释义 |
- Board presidents
- Board members San Francisco Common Council Four-member board (July–November 1856) 12 members elected by district (1856–1899) 18 members elected at-large, serving two-year terms (1900–1911) 18 members elected at-large, serving staggered four-year terms (1912–1931) 15 members elected at-large (1932–1933) 11 members elected at-large (1934–1977) 11 members elected by district (1978–1980) 11 members elected at-large (1981–2000) 11 members elected by district (2001–present) Timeline of supervisors since 2000
- Board members and transitions since 1980
- Nonpartisanship
- References
- Sources
- External links
The San Francisco Board of Supervisors is the legislative body of San Francisco, California, United States. The body consists of eleven members elected from single-member districts through ranked choice voting. From 1977 to 1979, and starting again in 2000, supervisors were elected from eleven single-member districts. Prior to 1977 and from 1980 to 1998, members were elected at-large, all running on one ballot, with the top vote-getters winning office. In 1980, elections shifted from odd-numbered years to even-numbered years, and because of the shift from district to at-large elections, all seats were up for election, with some members winning four-year terms and some winning two-year terms. Similar cases of supervisors elected to truncated terms happened in 1977 and 2000, when elections shifted to district elections. Several members were initially appointed by the mayor. San Francisco's city charter gives the mayor the power to fill any vacancies{{sfn|SF Charter 1996 §3.100|}} and to suspend members in limited circumstances;{{sfn|SF Charter 1996 §15.105|}} the latter case has happened only once, when Mayor Gavin Newsom suspended Ed Jew due to allegations of lying about his residency and extortion.[1] A few members were elected to the board, but appointed to their seat by the mayor during the weeks between the election and the beginning of their term. This has generally been done when supervisors were elected to the state legislature, since the terms of state legislators begin earlier than those of supervisors. The most recent example occurred in 2008, when David Campos was elected to the District 9 seat held by Tom Ammiano. In the same election, Ammiano was elected to the California State Assembly and resigned his seat a month early to take his new office. Mayor Gavin Newsom appointed Campos to the seat on December 4, 2008, a month before he would otherwise have taken office.[2] Board presidents{{expand list|date=February 2011}} The president of the Board of Supervisors presides over all board meetings and appoints members to board committees, among other duties. Board presidents are elected by their colleagues at the beginning of every odd-numbered year, or when a vacancy arises in the office.[3] From 1983 to 2001, the city charter specified that the president would be the highest vote-getter in the previous election, taking the power of electing the board president away from the supervisors themselves, except in the case of a vacancy in the post.[4][5] {{#tag:timeline| ImageSize = width:800 height:400 DateFormat = mm/dd/yyyy Period = from:01/01/1976 till:{{#time: m/d/Y }} TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal PlotArea = width:90% height:80% left:0 bottom:60 Legend = columns:4 left:10 top:35 columnwidth:160 Define $now = {{#time: m/d/Y }} Colors = id:howchosen value:rgb(0.85,0.65,0.85) id:supervisor value:rgb(0.65,0.85,0.85) legend: Supervisor id:president value:rgb(0.50,0.70,0.70) legend: President id:liteline value:rgb(0.80,0.80,0.80) id:line value:rgb(0.30,0.30,0.30) PlotData= bar:howchosen1 width:3 from:01/01/1976 till:01/08/1983 color:howchosen text:"board president elected by supervisors until 1983; convention is highest vote-getter" shift:(257,-4) fontsize:8 bar:Feinstein from:01/01/1976 till:01/08/1978 color:supervisor text:"Dianne Feinstein" shift:(86,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Feinstein from:01/08/1978 till:12/05/1978 color:president bar:Molinari from:01/01/1976 till:01/02/1979 color:supervisor text:"John L. Molinari" shift:(245,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Molinari from:01/02/1979 till:06/21/1982 color:president bar:Molinari from:06/21/1982 till:01/08/1985 color:supervisor bar:Molinari from:01/08/1985 till:01/08/1987 color:president bar:Molinari from:01/08/1987 till:01/08/1989 color:supervisor bar:Kopp from:01/01/1976 till:06/20/1982 color:supervisor text:"Quentin L. Kopp" shift:(182,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Kopp from:06/21/1982 till:01/08/1983 color:president bar:Kopp from:01/08/1983 till:11/30/1986 color:supervisor bar:howchosen2 width:3 from:01/01/1983 till:01/08/2001 color:howchosen text:"highest vote-getter is automatically board president 1983–2001" shift:(302,-4) fontsize:8 bar:Nelder from:01/08/1981 till:01/08/1983 color:supervisor text:"Wendy Nelder" shift:(-52,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Nelder from:01/08/1983 till:01/08/1985 color:president bar:Nelder from:01/08/1985 till:01/08/1991 color:supervisor bar:Walker from:01/08/1980 till:01/08/1987 color:supervisor text:"Nancy G. Walker" shift:(-69,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Walker from:01/08/1987 till:01/08/1989 color:president bar:Walker from:01/08/1989 till:01/08/1991 color:supervisor bar:Britt from:01/10/1979 till:01/08/1989 color:supervisor text:"Harry Britt" shift:(-98,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Britt from:01/08/1989 till:01/08/1991 color:president bar:Britt from:01/08/1991 till:01/08/1993 color:supervisor bar:Ward from:01/08/1980 till:01/08/1991 color:supervisor text:"Doris M. Ward" shift:(-111,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Ward from:01/08/1991 till:04/03/1992 color:president bar:Shelley from:01/08/1991 till:04/06/1992 color:supervisor text:"Kevin Shelley" shift:(-52,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Shelley from:04/06/1992 till:01/08/1993 color:president bar:Shelley from:01/08/1993 till:01/08/1995 color:supervisor bar:Shelley from:01/08/1995 till:11/25/1996 color:president bar:Shelley from:11/25/1996 till:12/02/1996 color:supervisor bar:Alioto from:01/08/1989 till:01/08/1993 color:supervisor text:"Angela Alioto" shift:(-75,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Alioto from:01/08/1993 till:01/08/1995 color:president bar:Alioto from:01/08/1995 till:01/08/1997 color:supervisor bar:Kaufman from:01/08/1993 till:11/25/1996 color:supervisor text:"Barbara Kaufman" shift:(-85,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Kaufman from:11/25/1996 till:01/08/1999 color:president bar:Kaufman from:01/08/1999 till:01/08/2001 color:supervisor bar:Ammiano from:01/08/1995 till:01/08/1999 color:supervisor text:"Tom Ammiano" shift:(-76,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Ammiano from:01/08/1999 till:01/08/2003 color:president bar:Ammiano from:01/08/2003 till:12/01/2008 color:supervisor bar:howchosen3 width:3 from:01/08/2001 till:$now color:howchosen text:"board president elected by supervisors since 2001" shift:(-272,-4) fontsize:8 bar:Gonzalez from:01/08/2001 till:01/08/2003 color:supervisor text:"Matt Gonzalez" shift:(-62,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Gonzalez from:01/08/2003 till:01/08/2005 color:president bar:Peskin from:01/08/2001 till:01/08/2005 color:supervisor text:"Aaron Peskin" shift:(-74,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Peskin from:01/08/2005 till:01/08/2009 color:president bar:Peskin from:12/08/2015 till:$now color:supervisor bar:Chiu from:01/08/2009 till:12/01/2014 color:president text:"David Chiu" shift:(-82,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Tang from:02/27/2013 till:12/01/2014 color:supervisor text:"Katy Tang" shift:(-48,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Tang from:12/01/2014 till:01/08/2015 color:president bar:Tang from:01/09/2015 till:01/08/2019 color:supervisor bar:Breed from:01/08/2013 till:01/08/2015 color:supervisor text:"London Breed" shift:(-60,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Breed from:01/09/2015 till:06/26/2018 color:president bar:Breed from:06/26/2018 till:07/11/2018 color:supervisor bar:Cohen from:01/08/2011 till:06/26/2018 color:supervisor text:"Malia Cohen" shift:(-102,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Cohen from:06/26/2018 till:01/07/2019 color:president bar:Yee2 from:01/08/2013 till:01/08/2019 color:supervisor text:"Norman Yee" shift:(-88,-4) fontsize:10 bar:Yee2 from:01/08/2019 till:$now color:president ScaleMajor = gridcolor:line unit:year increment:5 start:01/01/1980 ScaleMinor = gridcolor:liteline unit:year increment:1 start:01/01/1976 }} Board members No official list of supervisors in office prior to 1906 exists as the 1906 San Francisco earthquake destroyed all Board of Supervisors records. However, the names of San Francisco supervisors are recorded in many documents and newspapers from the time. {{Expand list|date=February 2011}} San Francisco Common Council The San Francisco Common Council was the predecessor of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. The Common Council was made up of the Board of Aldermen and the Board of Assistant Aldermen, each composed of one member elected from each of the city's eight wards. The first elections to these posts took place on May 1, 1850 (the same day as the vote on the city charter), and the Common Council took office on May 6, 1850.[6] The Common Council had authority only within the city limits, which stretched west to Divisadero and Castro streets and south to 20th Street.[7] The seventh and last Common Council served until July 1856, when under the Consolidation Act that unified city and county government in San Francisco, the Common Council was replaced by the first Board of Supervisors.[6] Four-member board (July–November 1856) The first Board of Supervisors served only from July 8 to November 15, 1856, and consisted of one justice of the peace for each of the city's four districts. These four men chose George J. Whelan as the city's mayor and president of the board. Year | President | District | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
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July–November 1856 | George J. Whelan | Lawrence Ryan | E.W. Smith | C.M. Chamberlain | David B. Castree |
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12 members elected by district (1856–1899) Supervisors from the 19th century are listed in surviving copies of municipal reports, contemporary newspapers, and similar sources.[6][8] Year | Ward | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
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November 1856–1857[6] | Charles Wilson | W.A. Darling | W.K. Van Alen | M.R. Roberts | Samuel Merritt | CWBond|A|A}} | H.A. George | N.C. Lane | W.L. Palmer | R.G. Sneath | J.J. Denny | S.S. Tilton |
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1858[6] | L.B. Benchley | Thomas Tennent{{ref label|TTennent|B|B}} |
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1859[6] | Charles S. Biden | H.S. Gates | Thomas Young | J.S. Paxson | W. McKibbin | J.C. Corbett |
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1860[6] | Joseph Britton | F.W. Brooks | J.S. Davies | W.B. Johnson | James Otis{{ref label|JOtis|G|G}} | AGRandall|C|C}}
John C. Ayres{{ref label|JCAyres|D|D}} | John Lynch{{ref label|JLynch|E|E}} |
