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The San Francisco Standard was originally Here/Say Media, a project of Civic Action Labs, a 501 (c)4 nonprofit. Some journalism ethicists were concerned about the organization's structure (nearly all nonprofit journalism organizations are 501 (c)3 nonprofits) and refusal to disclose its donors. [2][3] In March 2021, Here/Say disclosed on its ...
The San Francisco Standard is a for-profit San Francisco-centric news web site, funded by Michael Moritz, with offices in the Mission District, using Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube. [29] [30] Griffin Gaffney is the CEO of the SF Standard [31] [32] as well as co-founder of Here/Say Media and TogetherSF, Moritz-funded 501(c)4 organizations.
The comedian delivered a 45-minute set in which he mocked everything from the city of San Francisco to the conference attendees themselves, The San Francisco Standard reported.
J. The Jewish News of Northern California. Leviathan (newspaper) List of San Francisco neighborhood newspapers. Mirror of the Times. Nichibei (newspaper) [Japanese American News] (1912-1932) 1. Nichi Bei Times. Occidental and Vanguard. Organized Labor (1900-1988) 1.
225 Bush Street, originally known as the Standard Oil Building, is a 328-foot (100 m), 25-floor office building in the financial district of San Francisco. The building includes 21 floors of office space, 1 floor of retail, 1 storage floor and 2 basement levels including the garage. It was the tallest building in the city from its completion in ...
1971 San Francisco Bay oil spill. Coordinates: 37°45′34″N 122°20′31″W. The 1971 San Francisco Bay oil spill occurred when two Standard Oil Company of California tankers, the Arizona Standard and the Oregon Standard, collided on January 18, 1971, in the San Francisco Bay. The resulting 800,000-gallon spill, the largest in Bay Area ...
The memo noted that starting July 2023, Redfin would require "headquarters employees" who live within 20 miles of the company's Seattle, San Francisco, and Frisco offices to work from the office ...
Market Center, formerly known as the Standard Oil Buildings and later the Chevron Towers, is a complex comprising two skyscrapers at 555–575 Market Street in the Financial District of downtown San Francisco, California. It served as the headquarters of the Chevron Corporation until 2001.