Barbara Lee walking down Mission Street next to Kevin Ortiz, president of the San Francisco Latinx Democratic Club
Barbara Lee walking down Mission Street on March 5, 2024, next to Kevin Ortiz, president of the San Francisco Latinx Democratic Club, who held a sign urging a "no" vote on Proposition E. Photo by Junyao Yang.

โ€œMission Buzzโ€ is a regular update on changes, tidbits and other news from the Missionโ€™s commercial corridors. Got news? Send to tips at tips@missionlocal.com.


A man speaks into a microphone at an outdoor gathering. People stand around him, including a person holding a sign in the background. Trees and buildings are visible.
Kevin Ortiz, co-president of the San Francisco Latinx Democratic Club.

The San Francisco Latino Democratic Club announced last week that Kevin Ortiz will step away as the clubโ€™s president after three years in the position. His tenure ended today.  

โ€œI decided not to take on and run for another term, because it was time to allow leadership that’s been developing to take the reins,โ€ Ortiz said on Monday. โ€œIt’s always been that way with the LDC. We create spaces; spaces for others.โ€

The clubโ€™s new president will be Gabriela Lozano, its current treasurer.

Ortiz stepped aside from his position in July 2024 following allegations of sexual misconduct by two women. He was reinstated in March 2025 after the findings of a special investigation committee formed by the club did not support the allegations. The club then cut ties with the local Democratic Party.

One of the women accusing Ortiz declined to participate in the process citing concerns over a bias investigation. The attorney for the second accuser said the investigation committee did not reach out to his client.

“The scope of the investigation was too narrow to be credible,” read a statement by Neil Hallinan, the attorney for the second accuser. “The public can have no confidence in the findings of this investigation.โ€

Despite the allegations, Ortiz said heโ€™s proud of the work heโ€™s done for the club.

โ€œI walk away with my head high, because I have survived very personal attacks through an orchestrated scandal, and I have done so without surrendering my integrity or my commitment to this community,โ€ Ortiz wrote in a statement. 

Ortiz said he will focus more on consulting, working out, spending time with family, and school. 


Street view of Ezzo Rotisserie, a Middle Eastern restaurant with an open sign, outdoor seating, and banners announcing a soft opening in San Francisco.
Ezzo Rotisserie opened in August. The restaurant serves rotisserie chicken and Arabian staples. Photo by Oscar Palma.

Ezzo Rotisserie at 3388 24th St. near Valencia Street opened in August. The restaurant serves rotisserie chicken and other staples of Arabic cuisine. 

The restaurantโ€™s menu includes staples like grilled chicken, shawarma, falafel wraps, kebab, hummus and baba ganoush. As for desserts, thereโ€™s baklava, kanfeh and basbossa.

Ezzo Rotisserie is open seven days a week from 11 a.m. to midnight.


A two-story building with a metal gate, peeling white facade, green door, and a mural of a person in a brown coat, partially obscured by a tree on the sidewalk.
The building at 3034 24th St. has been empty since approximately 2009, but that’s changing later this year when a new restaurant takes over the space. Photo courtesy of MSQ Engineering Consultant.

A new Mediterranean restaurant is coming later this year to 3034 24th St. near Balmy Alley. The planning commission greenlit the project earlier this month after it sought a change of use from commercial to restaurant space.

The location, formerly the home of a grocery store-turned-restaurant, has been empty since approximately 2009. Project representative Danial Shabaz, whose family has run the Pakistani restaurant Pakwan at 3180 16th St. for nearly 30 years, said the new owner โ€” his aunt โ€” is excited to be part of the 24th Street corridor.

โ€œWe’ve loved 24th Street for the cultural, multicultural background and diverse background that it’s always had,โ€ Shabaz said. โ€œWe’ve always wanted to be a part of this community.โ€

Shabaz is advising his aunt, who, alongside his parents, owns the building, on how to get a business up and running.

Shabaz said thereโ€™s still no name for the restaurant. The menu, too, is still in the works, but he does not expect any Pakwan items to be included.


Architectural site plan showing an existing 6-unit building and a new 8-unit building footprint, separated by a court, with measurements and construction notes indicated.
A rendering of the new building at 241 Dolores St. Image courtesy of Knock architecture and design.

The planning commission heard a proposal earlier this month for a new four-story, eight-unit market-rate apartment building at 241 Dolores St. between 15th and 16th streets. 

The proposed 12,700-square-foot building will go up in the courtyard of an existing six-unit apartment building facing Dolores Street.

