Is San Francisco Back?
San Francisco is dead! Long live, San Francisco!
Or, maybe it's not so simple? The City by the Bay has always been a bellwether for the West Coast—economically, culturally, and politically. But in recent years, San Francisco, in particular, has faced a cascade of challenges: empty downtown offices, housing shortages, public safety concerns, and a lingering post-pandemic identity crisis.
Is San Francisco back? Or, do its challenges illuminate what’s coming to big cities everywhere?
In this episode of Pacific Time, Sean Elsbernd joins us. Sean is the CEO of SPUR, the Bay Area’s leading public policy center and he helps us unpack the real story behind the headlines. This is not a boosterish take, nor is it a doom loop.
Instead, it’s a clear-eyed conversation about what’s actually working, what isn’t, and what it will take for the whole San Francisco Bay Area to build on its deserved reputation for technical and social innovation. From downtown revitalization to housing reform, from governance challenges to regional cooperation, Elsbernd offers a pragmatic blueprint for recovery—and a candid assessment of the obstacles ahead.
For the West Coast, San Francisco is a test case.
About Our Guest
Sean Elsbernd is the CEO of SPUR (the San Francisco Bay Area Planning and Urban Research Association), one of the region’s most influential public policy organizations. A former member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors and longtime civic leader, Elsbernd brings deep experience in urban governance, housing, and regional policy.
Sean Elsbernd is the CEO of SPUR (the San Francisco Bay Area Planning and Urban Research Association), one of the region’s most influential public policy organizations. A former member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors and longtime civic leader, Elsbernd brings deep experience in urban governance, housing, and regional policy.
Key Themes & Highlights
- SF: Narrative vs Reality
Why San Francisco’s reputation has diverged so sharply from on-the-ground trends—and what data actually says about recovery. - Downtown’s Existential Pivot
The shift from office-centric urban core to a mixed-use future—and whether conversion strategies can succeed, while key infrastructure like transit work with shaky finances. - Housing: The Core Constraint
Why affordability remains the defining issue—and what meaningful reform would actually require politically. - Governance & Fragmentation
How local politics, regional coordination, and state policy interact—and where they break down. - A Blueprint for Renewal
Elsbernd’s pragmatic view on what must happen next—and what could still go wrong.
Related Episodes
- Ep 10: What If Blue Cities Got It Together? (with Sandeep Kaushik)
- Ep 11: What If Silicon Valley and Democracy Got Back Together? (with Margaret O’Malley)
- Ep 42: Affordability, Impeachment, or ICE Rollbacks? What’s a Congressional Candidate To Do? (with Brandon Riker)
🌶️ Spicy Question
If San Francisco can’t solve housing, governance, and public safety at the same time as it asserts itself as the world leader in AI—does it risk losing its reputation as the West Coast’s flagship city?
If San Francisco can’t solve housing, governance, and public safety at the same time as it asserts itself as the world leader in AI—does it risk losing its reputation as the West Coast’s flagship city?
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