Political Betrayal Warrants Recall
For almost a year I’ve been in conversations and debates concerning how the safety and quality of neighborhood life impacts of closing the Upper Great Highway (UGH), and the need for mitigation, planning and financing before any closure.
Most recently, I became a member of the Recall Engardio Committee. I joined because I cannot abide by Joel Engardio’s betrayal; I cannot stand by while his actions compromise our safety and our quality of life, and because the west side of San Francisco has had enough. I’ve taken a leadership role in the recall so Engardio can’t do any more harm, and to remind City Hall that they work for us. I also support the recently filed lawsuit to set aside Proposition K, which closed the UGH, so the harm Engardio did can be corrected.
From the time I was 21 years old, I have had the pleasure of being a police officer. Helping others is fulfilling, and service of all types is a noble calling. I’m the fourth generation of my family that’s called the west side home while serving in the SF Police Department. I also had the great-good fortune of serving as the captain of Richmond Police Station.
During my tenure I enjoyed working with many members of our Board of Supervisors. My lane was public safety, theirs was representing their constituents and advancing sound public policy. We didn’t always agree, but there was always a shared commitment to work together for San Francisco. I never encountered a supervisor that abandoned their duty to the people they were elected to represent. I’m sure there were disagreements between supervisors and their constituents, but none operated in secrecy to conspire against the people they represented or abdicated their obligation to representative democracy – until Engardio came into office.
Prop. K Created in Dark Room
Sometime before February 2024, Proposition K was prepared outside of the public’s view. There is no indication that the city attorney’s office wrote or reviewed Prop. K. Engardio admits knowing about the document for at least three months before he filed it with the clerk of the Board of Supervisors on the afternoon of June 18, 2024, the last possible day to submit a ballot proposition for the November 2024 election. By hiding the document from the public, Engardio prevented anyone from submitting a competing, rational proposal to voters.
I don’t know if Engardio co-authored Prop. K, but from his Sunshine Ordinance daily calendar we know he met at City Hall with Lucas Lux on March 18, 2024, three months before Prop. K was filed. Engardio’s next meeting with Lux was at a private residence on 48th Avenue on June 17, 2024, the day before Prop. K was filed. Within weeks Engardio was making public appearances with Lux at his side. According to his LinkedIn page, Lux is a former member of the board of directors and treasurer for the SF Bicycle Coalition and president of the board of directors of Friends of Great Highway Park. He is an outspoken proponent of Prop. K.
While Engardio was meeting privately with proponents of Prop. K, his constituents were relying on his campaign promises, including campaign literature, which stated: “Joel on parks and the environment: Great Highway: Joel supports allowing cars on the Great Highway on weekdays to serve commuters and opening the Great Highway on weekends and holidays to pedestrians and cyclists for recreation.”
During his 2022 campaign for District 4 supervisor, Engardio prepared a statement for inclusion in the City’s official Voter Handbook. He promised transparency, to be a voice for his constituents, and to focus on public safety and safer streets for the residents of District 4. Once elected, Engardio betrayed voters and violated his campaign promise of transparency, disregarded the needs and concerns of District 4 residents and muted their voice at City Hall.
More recently, Engardio supported the rapid closing of the UGH. Despite the City’s approaching budget cliff, and his constituents being up in arms over the unmitigated impacts of the closure, he watched silently as city departments (Municipal Transportation Agency and SF Recreation and Park Department) expended significant funds to fast track the closure of the UGH. In a Feb. 10, email to the Board of Supervisor’s Finance Committee, he requested a UGH-closure-related general fund appropriation of several hundred thousand dollars be quickly calendared for a hearing during the month of February.
Closure Threatens Public Safety
Engardio has compromised our neighborhood safety. Traffic has been routed onto high-injury, congested thoroughfares; commute times have been lengthened; exhaust-spewing vehicles have increased on residential streets; response times for emergency services will increase; a major evacuation route for western San Francisco will be unavailable in the event of disaster or conflagration; traffic congestion has increased in neighborhoods and Golden Gate Park, affecting air quality and pedestrian safety.
Engardio doesn’t want to be recalled. He has friends who feel the same way. Good friends that have given him a great deal of money, including some who financed Prop. K. According to the most recent disclosures filed with the SF Ethics Commission, Engardio has raised $284,144 for his “stop the recall” campaign, including $250,000 donated by just four wealthy people and one political action committee. By contrast, the Recall Engardio Committee has raised $39,713 from hundreds of westside donors. Engardio has generous, supportive friends, but none of them live in District 4 and none of them seem to care about people who live in the west side.
