Thursday, February 15, 2024

California Today: San Francisco dedicates a cable car to Tony Bennett

Car No. 53 took a special Valentine's Day ride up Nob Hill, stopping at the hotel where Bennett debuted "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" in 1961.
Continue reading the main story
Ad
California Today

February 15, 2024

It's Thursday. San Francisco has dedicated a cable car to Tony Bennett. Plus, California's push for ethnic studies is running into Israel-Hamas war.

Two women, one of them holding a small dog, smiling and standing inside a cable car.
Susan Benedetto, left, and Mayor London Breed enjoying a ride on cable car No. 53, which was dedicated to Tony Bennett. Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Cable car No. 53 took a special Valentine's Day ride up Nob Hill in San Francisco on Wednesday morning, including a stop outside the Fairmont Hotel, where the car was officially dedicated to the singer Tony Bennett, who died in July at age 96.

It was inside that hotel — at the Venetian Room, in 1961 — that Bennett first publicly performed his signature song, "I Left My Heart in San Francisco," with its lyrics about cable cars climbing halfway to the stars. The tune still stirs pride and nostalgia in many San Franciscans, and the Giants play it after every home victory.

The dedication, attended by Susan Benedetto, Bennett's widow, added to a recent string of positive news about the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency, which operates the city's buses, streetcars and light rail lines.

Not long ago, the agency's director, Jeffrey Tumlin, was worried that it was barreling toward a "fiscal cliff," when it would run out of money and have to make big cuts in service.

But like a cable car climbing steep California Street, the agency's fortunes are slowly rising.

The system now has 71 percent of the ridership it had before the pandemic, Tumlin said, which is fairly high compared with other public transportation agencies in the Bay Area. The figure for weekend ridership is even better, at 86 percent. Some bus lines have more riders than ever before, and Tumlin said the system's three historic cable car routes, loved by tourists, were once again fairly full.

"The cable cars are thriving," he said. "Everyone who visits San Francisco is apparently getting on our cable cars."

Tumlin said the agency worked hard during the pandemic to make the Muni system "fast, frequent, reliable, clean and safe" — and it seems to be paying off.

The biggest key to Muni's rebound has been adjusting routes to serve a variety of neighborhoods and destinations, rather than relying primarily on serving downtown office workers, many of whom now work from home. Routes that pass by hospitals or the Chase Center, where the Warriors play, are doing well.

The agency has built 25 miles of transit-only lanes to speed up bus service. The line that travels down Van Ness Avenue past City Hall now moves so quickly that people who are buried in their phones often miss their stops and complain that the bus is too fast, Tumlin said.

A plaque that reads, in part,
A plaque on cable car No. 53 explaining to riders why the car is dedicated to Tony Bennett. Jim Wilson/The New York Times

The agency has abandoned strict time schedules for its buses and has switched to a system called headway management that focuses on the time interval between buses and gives drivers more flexibility to keep from bunching up along the route.

Continue reading the main story

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

Of course, it's not all rosy. The subway lines that run on fixed rails to the financial district and the Moscone Center are struggling without office workers and convention-goers to fill them.

The situation for BART, the rail system that connects the city with much of the Bay Area, is far more dire. With downtown still struggling to rebound, BART is, too: It has recovered just 43 percent of its prepandemic ridership.

"Our ridership mirrors office occupancy," Alicia Trost, a spokeswoman for BART, said. "It's as simple as that."

BART still faces a very real fiscal cliff. A windfall of extra state money last year postponed that scary scenario until 2026, but if a ballot measure that is expected to be put before voters that year does not pass, the agency will be in real trouble, Trost said. The agency, with an annual operating budget of about $1 billion, will find itself short by about $300 million in 2026 without an infusion of funds.

Continue reading the main story

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

Bus agencies around the Bay Area are generally doing fairly well. SamTrans in San Mateo County is back up to 88 percent of its prepandemic ridership. Fixed rail services that serve mainly downtown commuters are not: Caltrain, which runs between San Francisco and Silicon Valley, has recovered just 38 percent of its ridership.

Even so, on Wednesday morning the mood when it came to public transit in the San Francisco area was pure happiness. Mayor London Breed; Larry Baer, the president of the San Francisco Giants; and other notables celebrated Bennett's life and the newly dedicated cable car. Benedetto said she wished her husband could have seen it.

"He would have been absolutely thrilled," she said. "He loved the people of San Francisco, and they loved him."

Heather Knight is the San Francisco bureau chief of The New York Times.

We hope you've enjoyed this newsletter, which is made possible through subscriber support. Subscribe to The New York Times.

Continue reading the main story

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad
A side view of Gov. Gavin Newsom gesturing with his right hand and speaking into a microphone.
Gov. Gavin Newsom in January. Jim Wilson/The New York Times

The rest of the news

  • Some Californians worry that a ballot initiative supported by Gov. Gavin Newsom could threaten vital programs to combat homelessness, The Associated Press reports.
  • Ethnic studies will be a required subject for high school students in California, but some scholars, parents and educators object to how the discipline addresses the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
  • California has spent roughly $370 million on work force programs like the High Road Training Partnership that are intended to prepare people for stable jobs with opportunities for growth — but the results of the programs are mixed, CalMatters reports.
  • Oil and gas regulators in California have released their proposal to phase out fracking in response to the state's not approving fracking permits in the past three years, KQED reports.

Southern California

  • Laguna Beach officials ended a City Council meeting over Zoom early on Tuesday after some speakers made antisemitic, homophobic, transphobic and racist remarks, in an example of "Zoombombing," The Los Angeles Times reports.

Central California

  • Kelly Toys, the company that makes Squishmallows, is suing Build-A-Bear over its Skoosherz line, which Kelly Toys claims is a knockoff. Build-A-Bear argues that its line does not infringe on any trademark.
  • The Fresno area will be hit by a series of storms into next week, some of which could be intense, The Fresno Bee reports.

Northern California

WHAT WE'RE EATING

Billie Eilish, in a yellow coat and flower-print head scarf, sits on the floor scratching a black-and-white dog's chin.
Billie Eilish with Messi, the Border collie who plays the family dog, Snoop, in "Anatomy of a Fall." Sinna Nasseri for The New York Times

And before you go, some good news

Some of Hollywood's biggest names gathered at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills on Monday for the annual Oscar nominees' luncheon. But in a crowd that included Hollywood veterans like Margot Robbie and Martin Scorsese, it was a new star who stole the show: Messi, the black-and-white Border collie from the French drama "Anatomy of a Fall."

Messi, who plays Snoop, the family dog, in the film, has acquired a fan base on social media — as well as a "Palm Dog" at the Cannes Film Festival — for his impressive performance, which, at one point includes an affecting show of playing (almost) dead.

On Monday, Messi wore a blue bow tie and was accompanied by a date — his owner and trainer, Laura Martin Contini. He beguiled actors, musicians and A-listers throughout the event, including Billie Eilish, who knelt down to pet him.

The Times Culture reporter Kyle Buchanan and two photographers chronicled Messi's inaugural Oscar campaign on Monday, along with the rest of the eclectic event and its human attendees. Read the full article and see the photos here.

Thanks for reading. We'll be back tomorrow.

P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword.

Soumya Karlamangla, Maia Coleman and Briana Scalia contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox.

Continue reading the main story

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for California Today from The New York Times.

To stop receiving California Today, unsubscribe. To opt out of other promotional emails from The Times, including those regarding The Athletic, manage your email settings. To opt out of updates and offers sent from The Athletic, submit a request.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebooktwitterinstagram

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

LiveIntent LogoAdChoices Logo

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

No comments:

Post a Comment