Seven units in the proposal would be two-bedroom apartments, and one would be a three-bedroom. The plan also includes the construction of a separate one-story accessory dwelling unit. 

Projects with fewer than 10 units are exempt from any affordable-housing requirements. The project takes advantage of state law SB 423, which expedites permitting processes. The law also limits planning commissionersโ€™ ability to approve or deny projects.

Commissioner Sean McGarry lamented the projectโ€™s use of SB 423 for a project โ€œjust under the wire to qualify for affordable housing.โ€

โ€œI do like the project,โ€ McGarry said at a hearing on Jan. 15. But, he said, โ€œI do want to say I’m not a big fan of 423 being used for nine units, anything under 10 units. I don’t believe that was its original intent.โ€  

Project architect Ryan Knock from Knock Architecture Design did not reply to a request for comment. According to Redfin, the property sold in September for $2.7 million. It is unclear who the owner is. 


A man orders at a modern coffee counter with two staff members, espresso machines, a menu board, and stacks of cups in a minimalistic cafรฉ setting.
Among the baristas at BIGFACE today: Butler’s personal barista, Rodney Mustelier, and Kat Padlan and Tyler Smith from Lucky’s Cofee in L.A. Photo by HR Smith, July 11, 2025.

Bigface, Jimmy Butler’s coffee pop-up, is coming back to the corner of 22nd and Valencia streets.

The Warriors forward brings his coffee back to the storefront after previously occupying the space for more than two weeks in July. The pop-up starts on Thursday, and it will run until mid-April.

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Reporting from the Mission District and other District 9 neighborhoods. Some of his personal interests are bicycles, film, and both Latin American literature and punk. Oscar's work has previously appeared in KQED, The Frisc, El Tecolote, and Golden Gate Xpress.

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7 Comments

  1. Kevin Ortiz’s stepping down from the SF Latino Democratic Club will give him more time to hang out with his pal and partner in crime, Jon Jacobo.

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  2. Deal with all the city BS for 1 affordable unit? – Sometime these planners these planners should listen to themselves, to many it sounds like they are are smoking crack. Who wants the hassle of special carve-outs, just be glad some developers are willing to risk doing anything. SF doesnโ€™t help itself. Anyone getting any built in SF has balls, good luck to them. Not for the faint of heart in this town. All these rules make everything more expensive for everyone. Iโ€™m sure that planner would be giving up his pension to help the โ€˜needyโ€™ with housing.

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  3. “I do want to say Iโ€™m not a big fan of 423 being used for nine units, anything under 10 units. I donโ€™t believe that was its original intent.โ€

    SB 423’s plain language: “Code complying projects with less than 10 dwelling units”. Also SB 423: “It is the policy of the state that this section be interpreted and implemented in a manner to afford the fullest possible weight to the interest of, and the approval and provision of, increased housing supply.”

    And this guy was appointed because he’s nominally pro-housing! No wonder a quarter-million people left California for red states last year.

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  4. As long as the Latino Democratic Club doesn’t stupidly rebrand itself as the Latinx Democratic Club, I’m happy enough with their leadership. Pools show that Hispanics hate the bogus gringo term “Latinx.”

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  5. This is great news for SFLDC, because Kevin was a no-good weasel when those allegations came out. Just like Jacobo, he lied to community and feigned ignorance, until the trust from community was broken beyond repair. Here’s hoping he never runs for political office.

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  6. Kevin’s a good guy,

    I haven’t met Jacobo yet but he seems like a good fella too.

    Both smeared and defenestrated by a gang of man-hating women.

    They’ve been coming after me for 20 odd years.

    In the last election cycle when I was a candidate for D-9 about 3 dozen of them hung up on me simultaneously in a Zoom interview where they appeared on my 54″ plasma like Hollywood Squares for their interview which went like this …

    “Why do you want our endorsement?”

    “I don’t want your endorsement.”

    “Then, why are you interviewing with us?”

    “For the story; I always run for the story from the inside.”

    “What story?”

    “I’ve watched you gather like a coven and attack Kevin Ortiz and Jon Jacobo and I wanted to see if you were all man-haters.”

    “CUT HIM OFF!!!”

    “HANG UP ON HIM!!!”

    They hung up and I didn’t get their endorsement.

    I spoke with Ortiz yesterday as he lives on me and Skippy’s Volunteer Trash Route and he said that the cops and DA keep pushing Jacobo’s court day back 6 months at a time.

    We live in interesting times.

    Go Seahawks and Sam Dalton !!!

    h.

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