A photo of four officials holding a commendation.
Upon being named Department of Building Inspection employee of the quarter in April 2016, senior inspector Bernie Curran, on the far right, said "It is a pleasure and privilege to serve the people of San Francisco on a daily basis." From left: then-Department of Building Inspection director Tom Hui, then-Building Inspection Commissioner Frank Lee and then-deputy director Dan Lowrey.

A long time ago, an eventual colleague of mine at the Hearst-era San Francisco Examiner — who could be described as dumb as a box of hammers, but this would necessitate discussing the relative intellects of varying types of hammers — had a problem at work. 

In this bygone era, information still traveled into newsrooms via tickertape. And this newspaperman simply couldn’t keep up with the flow of near-constant updates. So, he devised a solution: He turned off the newsroom tickertape machine.

For a brief, halcyon period, outside problems continued and even proliferated, but the newsroom remained remarkably peaceful. Presently, in a potentially far more destructive way, the city of San Francisco is doing the same thing. 

Last week, the Planning Commission approved proposed legislation from Board of Supervisors President Rafael Mandelman that would do away with fees and fines for people living in homes in which shoddy work, or perhaps worse, was carried out by disgraced engineer and permit expediter Rodrigo Santos, and/or approved by corrupt senior building inspector Bernie Curran

Both Santos and Curran went to prison as part of a federal probe into malfeasance at the Department of Building Inspection; the two were involved in a bribery scheme. It makes sense for the city not to doubly penalize homeowners who’ve been victimized by crap construction and/or dubious approvals of it by also punishing them with costly penalties, especially if the work in question was undertaken by prior owners. 

What does not make sense is the way that the city has chosen to go about this. It has artificially circumscribed the number of people eligible for amnesty while also failing to shine a light on the true extent of the lying and cheating that went on with the Department of Building Inspection’s tacit approval and even active cooperation.

The city is, in short, turning off the tickertape machine. 

Only a fraction of Curran/Santos properties were inspected by DBI

15,281 properties were

tied to Rodrigo Santos

or Bernie Curran

Out of those, only 5,445

properties were listed

in DBI’s audit

Not listed in audit

Only 140 properties

were physically

inspected

Not inspected

Listed in audit

15,281 properties were

tied to Rodrigo Santos

or Bernie Curran

Out of those, only

5,445 properties

were listed in DBI’s

audit

Not listed in audit

Not inspected

Listed in audit

Only 140 properties

were physically

inspected

Chart by Kelly Waldron. Source: The Department of Building and Inspection.

Underlying the Santos/Curran amnesty legislation is a years-in-the-making Department of Building Inspection audit of properties either man — or, especially, both of them — worked on. For all their other faults, both Santos and Curran possessed an abundant work ethic: The DBI audit underpinning the Santos/Curran amnesty legislation included some 5,445 properties. But DBI personnel ended up physically inspecting only 140 of them, and issued just 134 Notices of Violation — not quite 3 percent. 

These numbers are unbelievable — as in, I don’t believe them. But the bigger issue here is that DBI vastly limited the scope of the audit by only including some 3,000 Curran properties instead of the full 12,739 he inspected during his lengthy city career. 

Did an (accused) federal criminal work on your home? Check our map.

Map by Will Jarrett. Data from the Department of Building Inspection.

Only properties in which Curran performed an unscheduled same-day inspection, always a red flag that skullduggery is afoot, were included in this audit. 

Curran, however, went to federal prison because of his corruption. He was, for perhaps a decade, the Steph Curry of a corrupt department. While he was perfectly capable of doing skullduggery on a same-day unscheduled inspection, he absolutely had the skillset to skulldugger when he routinely went out-of-district to do an inspection (not on the audit), or when he did any routine inspection (not on the audit).

Curran thrived and was promoted within DBI to the role of senior inspector; current director Patrick O’Riordan was, for many years, his direct supervisor, who signed off on his time cards.

Curran’s leadership role imparted him with the ability to do a lot more than make trouble with unscheduled inspections. He could make trouble with scheduled inspections. He could sign off on inspections when he never traveled to the sites; Curran purportedly laughed about this with his colleagues (the GPS data for his city-issued car would be helpful here, if anyone cared to review it). On top of his own (dubious) work, he could also dispatch the inspectors he supervised to do inspections. 

Curran even threw his weight around with inspectors he wasn’t supervising. Close readers may recall an earlier Mission Local article noting a DBI senior inspector pressuring an inspector, whom he did not oversee, to blow off doing rebar inspections on seismic retrofits and instead schmooze at a holiday party attended by the very builders and developers whose work he’d be inspecting.

Well, that senior inspector was Bernie Curran. At the time, in a stage whisper audible to anyone who cared to listen, Curran purportedly dismissed these inspections on seismic upgrades by saying “rebar, shmeebar.” 

