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The report found that building permit applications for commercial property alterations, additions and repairs submitted in 2017 to the Department of Building Inspection took an average of 172 days — that’s nearly six months — to be approved.
It took another 88 days, on average, for the permitted construction and renovation work to be completed and get a final sign-off, for a total of 260 days or more than 8½ months.
If the new business needed a conditional use authorization change from the Planning Department — they’re required for more businesses in the Upper Market-Castro than in some other neighborhoods — it took an average of 332 days, or nearly one year, to be approved.
When combined with the time it takes to get a building permit and the final approval, the entire process can take a year and a half for projects requiring both Planning and Department of Building Inspection approvals, the report said.
Meanwhile, the storefronts remain vacant and the businesses are stuck paying rent.
“It’s like going into a casino,” Bergerac said. “You don’t know if you are going to win or lose.”
The city has programs to speed things up for small and mid-size businesses. In the last three years, 32 businesses sought help in accelerating their approvals and shaved 118 days off their wait, but it still took an average of 173 days — about six months — to get the final OK.
“For many applicants that means 18 months, two years or more of paying high rent on a storefront that hasn’t even opened yet,” said Supervisor Rafael Mandelman, whose district includes the Castro and who called for the study.
“The city ought to be doing everything we can to attract businesses and help them to open as quickly as possible, not making it more difficult, time-intensive and expensive,” Mandelman said.
“If it takes 88 days to build something out, but twice that time to get the permits, then something is wrong with the process,” said Supervisor Aaron Peskin, whose district includes North Beach.
Meanwhile, business owners are still faced with backups.
Bergerac said store owners are joining the ranks of people who hire professional “expediters” to get their permits approved faster — it’s a longtime, winked-at practice.
“What does that tell you about the system?” Bergerac said. “It’s criminal.”¹
The city is falling apart with needles and feces all over the streets, meanwhile it takes twice as long to permit something than it does to build it. Those "permit expediters" are nothing but ways to bribe your way into permits, several years ago several ex-building inspectors went to jail in San Francisco, the system is totally corrupt
¹ https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea...time-OKing-retail-makeovers-look-13736702.php