Chan's long time partner, Ed, is a member of the San Francisco Fire Department. The couple has a son.[33] Like many Asian women of her generation, she is named after American news anchor Connie Chung.[34]