Bernie Curran heading to his sentencing
Former senior building inspector Bernie Curran enters the San Francisco federal courthouse prior to his sentencing hearing on July 14, 2023, trailed by his daughter. Curran was sentenced to a year and a day in prison. Photo by Gilare Zada

The city well and truly ought to doubly scour every mandatory retrofit job tied Santos and/or Curran as a matter of course.  

As it stands, there are, literally, thousands of Curran-inspected properties where strange and terrible things could be underfoot or in the walls. Again, these were purposefully excluded from the audit (and DBI only personally visited 140 of the 5,445 properties it did include). 

It’s hard to understand why DBI was the agency tasked with undertaking an audit of the failures of DBI; it is perversely incentivized. As it is, the audit really is akin to the algorithm underpinning this whole endeavor. And, right now, it feels a bit like the AI program insisting there are only two r’s in “strawberry.” 

In other words: Audit, shmaudit. 

Rodrigo Santos at the United States District Court for the Northern District of California.
Rodrigo Santos at the United States District Court for the Northern District of California prior to his sentencing. Photo by Joe Eskenazi, Aug. 25, 2023.

If ever there was a poster couple for the city’s need to provide amnesty to the victims of the bad actors it enabled and employed, it would be Aleksandra Kenar and Andreu Osika. 

The pair, profiled in a deeply reported piece by the Chronicle’s St. John Barned-Smith, are facing perhaps a seven-figure construction bill to undo serious problems in a home they bought that had been worked on by the Santos/Curran one-two punch.

It makes perfect sense that people in Kenar and Osika’s position shouldn’t be punished for construction and inspection problems they had no way to know about, but which the city did indeed have ways to know about. Their attorney, Emily Brough, says that waiving additional penalties will certainly help her clients. But only so much. This could save them thousands of dollars, but they’re on the hook for hundreds of thousands, if not more than $1 million. 

“It’s a token of what they lost,” Brough says. “It’ll be a small part of their monetary losses, not to mention the toll it’s taken on them and their health and family.” 

The city attorney is insisting Kenar and Osika do not have recourse to sue San Francisco. Their attorney — surprise, surprise, surprise — does not agree. 

It’s also not clear how many of the people swept up in the audit’s 134 Notices of Violation are as blameless as Kenar and Osika. Some 99 of those 134 complaints have not been fully investigated by DBI, so we just don’t know. 

There is, at present, not even an audit report, and yet we’re moving ahead with this amnesty program. Mandelman hopes to have it ratified by the Board of Supervisors by June and signed by Mayor Daniel Lurie before the supes’ August recess. 

So, that may well happen. And it may extend a modicum of relief for people like Kenar and Osika (and, potentially, others whose tales are less sympathetic). But there’s a lot of tickertape remaining out there. The city has chosen not to read it.  

Follow Us

Managing Editor/Columnist. Joe was born in San Francisco, raised in the Bay Area, and attended U.C. Berkeley. He never left.

“Your humble narrator” was a writer and columnist for SF Weekly from 2007 to 2015, and a senior editor at San Francisco Magazine from 2015 to 2017. You may also have read his work in the Guardian (U.S. and U.K.); San Francisco Public Press; San Francisco Chronicle; San Francisco Examiner; Dallas Morning News; and elsewhere.

He resides in the Excelsior with his wife and three (!) kids, 4.3 miles from his birthplace and 5,474 from hers.

The Northern California branch of the Society of Professional Journalists named Eskenazi the 2019 Journalist of the Year.

Join the Conversation

16 Comments

  1. An excellent explanation of the issues at hand.
    Property owners that have been hurt by the City’s/DBI’s malfeasance should definitely be allowed to sue for damages.

    +5
    -1
    votes. Sign in to vote
  2. One unclear thing in this article. Are you saying that, of the 140 properties DBI could be bothered to inspect, 134 of them were in violation? As in 96% of that small sampling of affected properties required remedy?

    +2
    0
    votes. Sign in to vote
    1. Sir — 

      My understanding is that, of 294 flagged properties, 175 were determined to need physical inspections. Of those 175, 135 (one more in the period between the story and now) have been given NOVs. More could be forthcoming.

      JE

      +3
      -1
      votes. Sign in to vote
  3. Shouldn’t we just merge Planning & Buildings, to avoid people being caught up in (typically costly) skirmishes between them?

    +2
    -1
    votes. Sign in to vote
    1. Or just run them competently and ethically, even oversee them maybe?

      All I can say is thank GOD we got rid of London Breed. Lurie’s got a window to show something of himself with his self-lauded “business know-how” and talk of accountability – he should be leading the charge to investigate and remunerate those affected by the City’s agents’ frauds. He should be all about it. Crickets!?