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1861[6] | H. De La Montaya | D. Gaven | H.L. Dodge | W.C. Hinckley | Eugene Crowell | Frank McCoppin |
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1862[6] | Myles D. Sweeney | H.L. King | Gerritt W. Bell | John C. Merrill | J.H. Redington{{ref label|JHRedington|H|H}} | James W. Cudworth{{ref label|JWCudworth|F|F}} |
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1863[6] | A.H. Titcomb | Giles H. Gray |
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1864[6] | John Fay | E.C. Kennedy
A.S. Baldwin | E.N. Torrey | A.H. Cummings | Michael Cody |
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1865[6] | Isaac Rowell | Monroe Ashbury | Charles Clayton | A.J. Shrader |
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1866[6] | R.P. Clement | William S. Phelps | Jacob Schreiber | James H. Reynolds | Charles H. Stanyan |
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1867[6] | P.H. Daly | W.B. Farman | F.G.E. Tittell |
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1868[6] | Henry Winkle | John Harrold | Edward Flaherty | R. Beverly Cole | D.D. Shattuck | J.B.E. Cavallier | Edward Nunan | P.H. Canavan |
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1869[6] | Richard Ring |
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1870[6] | Timothy McCarthy | Alexander Badlam | Charles R. Story | James Adams | M.J. Kelly |
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1871[6] | Stewart Menzies | James J. Kenney | Robert Goodwin | A.B. Forbes | Edward Commins |
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1872[6] | H.F. Swain | Henry L. King | James Barrett | Samuel Penfield Taylor |
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1873 |
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1874[6] | William C. Pease | A.M. Ebbets | John R. Sims | James H. Deering | James B. Roberts | A.L. Wangenheim
Abram Block | A.W. Scott | George Hewston | M. Lynch | D.A. Macdonald |
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1875[6] | Abram Block |
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1876[6] | August Drucker | C.B. Edwards | Thomas Bryan | John H. Wise | John P. Shine | Frederick W. Eaton | George W. Hayes | Fleet F. Strother | Thomas Boyce | John C. Roberts | Frederick A. Gibbs |
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1877 |
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1878[6] | John Foley | Martin Mangels | Horace L. Hill | Edwin Danforth | J. Henley Smith | James O. Rountree | John W. Farren | Thomas S. Ackerson | A.W. Scott | Robert Haight | Henry Brickwedel |
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1879[6] | Thomas A. Talbert |
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1880[6] | Antone Schottler | John Mason | J.M. Litchfield | Samuel Drake | James D. Whitney | Frank Eastman | Hugh Fraser | Charles L. Taylor | Micah Doane | Charles A. Bayly | Erastus N. Torrey | James B. Stetson |
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1881 |
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1882[6][9] | William H. Bodfish | John C. McKew | John Shirley | John H. Carmany | Henry Molineaux | George Torrens | George B. Bradford | Charles A. Fisher | Oliver Merrill | Henry B. Russ | Nathan C. Parrish | John F. Kennedy |
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1883[6][10] | John T. Sullivan | John J. Reichenbach | Charles H. Burton | J. Henley Smith | Edward B. Pond | John D. Griffin | Fleet F. Strother | John B. Lewis | Herman Ranken | Jefferson G. James | Thomas Ashworth |
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1884 |
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1885[6][11] | Justin Gates | Robert Roy | John E. Kunkler | John E. Abbott | Willard B. Farwell | James Williamson | David L. Farnsworth | Albert Heyer | James Gilleran | Daniel McMillan | Samuel Valleau |
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1886 |
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1887[6][12][13] | Hugh Curran | James M. McDonald | Colin M. Boyd | Joseph Pescia | Charles S. Bush | Aaron M. Burns | William Hawkins | Albert F. Knorp | William P. Lambert | Herman Joost | Sargent S. Morton |
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1888 |
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1889[6][14] | Henry Bingham | Levi R. Ellert | Peter Wheelan | Diedrich Becker | Henry Pilster | Vincent Kingwell | David Barry | Patrick Noble |
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1890[6] | Selden S. Wright |
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1891[6][15] | Henry Evans | David B. Jackson | James W. Burling | John. B. Curtis | Washington Ayer | George A. Carnes | Patrick J. Coffee | Albert Heyer | Denis D. Hunt | Charles W. Taber | William Wilkinson |
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1892[6] | Joseph A. Artigues |
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1893[6] | Michael Goodwin | Daniel Rogers | William Montgomery James I. Stanton C.W. Nevin | Patrick J. Kennedy | Sands W. Forman | Christian Reis | James Ryan | Robert Day | Patrick F. Dundon | William M. Hinton | Jefferson G. James | James Denman |
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1894 |
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1895[6] | Joseph King | Peter A. Scully | Charles E. Benjamin | Alphonse Hirsch | Joseph I. Dimond | Edward C. Hughes | Christopher Dunker | Charles L. Taylor | Alfred W. Morgenstern | Adolph B. Spreckels | John K.C. Hobbs | Edward L. Wagner |
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1896 |
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1897[6] | Lawrence Devany | Thomas H. Haskins | P.M. Delany | John H. Sheehan | Washington Dodge | John Lackmann | T.A. Rottanzi | Thomas Morton | James E. Britt | Edward J. Smith | Charles A. Clinton | Thomas W. Rivers |
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1898 |
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1899[16] | Edward Holland | Edward C. Kalben | Howard Black | Edward L. Perrault | William H. Phelps | John Lackmann | Lewis F. Byington | George W. Collins | Albert Heyer | Jeremiah Deasy | Arthur Attridge | Edward H. Algeltinger |
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Year | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
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Ward |
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{{refbegin|3}}- {{note label|CWBond|A|A}} Charles W. Bond resigned April 7, 1858.
- {{note label|TTennent|B|B}} Thomas Tennett took his seat May 21, 1858.
- {{note label|AGRandall|C|C}} A.G. Randall resigned February 13, 1860.
- {{note label|JCAyres|D|D}} John C. Ayres took his seat May 7, 1860.
- {{note label|JLynch|E|E}} John Lynch resigned October 7, 1861.
- {{note label|JWCudworth|F|F}} James W. Cudworth took his seat November 4, 1861.
- {{note label|JOtis|G|G}} James Otis resigned November 25, 1861, "as he is under the necessity of absenting himself from the State for the next few months".
- {{note label|JHRedington|H|H}} J.H. Redington took his seat December 30, 1861.
{{refend}} 18 members elected at-large, serving two-year terms (1900–1911) Article II, Chapter I, Section 2 of the revised charter, ratified by voters on May 26, 1898, specified that "[t]he Board of Supervisors shall consist of eighteen members all of whom shall hold office for two years and be elected from the City and County at large." Former mayors of the city were allowed non-voting seats on the board.[17] In 1912, supervisors' terms were extended to four years.[18] Year | | 1900[19][20] | James P. Booth | Charles Boxton{{ref label|CBoxton|P|P}} | Henry U. Branden- stein | A.B. Maguire{{ref label|ABMaguire|A|A}} | A. Comte, Jr. | John Connor | Peter J. Curtis | A. Arnold D'Ancona | L.J. Dwyer{{ref label|LJDwyer|G|G}} | M.J. Fontana | Richard M. Hotaling | Thomas Jennings | William N. McCarthy | Charles Wesley Reed | George R. Sanderson | John E.A. Helms{{ref label|JEAHelms|C|C}} | Joseph S. Tobin | Victor D. Duboce{{ref label|VDDuboce|D|D}} |
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1901 | Samuel Braunhart{{ref label|SBraunhart|B|B}} | Henry J. Stafford{{ref label|HJStafford|E|E}} | Horace Wilson{{ref label|HWilson|E|E}} |
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1902[21][20] | Robert J. Loughery{{ref label|RJLoughery|H|H}} | George Alpers | Fred N. Bent | Frederick Eggers | John A. Lynch | George B. McLellan | Henry Payot | William J. Wynn{{ref label|WJWynn|I|I}} |
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1903 | Edward I. Walsh{{ref label|EIWalsh|J|J}} |
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1904[22] | Thomas F. Finn{{ref label|TFFinn|K|K}} | Oscar Hocks | Theodore Lunstedt | L.A. Rea | Edward R. Rock | William W. Sanderson |
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1905 | James L. Gallagher{{ref label|JLGallagher|L|L}} |
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1906[59] | Michael W. Coffey | Daniel G. Coleman | Sam Davis | John J. Furey | Cornelius J. Harrigan | James F. Kelly | Thomas F. Lonergan | Max Mamlock | Patrick M. McGushin | Fred P. Nicholas | Andrew M. Wilson{{ref label|AMWilsonGFDuffy|M|M}} | George F. Duffey{{ref label|AMWilsonGFDuffy|M|M}} | Jennings J. Phillips | Edward I. Walsh |
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[23]{{ref label>SFGraft|O|O | J.J. O'Neill{{ref label|JJONeillOATveitmoe|N|N}} | Olaf A. Tveitmoe{{ref label|JJONeillOATveitmoe|N|N}} |
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[24]{{ref label>TaylorPurge1907|Q|Q | Henry U. Brandenstein | James P. Booth{{ref label|CBoxtonJPBooth|O|O}} | Gustave Brenner | George L. Center | A. Arnold D'Ancona | Thomas Magee | Bernard Faymonville | Eusebius Joseph Molera | Charles Albert Murdock | Daniel C. Murphy | A. Comte, Jr. | Henry Payot | Lippmann Sachs{{ref label|LSachsWGStafford|R|R}} | Loring P. Rixford{{ref label|LPRixfordWEBalcom|U|U}} | Matt Sullivan | William G. Stafford{{ref label|LSachsWGStafford|R|R}} |
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1908[24] | Paul Bancroft | William Broderick | A.H. Giannini{{ref label|AHGianniniWWSanderson|T|T}} | Oscar Hocks | Thomas Jennings | James A. Johnston | M. Hall McAllister | Ralph McLeran | A. Arnold D'Ancona{{ref label|GAConnollyAADAncona|S|S}} | Allan Pollok | George A. Connolly{{ref label|GAConnollyAADAncona|S|S}} |
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1909[24] | William W. Sanderson{{ref label|AHGianniniWWSanderson|T|T}} | W.E. Balcom{{ref label|LPRixfordWEBalcom|U|U}} |
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1910[25] | Edward L. Cutten | Cornelius Deasy | Matt Harris, Sr. | James Emmet Hayden | Timothy B. Healy | John L. Herget | John A. Kelly | John R. Knowles | Robert J. Loughery | John P. McLaughlin | Timothy P. Minehan | Charles A. Nelson | Thomas P. O'Dowd | William C. Pugh | John O. Walsh |
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1911[26] | John I. Nolan{{ref label|JPMcLauglinJINolan|V|V}} |
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Year | Board elections moved to staggered four-year terms from 1912 |
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{{refbegin|3}}- {{note label|ABMaguire|A|A}} A.B. Maguire resigned some time before June 27, 1900 and died shortly afterwards.
