Good afternoon!

It’s back to school day in San Francisco! Follow along during the day as we chat with Mission students and their families about the beginning of a new school year.

SFUSD opens with twenty-five percent of its vacant teacher positions still unfilled. Many teachers blame the shortage on SFUSD’s payroll disasters, increased special education caseloads, mismanagement, and inadequate pay. “What you see is highly qualified teachers leaving…and new teachers burn out quickly because they donโ€™t have any guidance.โ€

San Francisco’s classic disaster-warning sirens have been silent since 2019, and fixes to the system are still unfunded. In the wake of fires on Maui, disaster experts worry this will leave residents vulnerable if cell phones and internet access get knocked out.

More soon,

Sara

The Latest News

Mission High on back to school day.

Back to school 2023: SF students begin a new year

“I’m excited and nervous because it’s my first day.”

Mission High sits next to Mission Dolores Park.

SFUSD prepares for new year amid teacher shortages

“People are getting fed up. And youโ€™re seeing it โ€” because people are leaving.”

One of SF sirens, downtown

Disaster sirens still silent after 4 years, with no funding in sight

“What are you guys going to do? This is not an acceptable situation.โ€


SNAP


Haute doggie dining

By Mike Schuller


Mission Local is a nonprofit news site that depends on its readers.

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Volunteer and author of the daily newsletter. I'm a writer whoโ€™s covered wars, politics, and religion. Iโ€™ve lived in the Mission for over 30 years, and have appreciated the work of Mission Local since it began.