Supervisor, District 1: Connie Chan

Back to supervisor mapConnie Chan

Connie Chan

District 1 Supervisor


District 1

District 1 includes Inner Richmond, Central Richmond, Outer Richmond, Vista del Mar, Seacliff, Lake District, Presidio Terrace, Lone Mountain, Golden Gate Park, Lincoln Park, and the University of San Francisco.


Elected

November 2020

Won by 125 votes.

Re-elected

November 2024

Won by 1,301 votes

Up for Re-Election

Termed out in 2028


Connie Chan is the Supervisor for San Francisco's District 1.

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Policy positions & priorities

Supervisor Chan has stated that she would like to see changes in small business support, accountability in city governance, homelessness, transit, support for working families and energy infrastructure. In practice, Chan has been a member of the Board’s progressive bloc and a key opponent of new housing development and transportation reform. She has repeatedly introduced legislation designed to obstruct meaningful change in these areas, including her solo stand against all possible political compromise during the car-free JFK campaign. In 2025, Chan announced that she would run for Congress, seeking to replace Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi’s vacant seat.

Housing

District 1 has the largest shortage of affordable housing in the city. Supervisor Chan’s solution is to push for “100% affordable housing in our new housing development,” which would require developers to lose money on anything they build. In practice, this means that she opposes nearly all new development. This has resulted in a string of votes blocking much-needed new housing and the introduction of legislation, notably Prop E, designed to impede any attempt to streamline development. Chan has rather proudly (and openly) stated that she is following in Aaron Peskin’s footsteps. She voted against Mayor Lurie’s Family Zoning Plan, while also trying to sink with a series of amendments to defang the whole proposal should it pass (like, excluding all historical buildings or all existing residential uses).

For example, within her own district, Chan has rejected developer proposals to create new housing at the Alexandria Theatre, at one point threatening to landmark the property for historic preservation. The slowly deteriorating property, which has sat vacant since 2004, was finally approved for development in 2025. On the other side of the city, Chan voted against the construction of 495 units of new housing at 469 Stevenson Street in SOMA, a decision that sparked widespread outrage and triggered city-level investigations and state intervention.

In 2025, Chan tried to block the removal of the North Beach Special Exemption district, which is particularly notable because the board almost always defers to the supervisor whose district the development is in (but not Connie)! And, finally, here is her fact-challenge response opposing the Marina Safeway redevelopment project.

Transportation

Supervisor Chan has been a key opponent of attempts to provide car-free spaces for pedestrians and bicyclists. Chan’s district includes portions of Golden Gate Park, so she has been a central figure in the car-free JFK debates, if a somewhat bewildering one. JFK Drive was one of the most dangerous streets in San Francisco before Mayor London Breed temporarily closed the eastern span to provide more space for physical distancing and outdoor recreation during the COVID-19 pandemic. As pandemic restrictions began to lift, political and public consensus began to emerge around keeping the eastern span of JFK Drive closed to vehicular traffic. Keeping JFK car-free was overwhelmingly popular with San Franciscans, with 70% of SF Parks and Rec survey respondents in support, but the proposal was bitterly opposed by the De Young Museum–and by Supervisor Chan. She ultimately introduced not one, but two alternative proposals, managing to confuse (and frustrate) nearly everyone involved by backtracking on how much of JFK Drive to close while also flatly refusing to compromise. Unsurprisingly, she voted against the Board of Supervisors resolution to keep JFK car-free, alongside Supervisors Shamann Walton, Ahsha Safaí and Aaron Peskin. The issue was finally settled at the ballot box in November of 2022, with 63.5% of voters choosing to keep car-free JFK.

Supervisor Chan has also consistently supported the re-opening of Great Highway to cars on weekends. She was one of only two supervisors to vote against extending the weekend closures until 2025. In the wake of Upper Great Highway’s closure in March of 2025 and Supervisor Joel Engardio’s subsequent recall, Chan has announced that she will “explore a ballot measure” to re-open Upper Great Highway on weekdays.

When it comes to public transit, Chan cites accessibility as a top concern. She voted in favor of a “Free MUNI” pilot program in 2021 aimed at restoring MUNI ridership levels, which plummeted during the pandemic. The proposal was opposed by MUNI agency leaders already caught between a looming budget deficit and their struggle to restore full service. Research suggests that a free MUNI pilot program would be largely ineffective without a stronger recovery in the downtown area. The measure was ultimately vetoed by Mayor Breed. Chan has generally been supportive of ballot measures to fund transportation infrastructure, including the $400million general obligation bond for SF transportation infrastructure projects and 2024’s Prop L, a proposed tax on ridesharing intended to fund MUNI.

Support for Small Businesses

Chan’s original campaign included a commitment to reducing the “incredible amount of bureaucracy” experienced by local merchants, but in practice, she hasn’t done a whole lot. She voted against letting small businesses close their parklets overnight, increasing the burden on small business owners trying to survive the pandemic and opposed Mayor Breed’s plan to attract business downtown through tax breaks. Chan did support Mayor Breed’s 2023 Small Business Reform package, which eased permitting requirements for ground floor businesses, bars, entertainment establishments and restaurants. In 2025, however, she introduced legislation ostensibly to protect legacy business, by requiring conditional use permits for any business coming in to replace them. She then walked back the whole package when the Small Business Commission noted that these policies would largely be ineffective and, in fact, increase the burden for small business owners.

School Board Reform

In 2022, 72% of voters chose to recall three incompetent school board members–a move opposed by Connie Chan. Voters were angry over the school board’s failure to prioritize school re-openings during the pandemic; its decision to end merit-based admissions at San Francisco’s top high school; its ill-timed and comically flawed school renaming effort; and a trail of embarrassing behavior by board member Alison Collins. But Supervisor Chan opposed the recall effort, citing a general opposition to all recalls. And after the mayor appointed far better board members to replace the recalled officials, Chan called for new appointee Ann Hsu to resign over remarks characterizing a lack of family support and stability as one reason for the underperformance of “marginalized students especially in the black and brown community.”

Fun

Where but in San Francisco would we spend three months debating the extension of a ferris wheel contract, in the midst of a raging pandemic that threatened entire livelihoods, swatches of business and, oh right, the actual loss of human life? Despite approval from two separate city committees to extend the installation of a ferris wheel in Golden Gate Park for an additional four years so that SF families and visitors can have fun, Supervisors Chan and Aaron Peskin dragged the contract before the full Board of Supervisors under the pretense that the ferris wheel, a temporary installation, was in fact a “permanent structure.” Chan and other members of the board’s progressive bloc voted to overrule the four year extension, but ultimately lost the vote.

Key votes and actions

Housing

Transit

Public Safety

Education

Small Business Support

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