Commissioners used the April 4 meeting to press planning staff for a clearer approach to the mayor’s recent letter on the citywide rezoning proposal and asked how the department will update its recommendations.
Director Hillis told commissioners the department circulated a memo (from Lisa Chen) outlining next steps and topics and stressed staff will pursue data‑driven recommendations. "We will continue to ... put forward recommendations that we think are good planning policy, good public policy, and really use data and analysis to get there," Director Hillis said.
Commissioners asked for more neighborhood‑focused outreach, including potential mailers and topic workshops on objective design standards, historic preservation, infrastructure needs, and how the local program would interact with state density bonus rules. "Doing it with more neighbourhood focused input ... is where the success of San Francisco planning has been," Vice President Moore said.
Public commenters during general comment reinforced the call for careful outreach and cited concerns about upzoning, displacement and modeling assumptions: Neighborhoods United San Francisco and other speakers urged the commission to keep equity front and center and to explain feasibility and the city’s approach to infrastructure and tenant protections.
Staff said the topics are likely to be bunched across several hearings, and that the department will post the memo and schedule topic‑based hearings rapidly to meet HCD timelines for the housing element process.
Next steps: Staff will post the memo and propose a schedule of topic‑specific hearings; commissioners signaled support for additional hearings on preservation, equity and feasibility before a revised map is finalized.