- {{note label|SBraunhart|B|B}} Samuel Braunhart was appointed June 27, 1900 to replace A.B Maguire.
- {{note label|JEAHelms|C|C}} John E.A. Helms died some time before July 26, 1900, while returning from a trip to investigate the possibility of using Lake Tahoe as a water supply for the city.
- {{note label|VDDuboce|D|D}} Colonel Victor Donglain Duboce, a veteran of the Spanish–American War died some time before August 15, 1900.
- {{note label|HJStafford|E|E}} Henry J. Stafford was appointed November 1, 1900 to replace John E.A. Helms.
- {{note label|HWilson|F|F}} Horace Wilson was appointed November 1, 1900 to replace Victor D. Duboce.
- {{note label|LJDwyer|G|G}} L.J. Dwyer died some time before February 8, 1902.
- {{note label|RJLoughery|H|H}} Robert J. Loughery was appointed February 8, 1902 to replace L.J. Dwyer.
- {{note label|WJWynn|I|I}} William J. Wynn resigned after his election as U.S. Representative for California's 5th congressional district for the term beginning March 4, 1903.
- {{note label|EIWalsh|J|J}} Edward I. Walsh was appointed March 4, 1903 to replace W.J. Wynn.
- {{note label|TFFinn|K|K}} Thomas F. Finn resigned January 1, 1905.
- {{note label|JLGallagher|L|L}} James L. Gallagher was appointed February 11, 1905 to replace Thomas F. Finn. On June 17, 1907, Gallagher was appointed acting mayor by the board of supervisors, to serve in place of Eugene E. Schmitz, who had been arrested on felony charges of extortion. Schmitz protested his removal, but Gallagher continued to serve until the board elected Charles Boxton to fill Schmitz's unexpired term on July 9, 1907.
- {{note label|AMWilsonGFDuffey|M|M}} A.M. Wilson and G.F. Duffey resigned their positions prior to January 17, 1907; Wilson took up the position of state railroad commissioner; Duffey became director of the city's department of public works.{{sfn|Hichborn|1915|p=154}}
- {{note label|JJONeillOATveitmoe|N|N}} J.J. O'Neill and O.A. Tveitmoe were appointed by Mayor Eugene E. Schmitz on January 17, 1907 to succeed A.M. Wilson and G.F. Duffey, who had resigned.
- {{note label|SFGraft|O|O}} On March 18, 1907, as part of the San Francisco graft trials, 16 of the 18 supervisors confessed before a grand jury to receiving money from corrupt political boss Abe Ruef. In exchange for their testimony, "they were promised complete immunity and would not be forced to resign their offices."
- {{note label|CBoxton|P|P}} Following the conviction of Mayor Eugene E. Schmitz for extortion, the board declared the office of the mayor vacant on July 9, 1907. Charles Boxton resigned his position as supervisor the same day and was elected by the board to fill Schmitz's unexpired term. However, testimony in Schmitz's corruption trial soon revealed that Boxton had taken bribes, so he actually served only seven days as mayor, resigning on July 16, 1907 to be replaced by Edward R. Taylor, dean of Hastings College of the Law. On July 29, 1907, Taylor appointed James P. Booth, who had served as a supervisor from 1900 to 1905, to serve Boxton's unexpired term as supervisor.
- {{note label|TaylorPurge1907|Q|Q}} On July 29, 1907, two weeks after Edward R. Taylor's appointment as mayor, he conducted a wholesale purge of supervisors connected with the graft scandal. Taylor obtained the resignations of 14 supervisors and appointed replacements for all their seats plus the open seat created by the resignation of Charles Boxton. These 15 appointments were protested by supervisors O.A. Tveitmoe and J.J. O'Neill, who had not resigned, on the grounds that Taylor's claim to the mayor's office had not been legally established. On August 26, 1907, P.M. McGushin resigned and Taylor replaced him with former supervisor A. Comte, Jr.
- {{note label|LSachsWGStafford|R|R}} Lippmann Sachs and W.G. Stafford were both elected in November 1907 to continue as supervisors. However, both resigned before May 28, 1908.
- {{note label|GAConnollyAADAncona|S|S}} George A. Connolly and A.A. D'Ancona were appointed as supervisors on May 28, 1908 to replace W.G. Stafford and Lippmann Sachs, respectively.
- {{note label|AHGianniniWWSanderson|T|T}} William W. Sanderson was appointed June 1, 1909 to replace A.H. Giannini, who had resigned. Attilio Henry Giannini was the brother of A.P. Giannini, founder of the Bank of America. W.W. Sanderson was a grocery executive with Hooper & Jennings. He served as a supervisor during the period of Abe Ruef's corruption, and gave evidence about the graft schemes.
- {{note label|LPRixfordWEBalcom|U|U}} W.E. Balcom was appointed June 7, 1909 to replace L.P. Rixford, who had resigned.
- {{note label|JPMcLauglinJINolan|V|V}} John I. Nolan was appointed March 6, 1911 to replace John P. McLaughlin, who had resigned.
{{refend}} 18 members elected at-large, serving staggered four-year terms (1912–1931) From January 8, 1912, the term of office of San Francisco supervisors was extended to four years, with nine members elected every two years. The nine supervisors with the highest vote counts at the 1911 election received four-year terms, and the other nine received two-year initial terms putting them up for re-election in 1913.[27] Year | Initial term 1912–1915 | Initial term 1912–1913 | 1912[28] | Paul Bancroft{{ref label|1912BOSReelected|A|A}} | George E. Gallagher{{ref label|GEGallagherJCKortick|C|C}} | James Emmet Hayden{{ref label|1912BOSReelected|A|A}} | Oscar Hocks{{ref label|1912BOSReelected|A|A}} | Thomas Jennings | William H. McCarthy | Charles Albert Murdock{{ref label|1912BOSReelected|A|A}} | Henry Payot | Alexander T. Vogelsang | Guido E. Caglieri | Andrew J. Gallagher | J.B. Bocarde, A.H. Giannini{{ref label|JBBocardeAHGiannini|B|B}} | Fred L. Hilmer | Adolf Koshland | Byron Mauzy | Ralph McLeran | Daniel C. Murphy | Edward L. Nolan |
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1913[29] |
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1914[30] | John C. Kortick{{ref label|GEGallagherJCKortick|C|C}} | Cornelius J. Deasy | Charles A. Nelson | James E. Power | Fred Suhr, Jr. | John O. Walsh |
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1915[31] |
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1916[32] | Edward J. Brandon | John D. Hynes | Joseph F. Lahaney | Joseph Mulvihill | Richard J. Welch | Edward I. Wolfe{{ref label|EIWolfeJCColman|D|D}} |
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1917[33] |
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[34]{{ref label>PreferentialVote|E|E | James B. McSheehy | Eugene Schmitz |
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1919 |
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1920[35] | Edwin G. Bath | Charles J. Powers | William S. Scott | Warren Shannon |
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1921 |
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1922[36] | Jesse C. Colman {{ref label|EIWolfeJCColman|D|D}} | Frank H. Harris | John A. McGregor | Margaret Mary Morgan{{ref label|MMMorgan|F|F}} | Frank Robb | Angelo Joseph Rossi |
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1923 |
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1924[37] | John Badaracco | William H. Harrelson | Philip C. Katz | Alfred Roncovieri |
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1925 |
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1926[38] | Franck R. Havenner | Milo F. Kent | Milton Marks, Sr.{{ref label|MMarksSr|G|G}} | Charles J. Powers | Walter J. Schmidt | William P. Stanton | Charles F. Todd |
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1927 |
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1928[39] | Andrew J. Gallagher | Fred Suhr, Jr. | Joseph M. Toner{{ref label|AJRossiJMTonerSTBreyerTPGarrity|H|H}} | Frank J. McGovern |
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1929 |
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1930[40] | Victor J. Canepa | Carl W. Miles | Jefferson E. Peyser | James E. Power | Angelo Joseph Rossi{{ref label|AJRossiJMTonerSTBreyerTPGarrity|H|H}} | E.J. "Jack" Spaulding |
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1931 | Samuel T. Breyer{{ref label|AJRossiJMTonerSTBreyerTPGarrity|H|H}}{{ref label|STBreyer|I|I}} | Thomas P. Garrity{{ref label|AJRossiJMTonerSTBreyerTPGarrity|H|H}} |
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Year | Board reduced from 18 members to 15 for the period 1932–1933 |
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{{refbegin|3}}- {{note label|1912BOSReelected|A|A}} Four members elected to four-year seats in 1912 served on the previous board: Paul Bancroft, James Emmet Hayden, Oscar Hocks and Charles Albert Murdock.
