NOVEMBER 2024 VOTER GUIDE

DISTRICT 3 SUPERVISOR

What is the Board of Supervisors?

  • An 11-member body that governs the affairs of the city

  • Each supervisor represents the roughly 80,000 residents who live in their district

  • Supervisors hold a significant amount of power to create or block policies and programs that impact the City

  • Supervisors can serve two consecutive terms of four years, and serve staggered terms so that every two years, either the even or odd districts are up for elections (this year, the odd districts are up for election)

  • The salary and benefits of this full-time position total $140,000 per year

Why You Should Care 

Your supervisor represents you at the local level, and has the power to fix many of your day-to-day quality of life issues in your neighborhood. They are also powerful enough to solve citywide problems, particularly through their control of the budget which they pass annually after a series of deliberations. While the budget can be effectively used as a tool to implement policy, it can also be spent wastefully on items that are either performative or unaccountable to the voters. Examples: $61,000-per-tent encampments for the homeless, or $250,000-per-unit public restrooms often repurposed as drug injection sites. 

Our Vision for the Board of Supervisors

They work with the Mayor and City Departments on the nuts and bolts of making our city better, with measurable outcomes, instead of performative and overly bureaucratic policies.

How We’re Evaluating Candidates’ Records

😍 Perfect  😃 Great!  😐 Fine or not enough info  🤔 Questionable  😩 Quite bad

When making endorsements, we judge candidates based on their political experience, managerial experience, and dedication to our issue areas. We came to our endorsement decisions after conducting interviews with candidates, deeply researching their records, and collecting our community’s input.

Why we’re voting for him: Danny Sauter has truly progressive values, with policies designed to move San Francisco forward, not keep the city stuck with the status quo. Since 2019, Sauter has been directly involved with youth and senior activity programming as the Executive Director of Neighborhood Centers Together, a network of eight neighborhood centers serving over 10,000 people annually. But Sauter is also an entrepreneur, co-founding performance marketing company Bamboo in 2014, growing it to 30 employees before leaving in 2018. And he knows how to get things done in City Hall—he created the North Beach Farmers Market, which required Sauter to coordinate six different city departments to get the weekly market off the ground. We support Danny Sauter for supervisor because he’s a fresh, energetic leader with plenty of experience working with the community to improve San Francisco.

Political Experience 😃

An experienced local leader ready to step up

Danny Sauter’s political resume shows consistent, steady growth in leadership positions over time, and we think it’s time for him to move up to the Board of Supervisors. Sauter currently holds leadership positions at the Eastern Neighborhood Democratic Club and North Beach Neighbors, and was a board member of the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition from 2021 to 2023. And he’s a strong campaigner—he ran for District 3 Supervisor in 2020, garnering an impressive 37 percent of the vote as a first-time candidate against long-time incumbent Aaron Peskin. Sauter is young, but he’s been preparing for this opportunity for years, and he’s ready to serve his neighborhood.

Past Policy 😐

Consistent on housing—less so on public safety

Danny Sauter’s past policy positions are a bit of a mixed bag, so we can’t give a full-throated endorsement here. He’s consistently advocated for more housing in San Francisco, which is the only way San Francisco will ever get out of the housing crisis it’s been stuck in for years. That’s great. However, his positions on law enforcement have been less consistent—in 2020, Sauter said that SFPD’s budget should be reduced through “budget justice.” And, he did not provide an answer to a question on whether SFPD should be disbanded or defunded. Now, Sauter supports hiring more police officers, with a focus on hiring bilingual officers for his district and increasing foot patrols. All that said, we admire Sauter’s belief that law enforcement should be accountable to the public and we believe that criticism of him for being “weak” on public safety lacks any real depth.


Proposed Policy 😃

Change is the way forward

Sauter is the most pro-housing, pro-transit, pro-San Francisco-working-like-it-should candidate in the race for District 3. Sauter supports making it easier to convert empty office space into housing, supports bringing the Central Subway to North Beach, and wants to make it easier to open small businesses in North Beach. These are basic policies that should have been enacted years ago—after two decades of obstructionist politics from termed-out supervisor Aaron Peskin, Sauter’s reformist policies are a breath of fresh air.

Don’t Forget

Chinatown is a pretty big cultural influence in District 3, and Sauter knows how to speak the language—literally. Sauter is conversational in Cantonese, and put those skills to use organizing a fundraiser to create a computer lab for underserved Chinatown youth.

✅ Danny Sauter


Also Consider

Matt Susk

Matt Susk is a newcomer into local politics, with a background largely in finance. His scrappiness in this race is admirable, and we support many of his positions on key issues like shutting down open-air drug markets and building more housing in San Francisco. But in Susk’s case, his political inexperience is just too detrimental. He hasn’t been able to build a base of political support to contend with some of the bigger names in this race, and his unfamiliarity with San Francisco politics means he would likely struggle as a supervisor.

District 3 includes North Beach, Chinatown, Fisherman’s Wharf, Polk Gulch, Union Square/Financial District and Russian, Telegraph and Nob Hills.

Paid for by TogetherSF Action (tsfaction.org). Not authorized by any candidate or committee controlled by a candidate. Financial disclosures are available at sfethics.org.

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