On September 16, HANC and the League of Women Voters co-sponsored a District 5 candidate forum at UCSF’s Cole Hall. Several hundred were in attendance, as were the four candidates. HANC Board member (and UCSF employee) Christian Vaisse gave one of the introductory speeches. HANC cannot endorse candidates, but we do encourage you to vote!
By Richard Ivanhoe, HANC Board Member
On October 15, 1959, 200 neighbors met at the Dudley Stone School (now the Chinese Immersion School at De Avila) and unanimously decided to form the Haight Ashbury Neighborhood Council. Times were different (the meeting began with the Boy Scouts presenting the colors and with the pledge of allegiance), but the meeting touched on issues that are still relevant—Schools, Housing, Health, and Recreation.
In March, 1960, HANC adopted bylaws “amid flaring tempers and rollicking laughter.” (Haight-Cole Journal, March 24, 1960) HANC’s earliest work included planting trees, setting up tuberculosis screenings, clearing brush at Buena Vista Park, addressing overcrowding at neighborhood schools, and seeking supervision of play areas in the Panhandle and at the Dudley Stone School playground. But we are probably best known for our opposition to the proposed Panhandle Freeway, which was defeated at the Board of Supervisors in a close vote in October, 1964, but needed to be defeated again, with another close vote at the Board in March, 1966. In November, 1966, HANC incorporated as a non-profit corporation.
Here are some of HANC’s other accomplishments:
- Co-sponsored zoning legislation that protected 45 square blocks from high-rise construction, speculation, and resident displacement (1970)
- Key participant in Golden Gate Park Master Plan (1970 to present)
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