- {{note label|JBBocardeAHGiannini|B|B}} A.H. Giannini was appointed January 8, 1912 to replace J.B. Bocarde who was elected in November 1911 but died before his term started.
- {{note label|GEGallagherJCKortick|C|C}} John C. Kortick was appointed March 9, 1914 to replace George E. Gallagher who resigned January 8, 1914.
- {{note label|EIWolfeJCColman|D|D}} Edward I. "Eddie" Wolfe collapsed and died while speaking at a luncheon on January 26, 1922. The next day Mayor James Rolph appointed Jesse C. Colman to the vacant seat.
- {{note label|PreferentialVote|E|E}} The November 6, 1917 election used a preferential system for the supervisor race, apparently using the Bucklin voting system. Voters cast ballots for first, second and third choices for nine supervisor positions, choosing among 49 candidates. The total votes cast were divided by the nine seats to calculate a majority threshold. Ralph McLeran got most votes and was elected based on first preference votes only; Charles Nelson was elected based on first and second preference votes; the other seven successful candidates required first, second and third preference votes.
- {{note label|MMMorgan|F|F}} Mary Margaret Morgan was the first woman elected as a San Francisco supervisor. She placed seventh of 22 candidates for the nine seats at stake in the November 8, 1921 election.
- {{note label|MMarksSr|G|G}} Milton Marks, Sr. was the father of Milton Marks, Jr. who became the state assembly member and later state senator representing San Francisco. Milton Marks, Sr. did not stand for re-election in November 1929.
- {{note label|AJRossiJMTonerSTBreyerTPGarrity|H|H}} A.J. Rossi was sworn in as mayor of San Francisco on January 7, 1931 to fill the vacancy left by the swearing in of James Rolph as governor of California the previous day. Rossi had been chosen for the post on January 5 by a 14–2 vote of the Board of Supervisors. At the same time Dr. Joseph M. Toner took up a position as director of institutions for California. On January 20, Rossi's appointees Samuel T. Breyer and Thomas P. Garrity were sworn in to fill the two open supervisor seats.
- {{note label|STBreyer|I|I}} Samuel T. Breyer was the father of Irving Breyer, who later served as legal counsel for the San Francisco Board of Education, and the grandfather of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer and U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer.
{{refend}} 15 members elected at-large (1932–1933) The new city charter adopted by voters in November 1931 reduced the Board of Supervisors' membership in two stages from 18 members to 11. The first stage was that the nine members whose terms expired at the end of 1931 were replaced by six new members elected in November 1931. This reduced the board to 15 members for the period 1932–1933. Then, at the 1933 election, only five supervisors were elected, reducing the board to 11 members. The 1931 charter also removed administrative responsibility from the board and restricted it to a legislative role, and it created a new position of President of the Board of Supervisors. Previously, the mayor had served as president of the board. Year | | 1932 | Samuel T. Breyer | Arthur M. Brown, Jr. | Victor Canepa | Jesse Colman | Andrew J. Gallagher | Franck R. Havenner | J. Emmet Hayden | James McSheehy | Carl W. Miles | Jefferson E. Peyser | James E. Power | Warren Shannon | Alfred Roncovieri | E. Jack Spaulding | William P. Stanton |
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1933 |
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Year | |
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11 members elected at-large (1934–1977) Year | | 1934 | Jesse Colman | Franck R. Havenner | Andrew J. Gallagher | James McSheehy | John Ratto | Samuel T. Breyer | Arthur M. Brown, Jr. | Adolph Schmidt | Adolph Uhl | Alfred Roncovieri | Warren Shannon |
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1935 | J. Emmet Hayden |
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1936 | Dewey Mead | Fred W. Meyer |
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1937 | George R. Reilly |
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1938 |
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1939 | John F. McGowan |
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1940 |
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1941 |
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1942 | Gerald O'Gara | Chester MacPhee | Robert M. Green | Daniel Gallagher |
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1943 | James Gartland |
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1944 | Edward Mancuso | John J. Sullivan |
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1945 |
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1946 | Marvin E. Lewis | P. J. McMurray | George Christopher |
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1947 | J. Joseph Sullivan |
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1948 | Chris J. Christensen | Don Fazackerley |
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1949 | James Halley |
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1950 |
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1951 |
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1952 | Byron Arnold | John J. Ferdon | Harold Dobbs | Francis McCarty |
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1953 | James Halley |
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1954 | J. Eugene McAteer | Matthew Carberry | Clarissa McMahon |
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1955 | William C. Blake | Charles Ertola | James Halley |
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1956 | Joseph M. Casey | James J. Sullivan | Henry Rolph |
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1957 |
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1958 | Alfonso Zirpoli |
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1959 | J. Joseph Sullivan |
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1960 |
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1961 | Jesse Colman | Joseph E. Tinney | Peter Tamaras |
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1962 | Jack Morrison | Roger Boas |
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1963 | J. Max Moore |
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1964 | Leo T. McCarthy | George Moscone |
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1965 | John Ertola | Terry Francois |
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1966 | Kevin O'Shea |
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1967 | Dorothy von Beroldingen | Josiah H. "Joe" Beeman V |
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1968 | Robert H. Mendelsohn | James Mailliard | Ron Pelosi |
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1969 | Robert E. Gonzales |
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1970 | Dianne Feinstein | John Barbagelata |
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1971 | Michael J. Driscoll |
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1972 | John L. Molinari | Quentin L. Kopp |
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1973 | George Chinn |
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1974 | Alfred Nelder |
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1975 |
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1976 |
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1977 | Gordon Lau | Jane Murphy |
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Year | |
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11 members elected by district (1978–1980) Year | District | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 |
---|
1978 | Gordon Lau | Dianne Feinstein | John L. Molinari | Ella Hill Hutch | Harvey Milk | Carol Ruth Silver | Robert E. Gonzales | Dan White | Lee S. Dolson | Quentin L. Kopp | Ron Pelosi |
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1979 | Louise Renne | Harry Britt | Donald T. Horanzy |
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1980 | Ed Lawson | Doris M. Ward | Nancy G. Walker | John Bardis |
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Year | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 |
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District |
---|
11 members elected at-large (1981–2000) Year | Seat | 1981 | Carol Ruth Silver | Richard Hongisto | John L. Molinari | Louise Renne | Harry Britt | Ella Hill Hutch | Doris M. Ward | Wendy Nelder | Lee S. Dolson | Quentin L. Kopp | Nancy G. Walker |
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1982 | Willie B. Kennedy |
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1983 | Bill J. Maher |
---|
1984 |
---|
1985 |
---|
1986 | Tom Hsieh | Jim Gonzalez |
---|
1987 |
---|
1988 |
---|
1989 | Terence Hallinan | Angela Alioto |
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1990 |
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1991 | Kevin Shelley | Roberta Achtenberg | Carole Migden |
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1992 | Annemarie Conroy |
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1993 | Sue Bierman | Barbara Kaufman |
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1994 | Susan Leal |
---|
1995 | Mabel Teng | Tom Ammiano |
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1996 | Leslie Katz |
---|
1997 | Michael Yaki | Gavin Newsom | José Medina | Leland Yee | Amos C. Brown |
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1998 |
---|
1999 | Mark Leno |
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2000 | Alicia Becerril |
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Year | Seat |
