This Nov. 5, 2024 election dashboard was developed by Ciara Zavala and a dedicated team of journalists and engineers. The data was scraped from official county websites and then coded using ChatGPT and Claude.ai. Every step was carefully reviewed by human editors. While we aim for accurate and timely results, this dashboard relies on government data and automated tools so please allow for slight delays or discrepancies as editors verify the information.

Election Results

Measures

Election Results
SCHOOL
Measure A – San Francisco Unified School District Bond Measure
To improve earthquake safety and accessibility at San Francisco public schools; provide reliable internet in classrooms; replace worn-out plumbing, electrical and ventilation systems; improve student nutrition services; and have updated security features; shall San Francisco Unified School District’s measure authorizing $790,000,000 in bonds at legal rates levying approximately $12.95 per $100,000 of assessed value, raising approximately $56,400,000 annually while bonds are outstanding, with independent oversight and all funds staying local, be adopted?
YES
75
NO
25
CITY
Measure B – San Francisco Community Health and Medical Facilities Bond
To finance the acquisition or improvement of real property, including: temporary shelters, particularly for families; facilities that deliver healthcare services, including preventive care and behavioral health services, such as the Chinatown Public Health Center; critical repairs, renovations, and seismic upgrades at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center and Laguna Honda Hospital; and pedestrian and street safety improvements, streetscape enhancements, and other public space improvements; and to pay related costs; shall the City and County of San Francisco issue $390,000,000 in general obligation bonds with a duration of up to 30 years from the time of issuance, an estimated average tax rate of $0.0069/$100 of assessed property value, and projected average annual revenues of $31,000,000, subject to independent citizen oversight and regular audits?
YES
72.8
NO
27.2
Measure C – San Francisco Inspector General Charter Amendment
Shall the City amend the Charter to create the new position of Inspector General in the Controller’s Office to review and investigate complaints of fraud, waste, and abuse, and give the Controller’s Office additional powers to issue subpoenas and execute search warrants when permitted by State law?
YES
60.94
NO
39.06
Measure D – San Francisco City Commissions and Mayoral Authority Charter Amendment
Shall the City amend the Charter to limit the total number of commissions the City may have to 65, retaining certain decision-making commissions and dissolving the others unless the Board of Supervisors instead continues any as advisory bodies; give the Mayor sole authority to appoint and remove City department heads; and give the Police Chief sole authority to adopt rules governing police officers’ conduct?
YES
43.33
NO
56.67
Measure E – San Francisco Task Force on City Commissions Charter Amendment
Shall the City amend the Charter to create a Task Force with authority to make recommendations by February 1, 2026, on ways the City could change, eliminate, or consolidate commissions to improve the administration of City government; require a financial report on the City’s commissions; and give the Task Force authority to introduce ordinances to implement its recommendations, and if required provide for the City Attorney to draft Charter amendments to submit to voters at a future election?
YES
52.92
NO
47.08
Measure F – San Francisco Police Staffing and Deferred Retirement Charter Amendment
Shall the City amend the Charter to define “full-duty sworn officer”; require the Police Chief to make a report and recommendation on future staffing of full-duty sworn officers to the Police Commission every three years instead of two; require the Police Commission to report annually to the Board of Supervisors on Police Department staffing; and create a five-year program with possible renewals allowing police officers to continue working for the Police Department after retiring, with pension payments deferred while they are working?
YES
45.3
NO
54.7
Measure G – San Francisco Rental Subsidies for Affordable Housing Charter Amendment
Shall the City amend the Charter to require the City to appropriate at least $8.25 million a year to pay for rental subsidies for affordable housing developments serving extremely low-income households of seniors
YES
58.74
NO
41.26
Measure H – San Francisco Retirement Benefits for Firefighters Charter Amendment
Shall the City amend the Charter to change how pension benefits are calculated for members of the Fire Department hired on or after January 7, 2012, by lowering the age these members can receive the highest pension from 58 to 55, and make those benefits the same as members hired before January 7, 2012?
YES
52.63
NO
47.37
Measure I – San Francisco Retirement Benefits for Nurses and 911 Operators Charter Amendment
Shall the City amend the Charter to allow registered nurses who are members of the San Francisco Employees’ Retirement System and meet certain requirements to purchase credits toward their total pension years of service for time previously worked as per diem nurses
YES
71.9
NO
28.1
Measure J – San Francisco Children
Youth
YES
82.13
NO
17.87
Measure K – San Francisco Upper Great Highway Closure Ordinance
Shall the City use the Upper Great Highway as public open recreation space
YES
54.73
NO
45.27
Measure L – San Francisco Transportation Network Companies and Autonomous Vehicle Business Tax Ordinance
Shall the City place an additional tax permanently on transportation network companies and autonomous vehicle businesses that provide passenger service for compensation with rates between 1% and 4.5% of gross receipts in San Francisco above $500
YES
56.92
NO
43.08
Measure M – San Francisco Business Tax Changes Ordinance
Shall the City permanently change the taxes it collects from businesses, including: changing annual gross receipts tax rates to between 0.1% and 3.716%, homelessness gross receipts tax rates to between 0.0162% and 1.64%, business registration fees to between $55 and $60,000, overpaid executive gross receipts tax rates to between 0.02% and 0.129%, and administrative office tax rates to between 2.97% and 3.694% of payroll expense; increasing the gross receipts tax exemption for small businesses; and changing how the City calculates these taxes; for estimated annual revenue of $50 million once fully implemented?
YES
69.51
NO
30.49
Measure N – San Francisco First Responder Student Loan and Training Reimbursement Fund Ordinance
Shall the City create a fund that the City could use in the future to help reimburse eligible City employees, including police officers, firefighters, sheriffs, paramedics, registered nurses, and 911 dispatchers, for student loans and education and training programs?
YES
51.72
NO
48.28
Measure O – San Francisco Reproductive Rights Ordinance
Shall it be City policy and law to support, protect, and expand reproductive rights and services?
YES
83.84
NO
16.16