Engardio’s Proposition K subordinated our path for a dream of a better UGH to political gamesmanship and echo-chamber, small-group planning – tactics that assured a few people would be winners, and the great majority would suffer. It didn’t have to be that way. Closing the UGH without mitigating neighborhood impacts, before completing necessary studies and destroying the thoughtful compromise, was bad public policy bereft of social utility.
Make no mistake, residents, visitors and merchants on the west side, and District 4 in particular, are furious. Betrayal and deceit spark anger, but more is going on here. On the west side, there is a deep sense of sadness occasioned by being disenfranchised, misled and having our daily lives subordinated to the desires of a few promoters who have a vision for San Francisco that excludes so many of us.
Recently I walked a nearly empty UGH, and with a cool breeze at my side and the sound of the crashing surf blocking other noises. I felt melancholy. I thought of all the people who would be stuck in traffic, the people worried about their children crossing streets, the emergency vehicles forced to slower, congested routes, and the new patterns that people have adopted out of necessity rather than choice. Engardio hurt us by being the “ball-carrier” for a well-funded, small, insular group that wants a particular future, regardless of the social costs to others. That is a nice way of saying selfish. San Francisco is better than this, and the west side is saying-enough.
Engardio betrayed the public’s trust and compromised safety on the west side. Unless he resigns, he will be recalled and voted out of office.
Please visit the website RecallEngardio.com for more information, to volunteer or to make a donation.
Richard Corriea is a retired commander from the SF Police Department.
Categories: Commentary















A very exhaustive description of why Engardio should be recalled. Additionally, Connie Chan has recently announced that she would attempt to introduce a ballot measure to continue the previous compromise (weekend closure to cars, weekday open to cars) re the Great Highway that was supposed to be discussed in 2026 per the original decision to close the GH during the pandemic. Prop K aborted that discussion, and that was not an option offered by Prop K, it was all or nothing. I believe most people could have lived with the ongoing compromise and we would not have the deep division in our neighborhoods now caused by the passage of Prop K. The majority (and even supermajority >75% “no” in parts of the Richmond and Sunset districts) of the west side of SF opposed Prop K. A strong reason to recall Engardio since with Dean Preston losing his seat and London Breed no longer Mayor, support in City Hall for the total GH closure has diminished.
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This is so well written and describes exactly the way so many of us are feeling and why. Thank you, Commander Corriea, for your lifetime of service to San Francisco and for stepping up to help us in our effort to have representation that reflects the needs of our District. Hopefully, our next Supervisor will have the integrity that this one lacks.
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Richard, this is a great letter that I think explains what a lot of us in districts that were affected by the GH closure feel. Thank you.
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Much of District 1 (The Richmond) is just as furious and voted in even higher proportion against Prop. K. We don’t have a voice in the recall, though.
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You still have a VOICE, but not a vote. It affects Richmond just as much as Sunset.
You also have a supervisor who sticks to her word on campaign promises and is always looking out for her district’s residents. The Sunset needs that again.
Come out and protest Saturday between 11am and 4pm. Bring a sign!
Let them know they won’t steal from the West Side without a fight.
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Just watched a Jeopardy segment where one of the questions was what is the other name of Route1 that runs down the California Coast? So that raises the question, are there any re-routing directions for people who drive through San Francisco who don’t know the way down the California Coast now that the route has changed? Where are the Route1 signs? Do they take the traffic east on Lincoln and turn onto Sunset? What do they do with the traffic driving north into Marin along the California Coastline?
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Route 1 goes out 19th Avenue to 280 through Daly City, before heading off to Pacifica. It has never gone along the Great Highway, so no need to re-do any signage.
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Well written piece by Ret. Commander Corriea. He outlines all the reasons why Engardio needs to be recalled.
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Richard:
Well said!!! And so true!!! I have never in my lifetime in the Sunset seen or heard of such self centered behavior and conduct by an elected official; nor seen such a breech of the public trust to one’s constitutes. As a retired Ocean Lifeguard and Firefighter who raised a family in the Sunset, I find his lack of transparency and integrity reprehensible. His betrayal of his constitutes is the exact opposite of the values we were raised with in the Sunset and have tried to pass on to future generations. He needs go. Support the Recall.
Sincerely,
Marty Murphy
sfpoliticshub.com
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