In December, San Francisco Mayor London Breed scrambled to cut costs across city departments in an attempt to close an exceptionally large budget deficit, which currently hovers around $800 million but could top $1 billion in a few years. In October, when the deficit was supposedly âonlyâ about $500 million, Breed sent a letter requesting city departments submit preliminary spend reduction proposals by the end of the month. âWe need to ensure that every dollar our city departments spend, either directly, or through contracted parties, is done so responsibly and with accountability,â she wrote.
This is rich talk of fiscal responsibility from a mayor who's presided over record high city budgets from the start of her term in 2018 onward. The headline numbers of this spending spree are well known: a near-tripling of the Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housingâs budget, massive increases in spending on addiction-related services, and tens of millions in pandemic-era bailout programs, to name a few. But less discussed is the way Breed has quietly greenlit huge funding increases to a handful of activist-staffed city departments, including the Human Rights Commission (HRC), the Department on the Status of Women (DOSW), and the Office of Transgender Initiatives (OTI).
In 2018, when Breed assumed office, the HRC, which âworks in service of the Cityâs anti-discrimination laws to further racial solidarity, equity, and healing,â received $4.2 million. Today, it receives just over $19 million. Similarly, DOSW, whose mission is to ensure âequality for women, girls and nonbinary peopleâ in San Francisco now receives $18 million, up from $8.4 million in 2018. And the budget of OTI, which âadvocates for and uplifts the voices and needs of transgender, gender non-conforming, intersex, and 2-spirit (TGNCI2S) San Franciscans,â has increased from around $466,000 in 2018 to around $1 million.
Data from the Office of the Controller
Politically popular rhetoric about âequityâ and âadvocacyâ for the marginalized has ensured the specifics of how this windfall has been spent have gone largely unscrutinized in a city as left-leaning as San Francisco. But a closer look at these departmentsâ finances reveals most seem to function largely as make-work and vote-buying schemes. That is, their primary role is to provide jobs for activists and buy political support.
HRCâs Dream Keeper, which writes $200,000 checks to one-person âmedia companiesâ with almost no following and whose âSenior Home Repair Program,â funded by part of a $20 million grant, was recently found to have only repaired three homes since its inception two years ago, offers clear examples of wasteful, clientelist spending. But so too does the Office of Transgender Initiatives, which spends most of its budget on guaranteed income and rent payments offering a combined $3,200/month to around 150 âtransgender and gender non-conforming people.â (Judicial Watch, a nonprofit, recently filed a lawsuit against the city on the grounds OTI's guaranteed income program violates the California Constitution's equal protection clause.)
More generally, we could say most of the money spent on these departments serves one of three interconnected purposes: (1) to provide work for activists tasked with either (2) distributing government funds to select client-constituents, incentivizing their ongoing political support or (3) manufacturing internally-directed identitarian propaganda to agitate for more government funds. We have come to call this nearly $100 million a year clientelism scheme â in which all involved actors are perversely incentivized to demand ever-increasing sums of money for themselves, and in which every dollar spent brings in more participants â San Franciscoâs âDEI-industrial complex,â and outlined some of its most flagrant excesses below.
DIRECT CASH TRANSFERS
As we have said, the primary function of the cityâs DEI industrial-complex is to incentivize client-constituents to support their political patrons. These incentives can include things like no-bid contracts, though often administrators favor a simpler approach: providing direct cash transfers to their target voter base. In general, these cash transfers take one of two forms. Either administrators will funnel money through identity-specific welfare schemes, or they will give it to nonprofits, which will distribute it to clients in small grants.
All three departments discussed in the introduction â the Human Rights Commission, the Office of Transgender Initiatives, and the Department on the Status of Women â have their own identity-specific welfare schemes. HRCâs operates indirectly through its subsidiary Dream Keeper Initiative, which in addition to providing âdirect cash stipendsâ for âsmall or emerging Black-owned businesses,â also provides cash in the form of grants to tiny nonprofits like Clari-T Media, which got $200,000 from the program, or Both Sides of the Conversation, which got $300,000. On the other hand, OTI offers up to $3,200 a month to 145 âtransgender and gender non-conforming peopleâ through two stipend programs it runs directly:
- Guaranteed Income for Transgender People (GIFT), a program providing 55 âeconomically marginalized transgender people with unrestricted, monthly guaranteed incomeâ of $1,200/month for a year-and-a-half.
- Our Trans Home SF, a housing and rental aid program for 90 âlow-income transgender adultsâ that offers five-year subsidies of up to $2,000/month.
