Danielle Echeverria
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danielleechev.bsky.social
Danielle Echeverria
@danielleechev.bsky.social
Reporter @sfchronicle, alum @StanfordDaily & @StanfordJourn
Reposted by Danielle Echeverria
MON 6pm @kalwradio.bsky.social
Rep Lateefah Simon @replsimon.bsky.social /Bay Area food insecurity w @danielleechev.bsky.social @sfchronicle.com @taniscrosby.bsky.social ED SF Marin Food Banks, Gordon Tong San Mateo Co & Laura Bent CEO Samaritan House /Meklit Hadero @meklitmusic.bsky.social
November 10, 2025 at 12:30 AM
Reposted by Danielle Echeverria
Meteorologists now face a Trump ‘loyalty test’ when applying to National Weather Service jobs.

The essay questions — which have nothing to do with meteorology — are part of federal guidelines launched as part of the Trump administration’s efforts to recruit “patriotic Americans” to its workforce.
Meteorologists now face a Trump ‘loyalty test’ when applying to National Weather Service jobs
After firing hundreds of meteorologists, the National Weather Service announced it is filling vacant positions. Applicants are being asked to detail their support for Trump’s policies.
www.sfchronicle.com
August 27, 2025 at 11:52 PM
Reposted by Danielle Echeverria
Bus and light rail have recovered better than the major commuter trains, and weekends offer a glimmer of hope across systems.
Bay Area transit ridership is still hurting — but there are bright spots
Bus and light rail have recovered better than the major commuter trains, and weekends offer a glimmer of hope across systems.
bit.ly
August 11, 2025 at 1:30 PM
Reposted by Danielle Echeverria
New poll also shows better numbers for Board of Supervisors and greater optimism about the city’s trajectory
How’s Lurie doing as mayor? Our new poll on the state of S.F. had stunning results
New poll also shows better numbers for Board of Supervisors and greater optimism about the city’s trajectory
bit.ly
July 21, 2025 at 2:30 PM
Reposted by Danielle Echeverria
It may not be visible even to the residents of this Wine Country city, but the area is a turbocharged example of a trend happening across the Bay Area: fewer and fewer children.
‘Demographic bomb’: Children are vanishing from this wealthy Bay Area city
It may not be visible even to the residents of this Wine Country city, but the area is a turbocharged example of a trend happening across the Bay Area: fewer and fewer children.
bit.ly
July 17, 2025 at 1:00 PM
Reposted by Danielle Echeverria
🎧 Listen to the podcast!

Reporter @danielleechev.bsky.social, UCSF's Stacy Torres, Booker T. Washington Community Center's Shakirah Simley and JSei Community Center's Diane Wong talked w/ @alexis-madrigal.bsky.social about the Bay Area's aging population.

🔗:
The Bay Area is Getting Older — Fast. Are We Ready?
KQED's Forum · Episode
buff.ly
July 17, 2025 at 12:00 AM
Reposted by Danielle Echeverria
WED at 9AM:

The Bay Area is the third oldest region in country. Reporter @danielleechev.bsky.social, UCSF's Stacy Torres and local community leaders join to talk about how our systems can prepare for the 'silver tsunami.'

❓What do you think the Bay Area needs to do to support older residents?
This is the real doom loop. It will change everything about life in the Bay Area
Already one of the oldest parts of the U.S., the San Francisco metro area is aging faster than any other major region. It will change every aspect of our lives.
buff.ly
July 16, 2025 at 1:00 AM
Reposted by Danielle Echeverria
The Bay Area is facing a doom loop. It’s just not the one we usually think about.

The Bay Area is getting old fast and it’s accelerating. No other region is growing older at a quicker pace.

Read the story ⤵️
This is the real doom loop. It will change everything about life in the Bay Area
Already one of the oldest parts of the U.S., the San Francisco metro area is aging faster than any other major region. It will change every aspect of our lives.
www.sfchronicle.com
July 14, 2025 at 5:43 PM
Got to run around to SF's best and worst parks for this super fun story. Look up how your favorite parks scored & see how the city's rankings compared to what we saw: www.sfchronicle.com/sf/article/p...
San Francisco’s best and worst parks: How the city rates each one on hundreds of criteria
We checked out the lowest and highest scored San Francisco parks to see if their maintenance scores held up.
www.sfchronicle.com
December 9, 2024 at 6:45 PM
Reposted by Danielle Echeverria
Have old Clipper cards lying around? You might want to check how much money is left on it.

The amount of money stored on inactive Clipper cards has nearly quadrupled since the pandemic, a Chronicle data analysis found.
Millions of dollars are sitting on inactive Clipper cards. What happens to the money?
Nearly $30 million in cash was sitting on unused Clipper cards at the end of last year. What happens to that money?
www.sfchronicle.com
November 27, 2024 at 6:19 PM