---|
11 members elected by district (2001–present) Year | District | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 |
---|
2001 | Jake McGoldrick | Gavin Newsom | Aaron Peskin | Leland Yee | Matt Gonzalez | Chris Daly | Tony Hall | Mark Leno | Tom Ammiano | Sophie Maxwell | Gerardo Sandoval |
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2002 |
---|
2003 | Fiona Ma | Bevan Dufty |
---|
2004 | Michela Alioto-Pier |
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2005 | Ross Mirkarimi | Sean Elsbernd |
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2006 |
---|
2007 | Ed Jew |
---|
2008 | Carmen Chu |
---|
2009 | Eric Mar | David Chiu | David Campos | John Avalos |
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2010 |
---|
2011 | Mark Farrell | Jane Kim | Scott Wiener | Malia Cohen |
---|
2012 | Christina Olague |
---|
2013 | Katy Tang | London Breed | Norman Yee |
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2014 |
---|
2015 | Julie Christensen |
---|
2016 | Aaron Peskin |
---|
2017 | Sandra Lee Fewer | Jeff Sheehy | Hillary Ronen | Ahsha Safaí |
---|
2018 | Catherine Stefani | Vallie Brown |
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2019 | Gordon Mar | Matt Haney | Rafael Mandelman | Shamann Walton |
---|
|
Timeline of supervisors since 2000This graphical timeline depicts the composition of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors since district elections were resumed in November 2000, along with the mayor in office at each point. Each color corresponds to one of the city's 11 districts, with a paler shade indicating periods when the officeholder was appointed rather than elected. {{#tag:timeline| ImageSize = width:1200 height:auto barincrement:12 PlotArea = top:10 bottom:20 right:130 left:10 AlignBars = late DateFormat = mm/dd/yyyy Period = from:01/01/2000 till:{{#time: m/d/Y }} TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:1 start:2001 Define $now = {{#time: m/d/Y }} Colors = - saturated colors for elected supes
id:d1 value:rgb(0.60,0.10,0.10) id:d2 value:rgb(0.99,0.18,0.18) id:d3 value:rgb(0.89,0.34,0.12) id:d4 value:rgb(0.99,0.64,0) id:d5 value:rgb(0.39,0.80,0) id:d6 value:rgb(0.13,0.55,0.13) id:d7 value:rgb(0,0.49,0.99) id:d8 value:rgb(0,0.80,0.96) id:d9 value:rgb(0.99,0.40,0.99) id:d10 value:rgb(0.72,0.33,0.82) id:d11 value:rgb(0.47,0.21,0.54) - faded colors for appointed supes
id:d1a value:rgb(0.91,0.49,0.49) id:d2a value:rgb(0.99,0.60,0.60) id:d3a value:rgb(0.94,0.66,0.55) id:d4a value:rgb(0.99,0.82,0.50) id:d5a value:rgb(0.69,0.99,0.40) id:d6a value:rgb(0.43,0.86,0.43) id:d7a value:rgb(0.50,0.74,0.99) id:d8a value:rgb(0.50,0.91,0.99) id:d9a value:rgb(0.99,0.81,0.99) id:d10a value:rgb(0.87,0.68,0.91) id:d11a value:rgb(0.77,0.57,0.83) - others
id:supervisor value:rgb(0.75,0.75,0.75) #at-large supe id:supervisora value:rgb(0.87,0.87,0.787) #at-large supe appointed id:BoSpresident value:black #used as border with width:8 id:Mayor value:rgb(0.38,0.38,0.38) #mayor id:Mayora value:rgb(0.62,0.62,0.62) #appointed mayor (elected by BoS)
BarData = barset:MayorLine bar:MBrown bar:MNewsom bar:MLee bar:MFarrell bar:MBreed #barset:blankline barset:SupesLine bar:McGoldrick bar:Newsom bar:Peskin bar:Yee bar:Gonzalez bar:Daly bar:Hall bar:Leno bar:Ammiano bar:Maxwell bar:Sandoval bar:Ma bar:Dufty bar:Alioto-Pier bar:Elsbernd bar:Mirkarimi bar:Jew bar:Chu bar:Mar bar:Chiu bar:Campos bar:Avalos bar:Farrell bar:Kim bar:Wiener bar:Cohen bar:Olague bar:Tang bar:Breed bar:Yee2 bar:Christensen bar:Fewer bar:Sheehy bar:Ronen bar:Safai bar:Stefani bar:Mandelman bar:Brown bar:GMar bar:Haney bar:Walton PlotData= barset:MayorLine from:01/01/2001 till:end text:Mayors barset:SupesLine from:01/01/2001 till:end text:Supervisors bar:McGoldrick from:01/08/2001 till:01/08/2009 color:d1 text:"Jake McGoldrick" fontsize:S bar:Newsom from:01/01/2000 till:01/08/2001 color:supervisor bar:Newsom from:01/08/2001 till:01/08/2004 color:d2 text:"Gavin Newsom" fontsize:S bar:Peskin from:01/08/2001 till:01/08/2005 color:d3 bar:Peskin from:01/08/2005 till:01/08/2009 color:BoSpresident width:8 text:"Aaron Peskin" fontsize:S bar:Peskin from:01/08/2005 till:01/08/2009 color:d3 bar:Peskin from:12/08/2015 till:01/08/2016 color:d3a bar:Peskin from:01/08/2016 till:$now color:d3 text:"Aaron Peskin" fontsize:S bar:Yee from:01/01/2000 till:01/08/2001 color:supervisor bar:Yee from:01/08/2001 till:11/29/2002 color:d4 text:"Leland Yee" fontsize:S bar:Gonzalez from:01/08/2001 till:01/08/2003 color:d5 bar:Gonzalez from:01/08/2003 till:01/08/2005 color:BoSpresident width:8 text:"Matt Gonzalez" fontsize:S bar:Gonzalez from:01/08/2003 till:01/08/2005 color:d5 bar:Daly from:01/08/2001 till:01/08/2011 color:d6 text:"Chris Daly" fontsize:S bar:Hall from:01/08/2001 till:08/05/2004 color:d7 text:"Tony Hall" fontsize:S bar:Leno from:01/01/2000 till:01/08/2001 color:supervisor bar:Leno from:01/08/2001 till:11/29/2002 color:d8 text:"Mark Leno" fontsize:S bar:Ammiano from:01/01/2000 till:01/08/2001 color:supervisor bar:Ammiano from:01/01/2000 till:01/08/2003 color:BoSpresident width:8 bar:Ammiano from:01/08/2001 till:01/08/2003 color:d9 bar:Ammiano from:01/08/2003 till:12/01/2008 color:d9 text:"Tom Ammiano" fontsize:S bar:Maxwell from:01/08/2001 till:01/08/2011 color:d10 text:"Sophie Maxwell" fontsize:S bar:Sandoval from:01/08/2001 till:01/08/2009 color:d11 text:"Gerardo Sandoval" fontsize:S bar:Ma from:12/11/2002 till:01/08/2003 color:d4a bar:Ma from:01/08/2003 till:12/05/2006 color:d4 text:"Fiona Ma" fontsize:S bar:Dufty from:12/11/2002 till:01/08/2003 color:d8a bar:Dufty from:01/08/2003 till:01/08/2007 color:d8 bar:Dufty from:01/08/2007 till:01/08/2011 color:d8 text:"Bevan Dufty" fontsize:S bar:Alioto-Pier from:01/26/2004 till:01/08/2005 color:d2a bar:Alioto-Pier from:01/08/2005 till:01/08/2007 color:d2 bar:Alioto-Pier from:01/08/2007 till:01/08/2011 color:d2 text:"Michela Alioto-Pier" fontsize:S bar:Elsbernd from:08/05/2004 till:01/08/2005 color:d7a bar:Elsbernd from:01/08/2005 till:01/08/2009 color:d7 bar:Elsbernd from:01/08/2009 till:01/08/2013 color:d7 text:"Sean Elsbernd" fontsize:S bar:Mirkarimi from:01/08/2005 till:01/08/2009 color:d5 bar:Mirkarimi from:01/08/2009 till:01/07/2012 color:d5 text:"Ross Mirkarimi" fontsize:S bar:Jew from:12/05/2006 till:01/08/2007 color:d4a bar:Jew from:01/08/2007 till:01/11/2008 color:d4 text:"Ed Jew" fontsize:S bar:Chu from:09/25/2007 till:01/11/2008 color:d4a bar:Chu from:01/11/2008 till:01/08/2009 color:d4a bar:Chu from:01/08/2009 till:01/08/2011 color:d4 bar:Chu from:01/08/2011 till:02/27/2013 color:d4 text:"Carmen Chu" fontsize:S bar:Mar from:01/08/2009 till:01/08/2013 color:d1 bar:Mar from:01/08/2013 till:01/08/2017 color:d1 text:"Eric Mar" fontsize:S bar:Chiu from:01/08/2009 till:12/01/2014 color:BoSpresident width:8 text:"David Chiu" fontsize:S bar:Chiu from:01/08/2009 till:12/01/2014 color:d3 bar:Campos from:12/04/2008 till:01/08/2009 color:d9a bar:Campos from:01/08/2009 till:01/08/2013 color:d9 bar:Campos from:01/08/2013 till:01/08/2017 color:d9 text:"David Campos" fontsize:S bar:Avalos from:01/08/2009 till:01/08/2013 color:d11 bar:Avalos from:01/08/2013 till:01/08/2017 color:d11 text:"John Avalos" fontsize:S bar:Farrell from:01/08/2011 till:01/08/2015 color:d2 bar:Farrell from:01/08/2015 till:01/23/2018 color:d2 text:"Mark Farrell" fontsize:S bar:Kim from:01/08/2011 till:01/08/2015 color:d6 bar:Kim from:01/08/2015 till:01/08/2019 color:d6 text:"Jane Kim" fontsize:S bar:Wiener from:01/08/2011 till:01/08/2015 color:d8 bar:Wiener from:01/08/2015 till:12/05/2016 color:d8 text:"Scott Wiener" fontsize:S bar:Cohen from:01/08/2011 till:01/08/2015 color:d10 bar:Cohen from:06/26/2018 till:01/08/2019 color:BoSpresident width:8 bar:Cohen from:01/08/2015 till:01/07/2019 color:d10 text:"Malia Cohen" fontsize:S bar:Olague from:01/09/2012 till:01/08/2013 color:d5a text:"Christina Olague" fontsize:S bar:Tang from:12/01/2014 till:01/08/2015 color:BoSpresident width:8 bar:Tang from:02/27/2013 till:01/08/2014 color:d4a bar:Tang from:01/08/2014 till:01/08/2015 color:d4 bar:Tang from:01/09/2015 till:01/08/2019 color:d4 text:"Katy Tang" fontsize:S bar:Breed from:01/08/2013 till:01/08/2015 color:d5 bar:Breed from:01/08/2015 till:06/26/2018 color:BoSpresident width:8 text:"London Breed" fontsize:S bar:Breed from:01/08/2015 till:07/11/2018 color:d5 bar:Yee2 from:01/08/2013 till:01/08/2017 color:d7 bar:Yee2 from:01/08/2017 till:$now color:d7 text:"Norman Yee" fontsize:S bar:Yee2 from:01/08/2019 till:$now color:BoSpresident width:8 bar:Christensen from:01/08/2015 till:12/08/2015 color:d3a text:"Julie Christensen" fontsize:S bar:Fewer from:01/09/2017 till:$now color:d1 text:"Sandra Lee Fewer" fontsize:S bar:Sheehy from:01/09/2017 till:07/11/2018 color:d8a text:"Jeff Sheehy" fontsize:S bar:Ronen from:01/09/2017 till:$now color:d9 text:"Hillary Ronen" fontsize:S bar:Safai from:01/09/2017 till:$now color:d11 text:"Ahsha Safaí" fontsize:S bar:Stefani from:01/30/2018 till:11/06/2018 color:d2a bar:Stefani from:11/06/2018 till:$now color:d2 text:"Catherine Stefani" fontsize:S bar:Mandelman from:07/11/2018 till:$now color:d8 text:"Rafael Mandelman" fontsize:S bar:Brown from:07/16/2018 till:$now color:d5a text:"Vallie Brown" fontsize:S bar:GMar from:01/08/2019 till:$now color:d4 text:"Gordon Mar" fontsize:S bar:Haney from:01/08/2019 till:$now color:d6 text:"Matt Haney" fontsize:S bar:Walton from:01/08/2019 till:$now color:d10 text:"Shamann Walton" fontsize:S bar:MBrown from:01/01/2000 till:01/08/2004 color:Mayor text:"Willie Brown" bar:MNewsom from:01/08/2004 till:01/08/2011 color:Mayor text:"Gavin Newsom" bar:MLee from:01/08/2011 till:01/08/2012 color:Mayora bar:MLee from:01/08/2012 till:12/12/2017 color:Mayor