Vote Yes

PROP G: Create a Student Success Fund from Excess State Funds (NOVEMBER 2022)

SF Rising Action Fund endorses a YES vote on Prop G. If passed, Prop G would create a Student Success Fund that would give up to $60 million in grants to schools in the San Francisco Unified School District. The money will be used to fund support programs, summer learning opportunities, and school nurses and psychologists. San Francisco collects more property taxes than the state threshold for public school funding. This proposition would put excess tax revenue towards the Student Success Fund.

If we want our communities to thrive, we must invest in our schools and give students the tools to succeed. Vote YES on Prop G to support students, school staff, and education in San Francisco.

Won with 77.78%

Our Statement on the Results of the November 8th, 2022 Midterm Election

November 18, 2022
SF Rising Action Fund is grateful and thrilled to see that there have been many progressive victories across the country in the November Midterm Elect…

PROP A: Adjust Retiree Supplemental Cost of Living (November 2022)

San Francisco Local Measure
Costs are rising and San Francisco has always been expensive. Prop A allows city employees who retired before November 6, 1996, to receive a supplemen…

PROP B: Eliminates the Department of Sanitation and Streets and transfer its duties back to the Department of Public Works (November 2022)

San Francisco Local Measure
Prop B eliminates the Department of Sanitation and Streets and transfers its duties to the Department of Public Works and retains the Public Works Com…

PROP C: Create a Homelessness Oversight Commission (November 2022)

San Francisco Local Measure
Prop C creates a Homelessness Oversight Commission to oversee the Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing and require the City controller to…

PROP D: Make it harder for low-income families to qualify for affordable housing (NOVEMBER 2022)

SF Rising Action Fund endorses a NO vote on Prop D. San Francisco is already saturated with market-rate housing, with more and more working-class peop…