This year, DOSW plans to launch its own guaranteed income programs, which will offer monthly payments of unspecified amounts to âjustice involved womenâ (e.g. those currently or formerly incarcerated) and âthose from our Indigenous communities.â
These departments also funnel money to their constituents indirectly through the nonprofits they fund. A representative example is Dream Keeperâs $3 million grant to the African-American Arts and Culture Complex (AAACC), a nonprofit where, incidentally, Mayor Breed worked for over a decade, and which was recently barred from receiving state funding due to failure to submit appropriate revenue documentation. Despite renting a massive 32,000 square foot space in the heart of the Fillmore District, since this past October, AAACC has put on only one event per month â a âSeason of Black Artâ series showcasing the work of participants in its âcohorts of artists and entrepreneurs.â
The only programming AAACC appears to run in addition to this series is its âUbuntu Resource Program,â which âinvests in Black artists, creatives, and community membersâ either through âcreative development cohortsâ or âRadical Self-Care Quick Grants.â These quick grants are available only to those who are 18 and over, live in San Francisco and âpersonally identify and/or define themselves as African, African American, Afro Latino, Afro Diasporic or a member of the Black Community." They provide between $300 and $2,000 for âself-care, learning opportunities, or a creative project.â The grant guidelines specify these funds may be used for expenses ranging from âworkshops and child careâ to âtherapy, massage, spa treatments, space reset or declutter,â or any âother programs or services not listed that the awardee deems as radical self-care.â (Yes, the San Francisco taxpayer is paying for people to get $300+ spa treatments, if they have the right skin color.)
From the Programs section of the African American Art and Culture Complex website, February 4, 2024 (archive link)
THE ADMINISTRATORS AND THEIR PROPAGANDA
These cash transfer programs rely on steady inflows of taxpayer revenue, which the administrator-activists who staff these departments secure mainly by producing internally directed, identitarian propaganda. They are paid generously for this work; Sheryl Davis, who heads up HRC, made over $350,000 in combined salary and benefits in 2022; Kimberly Ellis, who runs DOSW, made around $280,000 in salary and benefits; and Pau Crego, who until recently ran OTI, made almost $200,000 â one-fifth of OTIâs total budget â in salary and benefits.
In general, these administrators oversee the production of either race- or gender-based propaganda directed at other city departments. HRC generally focuses on the former, largely through its subsidiary âOffice of Racial Equityâ (ORE), which Breed inaugurated in 2019 with an initial $600,000 investment, followed by an additional $4 million in 2020.
OREâs stated mission is to âaddress structural and institutional racism in the City and County of San Franciscoâs internal practices and systems and external delivery of services to the public.â To do this, it has tasked all other city departments with creating âRacial Equity Action Plans,â examining the racial composition of their workforces. ORE also has the authority to recommend âbudget reductions [to other city departments] should [their racial equity] benchmarks not be met.â Every department in the city now has one of these âaction plansâ â from the Department of Elections, to the Planning Department, to San Francisco International Airport (SFO).
A review of SFO's progress on its Racial Equity Action Plan (REAP) finds that SFO needs to spend more money on racial equity | From its 2022 REAP progress report
While the âaction plansâ seem primarily designed to push for (legally questionable) race- and sex-driven hiring practices, they also serve to entrench the narrative that San Francisco, arguably the most progressive city in a state with a Democratic supermajority, is a fundamentally racist and sexist city â and thus that ongoing funding to departments like HRC, DOSW, and OTI is necessary. For example, to encourage more âinclusive identity expression,â the airportâs plan states it will âpartner with OTI to begin offering Transgender Awareness Training on a quarterly basis.â And to ensure a diverse composition of its workforce, it will âuse the survey tool created by [DOSW] to track the diversity of appointments to boards, commissions, and advisory committeesâ along with âORE racial equity assessment tools.â
DOSW produces analogous internal propaganda along gender and sex-based lines. For instance, last year, the Department released its own âstrategic planâ for a âgender equitable city government,â which involves âanalyzingâ the number of women in city leadership, workforce development programs and on commissions and boards, as well as on public art, streets, buildings and parks. Additionally, the plan looks to prioritize âkey activities,â like the inauguration of a âBay Area Abortion Rights Coalition,â which will be a âregional collective of municipal governments and reproductive health and justice stakeholdersâ â a strange idea in a state with no specific gestational limits on abortion. Unsurprisingly, one of the intended outcomes of the plan is to ensure DOSW receives more funding by positioning it âas the go-to municipal knowledge broker on policies concerning gender equity and the human rights of women, girls, and nonbinary people.â
Between HRC, Dream Keeper, DOSW, and OTI, the budget of the cityâs DEI-industrial complex today hovers around $100 million. But unless major political change occurs, this number and the wasteful spending it entails, will doubtlessly increase.
Why? Because no one inside the system â from the client-constituents benefiting from âradical self-care grantsâ for spa treatments, to the DEI administrators making generous government salaries, to the mayor accruing virtue signaling points â has any incentive to reduce it.
â Sanjana Friedman