text:"Ed Lee" bar:MFarrell from:01/23/2018 till:07/11/2018 color:Mayora text:"Mark Farrell" bar:MBreed from:07/12/2018 till:$now color:Mayor text:"London Breed" LineData= #These are the colored bars of the Legend: atpos:202 from:02/01/2000 till:06/15/2000 color:Mayora atpos:202 from:07/15/2000 till:12/15/2000 color:Mayor atpos:189 from:02/01/2000 till:06/15/2000 color:Supervisora atpos:189 from:07/15/2000 till:12/15/2000 color:Supervisor atpos:176 from:02/01/2000 till:06/15/2000 color:d1a atpos:176 from:07/15/2000 till:12/15/2000 color:d1 atpos:163 from:02/01/2000 till:06/15/2000 color:d2a atpos:163 from:07/15/2000 till:12/15/2000 color:d2 atpos:150 from:02/01/2000 till:06/15/2000 color:d3a atpos:150 from:07/15/2000 till:12/15/2000 color:d3 atpos:137 from:02/01/2000 till:06/15/2000 color:d4a atpos:137 from:07/15/2000 till:12/15/2000 color:d4 atpos:124 from:02/01/2000 till:06/15/2000 color:d5a atpos:124 from:07/15/2000 till:12/15/2000 color:d5 atpos:111 from:02/01/2000 till:06/15/2000 color:d6a atpos:111 from:07/15/2000 till:12/15/2000 color:d6 atpos:98 from:02/01/2000 till:06/15/2000 color:d7a atpos:98 from:07/15/2000 till:12/15/2000 color:d7 atpos:85 from:02/01/2000 till:06/15/2000 color:d8a atpos:85 from:07/15/2000 till:12/15/2000 color:d8 atpos:72 from:02/01/2000 till:06/15/2000 color:d9a atpos:72 from:07/15/2000 till:12/15/2000 color:d9 atpos:59 from:02/01/2000 till:06/15/2000 color:d10a atpos:59 from:07/15/2000 till:12/15/2000 color:d10 atpos:46 from:02/01/2000 till:06/15/2000 color:d11a atpos:46 from:07/15/2000 till:12/15/2000 color:d11 atpos:33 from:02/01/2000 till:12/15/2000 width:8 color:BoSPresident atpos:33 from:02/01/2000 till:12/15/2000 width:4 color:Supervisor layer:back # This section creates the vertical lines. at:01/08/2001 width:0.1 color:supervisor # new supervisor term at:01/08/2003 width:0.1 color:supervisor # new supervisor term at:01/08/2004 width:0.1 color:Mayor # Gavin Newsom at:01/08/2005 width:0.1 color:supervisor # new supervisor term at:01/08/2007 width:0.1 color:supervisor # new supervisor term at:01/08/2009 width:0.1 color:supervisor # new supervisor term at:01/08/2011 width:0.1 color:Mayor # Ed Lee appointed at:01/08/2013 width:0.1 color:supervisor # new supervisor term at:01/08/2015 width:0.1 color:supervisor # new supervisor term at:01/08/2017 width:0.1 color:supervisor # new supervisor term at:12/12/2017 width:0.1 color:Mayor # Ed Lee dies at:01/23/2018 width:0.1 color:Mayor # Mark Farrell appointed at:07/11/2018 width:0.1 color:Mayor # London Breed sworn in TextData= #This is the text of the Legend pos:(74,224) text:" " text:"Mayor" text:"At-Large Supervisor" text:"District 1 Supervisor" text:"District 2 Supervisor" text:"District 3 Supervisor" text:"District 4 Supervisor" text:"District 5 Supervisor" text:"District 6 Supervisor" text:"District 7 Supervisor" text:"District 8 Supervisor" text:"District 9 Supervisor" text:"District 10 Supervisor" text:"District 11 Supervisor" text:"President of the Board" pos:(13,224) fontsize:XS text:"Appntd Elected" }} Board members and transitions since 1980 Name | Dates | Comments | Terry A. Francois | 1964–1978 | Appointed 1964 by Mayor John F. Shelley to succeed Supervisor John J. Ferdon. Elected 1967, 1971, and 1975. Resigned 1978. | Robert H. Mendelsohn | 1968–1977 | Elected 1967, 1971, and 1975. Resigned 1977 to accept appointment by President Jimmy Carter as Assistant Secretary of the Interior. | Ronald Pelosi | 1968–1980 | Elected 1967, 1971, 1975, and 1977. Defeated for re-election 1979.[41] | Robert E. Gonzales | 1969–1980 | Appointed 1969 by Mayor Joseph Alioto to succeed Supervisor Leo T. McCarthy. Elected 1971, 1975, and 1977. | Dianne Feinstein* | 1970–1978 | Elected 1969, 1973, and 1977. Served as acting mayor upon the assassination of Mayor George Moscone in 1978. Elected mayor by the Board of Supervisors one week later. | Quentin L. Kopp* | 1972–1986 | Elected 1971, 1975, 1977, 1980, and 1984. Resigned 1986 after election to the California State Senate. | John L. Molinari* | 1972–1989 | Elected 1971, 1975, 1977, 1979, 1980, and 1984. Did not seek re-election in 1988. | Gordon J. Lau | 1977–1980 | Appointed 1977 by Mayor George Moscone to succeed Supervisor Robert H. Mendelsohn. Elected 1977. Defeated for re-election 1979. | Jane McKaskle Murphy | 1977–1978 | Appointed 1977 by Mayor George Moscone to succeed Supervisor Dorothy von Beroldingen. | Lee S. Dolson | 1978–1980, 1981–1983 | Elected 1977. Defeated for re-election 1979. Elected 1980. Defeated for re-election 1982. | Ella Hill Hutch | 1978–1981 | Elected 1977 and 1980. Died in office in 1981. | Harvey Milk | 1978 | Elected 1977. Assassinated 1978. | Carol Ruth Silver | 1978–1988 | Elected 1977, 1980, and 1984. Defeated for re-election 1988. | Dan White | 1978 | Elected 1977. Resigned 1978. Assassinated Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk. | Donald T. Horanzy | 1978–1981 | Appointed 1978 by Mayor Dianne Feinstein to succeed Supervisor Dan White. Defeated for first election in 1980. | Louise Renne | 1978–1986 | Appointed 1978 by Mayor Dianne Feinstein to succeed Feinstein on the Board of Supervisors. Elected 1980 and 1984. Resigned 1986 to accept appointment by Feinstein as city attorney. | Harry Britt* | 1979–1993 | Appointed 1979 by Mayor Dianne Feinstein to succeed Supervisor Harvey Milk. Elected 1980, 1984, and 1988. Did not seek re-election in 1992. | John Bardis | 1980–1981 | Elected 1979. Defeated for re-election 1980. | Ed Lawson | 1980–1981 | Elected 1979. Defeated for re-election 1980. | Nancy G. Walker* | 1980–1991 | Elected 1979, 1980, 1982, and 1986. Did not seek re-election in 1990. | Doris M. Ward* | 1980–1992 | Elected 1979, 1980, 1982, 1986, and 1990. Resigned 1992 to accept appointment by Mayor Frank Jordan as assessor. | Richard D. Hongisto | 1981–1991 | Elected 1980, 1982, and 1986. Did not seek re-election in 1990, running successfully for assessor. | Wendy Nelder* | 1981–1991 | Elected 1980, 1982, and 1986. Did not seek re-election in 1990, running unsuccessfully for assessor. | Willie B. Kennedy | 1981–1996 | Appointed 1981 by Mayor Dianne Feinstein to succeed Supervisor Ella Hill Hutch. Elected 1984, 1988, and 1992. Resigned 1996 to become administrative officer of the Public Transition Development Corporation. | Bill Maher | 1983–1995 | Elected 1982, 1986, and 1990. Ineligible to seek re-election in 1994. | Tom Hsieh | 1986–1997 | Appointed 1986 by Mayor Dianne Feinstein to succeed Supervisor Louise Renne. Elected 1988 and 1992. Ineligible to seek re-election in 1996. | Jim Gonzalez | 1986–1993 | Appointed 1986 by Mayor Dianne Feinstein to succeed Supervisor Quentin L. Kopp. Elected 1988. Defeated for re-election 1992. | Angela Alioto* | 1989–1997 | Elected 1988 and 1992. Ineligible to seek re-election in 1996. | Terence Hallinan | 1989–1996 | Elected 1988 and 1992. Resigned 1996 after election as district attorney. | Carole Migden | 1991–1996 | Elected 1990 and 1994. Resigned 1996 after election to the California State Assembly. | Roberta Achtenberg | 1991–1993 | Elected 1990. Resigned 1993 to accept appointment by President Bill Clinton as Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. | Kevin Shelley* | 1991–1996 | Elected 1990 and 1994. Resigned 1996 after election to the California State Assembly. | Annemarie Conroy | 1992–1995 | Appointed 1992 by Mayor Frank Jordan to succeed Supervisor Doris M. Ward. Defeated for first election in 1994. | Sue Bierman | 1993–2001 | Elected 1992 and 1996. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2000. | Barbara Kaufman* | 1993–2001 | Elected 1992 and 1996. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2000. | Susan Leal | 1993–1998 | Appointed 1993 by Mayor Frank Jordan to succeed Supervisor Roberta Achtenberg. Elected 1994. Resigned 1998 after election as city treasurer. | Tom Ammiano* | 1995–2008 | Elected 1994, 1998, 2000, and 2004. Resigned 2008 after election to the California State Assembly. | Mabel Teng | 1995–2001 | Elected 1994 and 1998. Defeated for re-election 2000. | Michael Yaki | 1996–2001 | Appointed 1996 by Mayor Willie Brown to succeed Supervisor Terence Hallinan. Elected 1996. Defeated for re-election 2000. | Amos C. Brown | 1996–2001 | Appointed 1996 by Mayor Willie Brown to succeed Supervisor Carole Migden. Elected 1998. Defeated for re-election 2000. | Leslie R. Katz | 1996–2001 | Appointed 1996 by Mayor Willie Brown to succeed Supervisor Willie B. Kennedy. Elected 1996. Did not seek re-election in 2000. | Leland Yee | 1997–2002 | Elected 1996 and 2000. Resigned 2002 after election to the California State Assembly. | José Medina | 1997–1999 | Elected 1996. Resigned 1999 to accept appointment by Governor Gray Davis as Director of the California Department of Transportation. | Gavin Newsom | 1997–2004 | Appointed 1997 by Mayor Willie Brown to succeed Supervisor Kevin Shelley. Elected 1998, 2000, and 2002. Resigned 2004 after election as mayor. | Mark Leno | 1998–2002 | Appointed 1998 by Mayor Willie Brown to succeed Supervisor Susan Leal. Elected 1998 and 2000. Resigned 2002 after election to the California State Assembly. | Alicia Becerril | 1999–2001 | Appointed 1999 by Mayor Willie Brown to succeed Supervisor José Medina. Defeated for first election in 2000. | Matt Gonzalez* | 2001–2005 | Elected 2000. Did not seek re-election in 2004. | Tony Hall | 2001–2004 | Elected 2000. Resigned 2004 to accept appointment as executive director of the Treasure Island Development Authority. | Sophie Maxwell | 2001–2011 | Elected 2000, 2002, and 2006. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2010. | Jake McGoldrick | 2001–2009 | Elected 2000 and 2004. