Mid-Market revitalization Lee implemented a revitalization of
Mid-Market, San Francisco, providing companies that moved into the area with a temporary exemption from paying San Francisco's 1.5 percent payroll tax. Twitter, which had threatened to move out of San Francisco into the
San Francisco Peninsula without the tax break, moved into Mid-Market in 2011. In October 2013,
Square, Inc. moved its headquarters to the mid-Market area, followed by
Uber and
Dolby Laboratories. In 2014, this exemption saved companies . The plan drew controversy not only for the tax breaks given to corporations, but for the effects of
gentrification on the nearby
Tenderloin neighborhood.
Housing in 2015 In 2012, Lee proposed the creation of a Housing Trust Fund, which would generate between $20 million and $50 million of funding for affordable and middle class housing per year for thirty years. In 2014, Lee and
David Chiu, the president of the board of supervisors, announced the creation of the Ellis Act Housing Preference Program, which would help people evicted from their homes by landlords using the
Ellis Act. That year, Lee pledged to construct 30,000 new and rehabilitated homes throughout the city by 2020, with half available to low, working and middle income San Franciscans, and launched a small site acquisition program to fund the purchase and stabilization of multi-family rental buildings in neighborhoods that are susceptible to evictions and rising rents. Lee sponsored a $310 million bond measure to pay for housing for the November 2015 general election, which passed. In 2017, Lee approved a $44 million project to build affordable housing for teachers.
Minimum wage In December 2013, Lee called for an increase to San Francisco's minimum wage. In 2014, the board of supervisors unanimously approved a measure to raise the city's minimum wage for the November 2014 ballot. In October 2014, Lee announced that the city's minimum wage of $10.74 per hour would be adjusted to $11.05 per hour, effective January 1, 2015. In 2015, Lee co-chaired the minimum wage campaign with
Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf and worked with the
Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West for a November ballot initiative to gradually increase California's minimum wage to $15 an hour. The California State Senate and State Assembly approved Senate Bill 3, raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2022.
Suspension of Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi On January 13, 2012, incumbent
Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi was charged with
domestic violence battery,
child endangerment, and
dissuading a witness in connection with a New Year's Eve altercation he had with his wife. On March 20, 2012, Mayor Ed Lee gave Sheriff Mirkarimi a 24-hour ultimatum to resign from his post. While jury selection was underway, Mirkarimi entered into a plea agreement with the district attorney and pled guilty to one count of misdemeanor
false imprisonment. When Mirkarimi refused to resign, the mayor suspended him and appointed a temporary replacement,
Vicki Hennessy. City Attorney
Dennis Herrera crafted the formal complaint and sent it to the city's Ethics Commission and board of supervisors, who accepted it and then investigated Mirkarimi under misconduct charges as required by the city charter. On August 16, the commission ruled by 4 to 1 that Mirkarimi committed official misconduct when he falsely imprisoned his wife. Six of the charges brought by the mayor matched District Attorney
George Gascón's original criminal charges. Five of those were overruled, including the charge that Mirkarimi dissuaded witnesses and that he abused the power of his office. On October 9, 2012, four of the eleven San Francisco District Supervisors voted against Lee's removal of Mirkarimi as sheriff. The mayor would have needed the votes of nine board members to remove Mirkarimi. == Personal life and death ==