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  • Fire Station 35 against the San Francisco skyline.
  • The new Office of the Chief Medical Examiner features state-of-the-art forensic examination stations and more.
  • Construction for the new Fire Station 5 was completed in April 2019.
  • Installing a new welded steel pipe for Potable Emergency Firefighting Water Systems pipeline at 19th Ave. and Sloat Blvd.

Earthquake Safety and Emergency Response Bond

Earthquake Safety and Emergency Response (ESER) is San Francisco's bond program to strategically address critical public safety needs in the City. The program identifies seismic improvements and upgrades to City-owned facilities that are needed to help safeguard San Francisco.

The third phase of the ESER bond program was approved by voters with 82 percent approval during the March 2020 election. ESER 2020 will continue the work of the previous two ESER bonds that were overwhelmingly approved by voters in 2010 and 2014.

ESER 2010 and 2014 funded improvements to neighborhood fire stations, district police stations and the Emergency Firefighting Water System.  They also funded construction of new facilities such as the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (Hunter's Point), the Public Safety Building (Mission Bay), Fire Station No. 16 (Marina District), and Fire Station No. 5 (Fillmore District).

Find individual bond-related projects and more information about each bond by clicking the links below:

ESER 2020

ESER 2014

ESER 2010

Background

With support from the Mayor’s Office and the Board of Supervisors, the City has come together to address public safety needs through the Earthquake Safety and Emergency Response Bond Program (ESER, pronounced EE-sir).  

This website, maintained by Public Works and the Capital Planning Program, provides up-to-date information on the status of the ESER program. 

The Earthquake Safety and Emergency Response Bond Program is a series of general obligation bonds that began in 2010 focused on first responder infrastructure and related services. Find more information on major programs, the City's Capital Plan and general obligation bonds to address critical, capital needs at OneSF.

Accountability

The Earthquake Safety and Emergency Response Bond Program includes a comprehensive set of public oversight and accountability measures that apply to each of the funding areas. These measures are in addition to California's bond law requirements.

No property tax rate increase

As the City pays off exisiting bond projects, it is able to make new investments without raising the tax rate.  ESER 2020 will not increase property tax rates beyond their fiscal year 2006 levels. Click the graph to the right for more details.

Oversight organizations

Citizens’ General Obligation Bond Oversight Committee 
Office of Resilience and Capital Planning 
 
For the Annual General Obligation Bond Program Report – a high-level overview, as of June 30, 2021, of scope, schedule and budget for the City’s general obligation bond programs – click here.

Accountability measures can be summarized under three basic principles of commitment to cost accuracy, public involvement, and transparent selection criteria and rules.

Commitment to Cost Accuracy

Each of the projects in the bond program has a scope with realistic costs and schedule estimates that spell out construction and project cost contingencies, schedules and inflation estimates.

Commitment to Public Involvement: Opportunities for Oversight and Public Participation

There will be regular public reporting of bond expenditures through a dedicated bond website updated quarterly; periodic review before the Fire and Police Commissions, Capital Planning Committee and Board of Supervisors as part of the 10-year capital plan and annual capital budget processes. Per the Administrative Code (Section 5.30 to 5.36), the Citizens’ General Obligation Bond Oversight Committee (CGOBOC) reviews, audits, and reports on the expenditure of bond proceeds in accordance with the will of the voters. GOBOC will submit audits and reports to, Police and Fire Commissions, Board of Supervisors and the Mayor’s Office.

Also per the Administrative Code (Section 2.70 to 2.74) and 60 days prior to the issuance of any portion of the bond authority, Public Works must submit a bond accountability report to the Clerk of the Board, the Controller, the Treasurer, the Director of Public Finance and the Budget Analyst describing the current status and description of each proposed project and whether it conforms to the express will of the voters.

Transparent Selection Criteria and Rules

There are objective means of prioritizing projects though the use of criteria that are identified in the bond, and clear rules for funding, scope or prioritization changes based on the same criteria, should changes be necessary.

Citizens' General Obligation Bond Oversight Committee Reports & Quarterly Reports

Click here for ESER quarterly status reports, accountability reports, presentations and more.

Major Buildings
Public Safety
Special Projects
Download Project Files
ESER 2020 bond report