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2008. | Aaron Peskin* | 2001–2009, 2015–present | Elected 2000 and 2004. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2008. Elected 2015 and 2016.[42] | Chris Daly | 2001–2011 | Elected 2000, 2002, and 2006. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2010. | Gerardo Sandoval | 2001–2009 | Elected 2000 and 2004. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2008. | Bevan Dufty | 2002–2011 | Elected 2002 and 2006. Appointed post-election 2002 by Mayor Willie Brown to succeed Supervisor Mark Leno. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2010. | Fiona Ma | 2002–2006 | Elected 2002. Appointed post-election 2002 by Mayor Willie Brown to succeed Supervisor Leland Yee. Resigned 2006 after election to the California State Assembly. | Michela Alioto-Pier | 2004–2011 | Appointed 2004 by Mayor Gavin Newsom to succeed Newsom on the Board of Supervisors. Elected 2004 and 2006. Ruled ineligible by the San Francisco Department of Elections, citing an opinion by City Attorney Dennis Herrera, to seek re-election in 2010. Alioto-Pier filed lawsuit in San Francisco Superior Court asserting that, under the term limits law, she was eligible to seek re-election in 2010, and if re-elected, would be termed out as of the 2014 election instead. A Superior Court judge ruled in her favor,[43] but the California Court of Appeal overturned that ruling, thereby removing her from the 2010 ballot for District 2 supervisor. Alioto-Pier appealed that ruling to the Supreme Court of California[44] which declined to hear the case.[45] | Sean Elsbernd | 2004–2013 | Appointed 2004 by Mayor Gavin Newsom to succeed Supervisor Tony Hall. Elected 2004 and 2008. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2012. | Ross Mirkarimi | 2005–2012 | Elected 2004 and 2008. Resigned 2012 after election as sheriff. | Ed Jew | 2006–2007 | Elected 2006. Appointed post-election 2006 by Mayor Gavin Newsom to succeed Supervisor Fiona Ma. Suspended by Mayor Newsom on September 25, 2007, pending the outcome of a formal process to remove him from the board. A separate civil suit was initiated by the city to remove him as well. Resigned on January 11, 2008, prior to the completion of the removal process and the civil lawsuit, and agreed not to seek public office for five years.[46] | Carmen Chu | 2007–2008, 2008–2013 | Appointed 2007 by Mayor Gavin Newsom to succeed Supervisor Ed Jew, after his suspension, pending final action by the Board of Supervisors on the question of whether to remove Jew from office. Jew resigned from office 2008, prior to the completion of the removal process, ending Chu's interim term. Under the charter, the seat became vacant[47] upon Jew's resignation and remained vacant for about five and a half hours until a new appointment was made.[47] Appointed 2008 by Mayor Newsom to succeed Supervisor Ed Jew, after his resignation. Elected 2008 to serve out the remainder of Jew's term, which expired January 2011.[47][48][49] Elected 2010. Resigned 2013 to accept appointment by Mayor Ed Lee as assessor-recorder. | David Campos | 2008–2017 | Elected 2008 and 2012. Appointed post-election 2008 by Mayor Gavin Newsom to succeed Supervisor Tom Ammiano. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2016. | Eric Mar | 2009–2017 | Elected 2008 and 2012. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2016. | John Avalos | 2009–2017 | Elected 2008 and 2012. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2016. | David Chiu* | 2009–2014 | Elected 2008 and 2012. Resigned 2014 after election to the California State Assembly. | Mark Farrell | 2011–2018 | Elected 2010 and 2014. Elected mayor by the Board of Supervisors in 2018, following the death of Mayor Ed Lee. | Malia Cohen* | 2011–2019 | Elected 2010 and 2014. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2018. Resigned 2019 after election to the State Board of Equalization.[50] | Scott Wiener | 2011–2016 | Elected 2010 and 2014. Resigned 2016 after election to the California State Senate | Jane Kim | 2011–2019 | Elected 2010 and 2014. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2018. | Christina Olague | 2012–2013 | Appointed 2012 by Mayor Ed Lee to succeed Supervisor Ross Mirkarimi. Defeated for first election in 2012. | Norman Yee* | 2013–present | Elected 2012 and 2016. Ineligible to seek re-election in 2020. | London Breed* | 2013–2018 | Elected 2012 and 2016. As board president, served as acting mayor from the death of Mayor Ed Lee in December 2017 until the board's appointment of Mark Farrell as mayor in January 2018. Resigned 2018 after election as mayor. | Katy Tang* | 2013–2019 | Appointed 2013 by Mayor Ed Lee to succeed Supervisor Carmen Chu. Elected 2013 and 2014. Did not seek re-election in 2018. | Julie Christensen | 2015 | Appointed 2015 by Mayor Ed Lee to succeed Supervisor David Chiu. Defeated for first election in 2015. | Hillary Ronen | 2017–present | Elected 2016. | Jeff Sheehy | 2017–2018 | Appointed 2017 by Mayor Ed Lee to succeed Supervisor Scott Wiener. Defeated for first election in June 2018. | Sandra Lee Fewer | 2017–present | Elected 2016. | Ahsha Safaí | 2017–present | Elected 2016. | Catherine Stefani | 2018–present | Appointed 2018 by Mayor Mark Farrell to succeed Farrell on the Board of Supervisors. Elected 2018. | Rafael Mandelman | 2018–present | Elected June 2018 and November 2018. | Vallie Brown | 2018–present | Appointed 2018 by Mayor London Breed to succeed Breed on the Board of Supervisors. | Gordon Mar | 2019–present | Elected 2018. | Matt Haney | 2019–present | Elected 2018. | Shamann Walton | 2019–present | Elected 2018. | |
Current members shaded in yellow. Members who served as president of the Board of Supervisors during part of their tenure on the board are denoted with an asterisk (*). Nonpartisanship Supervisors are elected on non-partisan ballots, but all current members of the Board of Supervisors are registered Democrats. Supervisor Jane Kim was previously a member of the Green Party, but switched her registration to Democratic before running for supervisor.[51] References 1. ^{{cite news | title = Mayor suspends Ed Jew from board, opening doors to political fight | first = Cecilia M. | last = Vega | url = http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/09/25/MN0FSDULR.DTL | work = San Francisco Chronicle | publisher = Hearst Communications, Inc. | location = San Francisco | date = September 26, 2007 | page = A-1 | accessdate = July 29, 2009}} 2. ^{{cite news | title = Crowd cheers swearing in of Supervisor Campos | first = Marisa | last = Lagos | url = http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/12/05/BAH014ICD5.DTL&type=newsbayarea | work = San Francisco Chronicle | publisher = Hearst Communications, Inc. | location = San Francisco | date = December 5, 2008 | page = B-1 | accessdate = July 28, 2009}} 3. ^{{cite web |title = Section 2.116. President of the Board of Supervisors. |url = http://library2.municode.com:80/4201/home.htm?view=home&doc_action=setdoc&doc_keytype=tocid&doc_key=591a1e3e8829309f551ac9e1da49b67b |work = 1996 Charter of the City and County of San Francisco |publisher = Municipal Code Corporation |accessdate = July 29, 2009 |deadurl = yes |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20110714133409/http://library2.municode.com/4201/home.htm?view=home&doc_action=setdoc&doc_keytype=tocid&doc_key=591a1e3e8829309f551ac9e1da49b67b |archivedate = July 14, 2011 |df = }} 4. ^{{cite web |title = Proposition L |url = https://sfpl.org/pdf/main/gic/elections/June8_1982short.pdf |work = San Francisco Voter Information Pamphlet: Primary Election, June 8, 1982 |publisher = San Francisco Registrar of Voters Office |location = San Francisco |pages = 50–52 |format = PDF |accessdate = July 30, 2009}} 5. ^{{cite web |title = Proposition G |url = https://sfpl.org/pdf/main/gic/elections/November5_1996short.pdf |work = San Francisco Voter Information Pamphlet: Consolidated Presidential General Election, November 5, 1996 |publisher = San Francisco Department of Elections |location = San Francisco |pages = 153–164 |format = PDF |accessdate = July 30, 2009}} 6. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 {{citation|title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1898-99, Ending June 30, 1899|contribution=List of Public Officers of the City and County of San Francisco|date=1899|place=San Francisco|publisher=The Hinton Printing Co.|page=Ap1-640–Ap1-717|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Yv01AQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA661}} 7. ^{{citation |title=The San Francisco Bay Area: A Metropolis in Perspective |first=Mel |last=Scott |year=1985 |publisher=University of California Press |edition=2 |location=Berkeley |pages=43–45 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xlE4hwWVqqwC&pg=PA43&lpg=PA43}} 8. ^{{citation|title=Transactions of the California State Agricultural Society During the Year 1892|date=1893|place=Sacramento|page=142–143|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DrxBAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA142}} 9. ^{{citation|title=Transactions of the California State Agricultural Society During the Year 1892|date=1893|place=Sacramento|page=142–143|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DrxBAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA142}} 10. ^{{citation|title=Transactions of the California State Agricultural Society During the Year 1892|date=1893|place=Sacramento|page=142–143|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DrxBAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA142}} 11. ^{{citation|title=Transactions of the California State Agricultural Society During the Year 1892|date=1893|place=Sacramento|page=142–143|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DrxBAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA142}} 12. ^{{citation|title=Transactions of the California State Agricultural Society During the Year 1892|date=1893|place=Sacramento|page=142–143|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DrxBAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA142}} 13. ^{{citation|title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1886-7, Ending June 30, 1887|date=1887|place=San Francisco|publisher=William M. Hinton & Co.|page=436–437|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pYG3AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA436}} 14. ^{{citation|title=Transactions of the California State Agricultural Society During the Year 1892|date=1893|place=Sacramento|page=142–143|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DrxBAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA142}} 15. ^{{citation|title=Transactions of the California State Agricultural Society During the Year 1892|date=1893|place=Sacramento|page=142–143|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DrxBAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA142}} 16. ^{{citation|title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1898-99, Ending June 30, 1899|date=1899|place=San Francisco|publisher=The Hinton Printing Co.|page=75–76|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Yv01AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA75}} 17. ^{{citation |title=Charter of the city and county of San Francisco... ratified... 1898. ...in full force and effect, January 8, 1900. With amendments adopted... [to] November 5, 1918, in effect January 17, 1919 |date=1919 |url=https://archive.org/stream/charterofcitycou00sanfrich#page/4/mode/2up |page=4 }} 18. ^{{citation |title=Charter of the city and county of San Francisco... ratified... 1898. ...in full force and effect, January 8, 1900. With amendments adopted... [to] November 5, 1918, in effect January 17, 1919 |date=1919 |url=https://archive.org/stream/charterofcitycou00sanfrich#page/225/mode/2up |page=225 }} 19. ^{{citation |title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1899–1900 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=foi3AAAAIAAJ |year=1901 }} 20. ^1 {{citation |title=San Francisco: A Brief Biographical Sketch of Some of the Most Prominent Men who Will Preside Over Her Destiny for at Least Two Years |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6P81AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA159 |year=1902 |first1=Evarts I. |last1=Blake |publisher=Pacific Publishing Company }} 21. ^{{citation |title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1902–1903 |url=https://archive.org/stream/sanfranciscomuni53sanfrich#page/898/mode/2up |page=898 |year=1903 }} 22. ^{{citation |title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1904–1905 |url=https://archive.org/stream/sanfranciscomuni55sanfrich#page/426/mode/2up |page=426 |year=1905 }} 23. ^1 {{citation |title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1905–6... and the Fiscal Year 1906–7. |url=https://archive.org/stream/sanfranciscomuni57sanfrich#page/798/mode/2up |page=798 |year=1908 }} 24. ^1 2 {{citation |title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1907–08. |url=https://archive.org/stream/sanfranciscomuni56sanfrich#page/903/mode/2up |pages=903–921 |year=1909 }} 25. ^{{citation |title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1909–10. |url=https://archive.org/stream/sanfranciscomuni59sanfrich#page/1121/mode/1up |pages=1121 |year=1911 }} 26. ^{{citation |title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1910–11. |url=https://archive.org/stream/sanfranciscomuni60sanfrich#page/1259/mode/1up |pages=1259 |year=1912 }} 27. ^{{citation |title=Charter of the city and county of San Francisco... ratified... 1898. ...in full force and effect, January 8, 1900. With amendments adopted... [to] November 5, 1918, in effect January 17, 1919 |date=1919 |url=https://archive.org/stream/charterofcitycou00sanfrich#page/225/mode/2up |page=225 }} 28. ^{{citation |title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1911–12. |url=https://archive.org/stream/sanfranciscomuni61sanfrich#page/1100/mode/2up |pages=1100 |year=1913 }} 29. ^{{citation |title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1912–13. |url=https://archive.org/stream/munisanfrancisco62sanfrich#page/861/mode/1up |pages=861 |year=1914 }} 30. ^{{citation |title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1913–14. |url=https://archive.org/stream/munisanfrancisco63sanfrich#page/826/mode/1up |pages=826 |year=1915 }} 31. ^{{citation |title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1914–15. |url=https://archive.org/stream/munisanfrancisco64sanfrich#page/936/mode/2up |pages=937 |year=1916 }} 32. ^{{citation |title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1915–16. |url=https://archive.org/stream/munisanfrancisco65sanfrich#page/970/mode/2up |pages=971 |year=1918 }} 33. ^{{citation |title=San Francisco Municipal Reports for the Fiscal Year 1916–17. |url=https://archive.org/stream/munisanfrancisco66sanfrich#page/1022/mode/2up |pages=1023 |year=1919 }} 34. ^{{cite journal |title=Unofficial Count of Vote for Supervisor, Complete |page=3 |date=November 8, 1917 |journal=San Francisco Chronicle }} 35. ^{{cite journal |title=Ballot Totals Polled in S.F. City Election. |page=3 |date=November 6, 1919 |journal=San Francisco Chronicle }} 36. ^{{cite journal |title=Complete Returns. |page=1 |date=November 10, 1921 |journal=San Francisco Chronicle }} 37. ^{{cite journal |title=Complete Vote Registered at Polls Tuesday. |page=1 |date=November 8, 1923 |journal=San Francisco Chronicle }} 38. ^{{cite journal |title=Complete Returns. |page=1 |date=November 10, 1925 |journal=San Francisco Chronicle }} 39. ^{{cite journal |title=Complete Election Returns. |page=2 |date=November 10, 1927 |journal=San Francisco Chronicle }} 40. ^{{cite journal |title=Supervisors Vote by Districts. |page=2 |date=November 7, 1929 |journal=San Francisco Chronicle }} 41. ^Hartman, Chester W. and Carnochan, Sarah, "City for Sale: The Transformation of San Francisco" University of California Press (2002), p. 239, {{ISBN|0-520-08605-8}} 42. ^{{cite news|newspaper=San Francisco Examiner |url=http://www.sfexaminer.com/peskin-begins-term-on-board-of-supervisors/ |title=Peskin begins term on Board of Supervisors |first=Joshua |last=Sabatini |accessdate=December 8, 2015}} 43. ^{{cite news| url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/cityinsider/detail?entry_id=68850 | work=The San Francisco Chronicle | title=Herrera will appeal Alioto-Pier decision | first=Rachel | last=Gordon | date=July 28, 2010}} 44. ^{{cite news| url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/08/24/BANS1F2PE6.DTL | work=The San Francisco Chronicle | title=Appeals court rules against Alioto-Pier | first=Rachel | last=Gordon | date=August 25, 2010}} 45. ^http://blogs.sfweekly.com/thesnitch/2010/09/michela_alioto-pier_petition_s.php 46. ^Six months after he took office, the FBI raided his office and homes for allegedly extorting money from small business owners in his district. Shortly after the raid, the city attorney began investigating Jew for violating residency requirements necessary to hold his supervisor position. In late 2008, he pleaded guilty to both charges. He was sentenced to 64 months in federal prison for extortion, and a year in county jail for perjury.Ed Jew tenders resignation from S.F. Board of Supervisors, San Francisco Chronicle. 47. ^1 2 Interim supervisor becomes permanent replacement for Ed Jew, San Francisco Chronicle. 48. ^ARTICLE XIII: ELECTIONS {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061126210602/http://www.municode.com/content/4201/14130/HTML/ch013.html |date=2006-11-26 }} 49. ^S.F. mayor's finance office aide named interim replacement for Ed Jew, San Francisco Chronicle. 50. ^http://www.boe.ca.gov/news/2019/Jan2019-newmembers.pdf 51. ^http://www.sfbg.com/2010/03/11/green-partys-nadir
Sources - {{cite web |title=Section 3.100. Powers and Responsibilities. |url=http://library.amlegal.com/nxt/gateway.dll/California/charter_sf/articleiiiexecutivebranch-officeofmayor?f=templates$fn=default.htm$3.0$vid=amlegal:sanfrancisco_ca$anc=JD_3.100 |work=1996 Charter of the City and County of San Francisco |publisher=American Legal Publishing Corporation |accessdate=January 2, 2017 |ref={{harvid|SF Charter 1996 §3.100|}} }}
- {{cite web |title=Section 15.105. Suspension and Removal. |url=http://library.amlegal.com/nxt/gateway.dll/California/charter_sf/articlexvethics?f=templates$fn=default.htm$3.0$vid=amlegal:sanfrancisco_ca$anc=JD_15.105 |work=1996 Charter of the City and County of San Francisco |publisher=American Legal Publishing Corporation |accessdate=January 2, 2017 |ref={{harvid|SF Charter 1996 §15.105|}} }}
- {{cite news |url=http://www.sfchronicle.com/politics/article/AIDS-activist-Sheehy-to-succeed-Wiener-as-SF-10839149.php |title=AIDS activist Sheehy to succeed Wiener as SF supervisor |first=Emily |last=Green |date=January 5, 2017 |accessdate=January 6, 2017 |journal=San Francisco Chronicle }}
- {{citation |title="The System" as Uncovered by the San Francisco Graft Prosecution |first=Franklin |last=Hichborn |place=San Francisco |publisher=James H. Barry Company |date=1915 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xm0UAAAAYAAJ }}
External links{{commonscat|San Francisco Board of Supervisors members}}- San Francisco Board of Supervisors official website
- Past members of the Board of Supervisors
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