      +1
      -1
      votes. Sign in to vote
  4. “The legal recourse for any property owners who bought properties with unpermitted work is to bring a lawsuit against those who sold them the properties, contracted with Mr. Santos, or bribed Mr. Curran,” Jen Kwart, a spokesperson for the city attorney’s office, said in an emailed statement. “The City did not benefit from the actions of Mr. Santos, Mr. Curran, and those who hired them. In fact, the City was also defrauded.”

    YOU HIRED AND “SUPERVISED” THEM AND GAVE THEM LEGAL POWERS.

    YES, JEN KWART, YOU THE CITY SCREWED UP ALSO. YOU ARE LIABLE TOO.

    You and Chiu can put your hands over your eyes and play blind justice all you like because frankly we expect that type of charade from SF.gov now. It’s the same SF.gov that was supposedly overseeing the DPW/DBI frauds the ENTIRE TIME!

    Put a sock in it Kwart, we’re not buying your excuses anymore.

    +2
    -1
    votes. Sign in to vote
  5. Great article Joe, you nailed it when you mentioned that DBI is investigating itself about the biggest scandal to hit the department in decades or maybe ever.
    And how is DBI investigating itself?
    Bernie was a manager and the people who facilitated his actions were also managers and they all have been promoted to even higher positions. And the so called “reforms” at the department only target the line staff. Not the management.
    This audit is like everything DBI does “smoke and mirrors “ and the supervisors are gobbling it up. Maybe to try and impress Lurie?

    +1
    -1
    votes. Sign in to vote
  6. Thanks for this story! My heart goes out to affected homeowners

    Here’s another case we rarely hear about for some mysterious reason. Some 2,500 residential apartment buildings are years past deadline for earthquake retrofits under SF’s Mandatory Soft Story Program. In large quakes, this type of building commonly pancakes. Most tenants living in such buildings don’t even know about the problem.

    How could this have happened? If we had The Big One today, how many lives could be lost?

    0
    0
    votes. Sign in to vote
  7. Just because Bernie or Rodbigo were involved in a project on someone’s property doesn’t mean there has to be something wrong with it. Might very well be but are you suggesting people open up their homes and properties to inspectors after the fact? What if they’ve upgraded their bathroom without permits in the meantime? How about added an in-law? I’d say 80% of homes in the Sunset have illegal in-law units. That’s not only trouble for the DBI but regular people just trying to get by. How about we start with your property Joe? I’m sure it’s completely up to code with no work without permits. If it is it would be a miracle.

    0
    0
    votes. Sign in to vote
    1. Gigi — 

      “Let’s ignore the work by the guys who went to prison and instead look at the home of the journalist writing the story” is really a crassly stupid thing to think, write, and hit “print” on.

      Come on already.

      JE

      0
      0
      votes. Sign in to vote
  8. I am one of the people affected and slapped with an NOV. Note that I am the 3rd owner since the Curran sign off. Yet DBI wants ME to pay for THEIR Crocker scheme.
    What neither you nor St John have been pointing out that there is only a moratorium on those NOVs which will immediately get triggered again as soon as you apply for any kind of a permit. Meaning that DBI will make itself whole eventually while homeowners have to bleed regardless of being guilty or not.
    I bought a house with a clean paper trail. That should be the end of it. It’s a disgusting level of extortion and criminality and no matter how loud you rattle the cage nobody is listening or reporting the facts

    0
    0
    votes. Sign in to vote
  9. you are questioning why every project is not “audited” ; errr . . . how do you go back and audit a rebar inspection? the rebar is encased in concrete and further buried under a slab. The system is designed so that the Engineer of Record (EOR) or the outside special inspection agency checks the details and signs off on structural work. Per state law the EOR or Special Inspector, not the city inspector, are the party that have legal and financial responsibility. The city inspector is really just there to make sure that the outside inspector initialled the job card and do a very general spotcheck or the drawings and selected areas on site. Should city inspectors do “drive-by” inspections? No. Going back and to open thousands of records of for the purpose of satisfying those who want heads on a pike does nothing to ensure life safety and is a colossal waste of resources.

    0
    0
    votes. Sign in to vote
  10. They found violations in 3% of the properties they did a plan check review of. They found violations in 96% of the properties they actually physically inspected.

    The reason the City is passing these “amnesties” is an attempt to sweep these numbers under the rug. What we have is a situation where it’s very likely that between 5,000 and 12,000 properties are structurally deficient in some manner (could be seismic, could be electrical, could be plumbing). That’s a huge potential liability that the City caused, not only to the properties themselves but, potentially, to neighboring properties. The City is setting themselves up for a big time judgment should something happen to these properties.

    Love the use of the word “skullduggery”. Great article Joe. Keep the heat on these criminals.

    0
    -1
    votes. Sign in to vote
Leave a comment
Please keep your comments short and civil. Do not leave multiple comments under multiple names on one article. We will zap comments that fail to adhere to these short and easy-to-follow rules.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *