
Here’s the latest in our “Meet the Candidates” series for District 5, in which we ask each candidate to answer one question per week leading up to the election. Three candidates are challenging incumbent Supervisor Dean Preston to represent District 5, which spans from the east end of Golden Gate Park through Haight-Ashbury, Japantown and the Western Addition, the Lower Haight and Hayes Valley, and most of the Tenderloin.
This week, we’re talking about racism, after one District 5 resident received racist, threatening packages on his doorstep twice in recent weeks — blatant examples of the hate that still exists, at times in the open, but often in the undercurrents of our society.
We asked the candidates: What can you, as supervisor, do to address race issues, in a city like San Francisco that brands itself as progressive, and in a district that has seen plenty of racial tensions over the years?
Since we posed the question last week, Preston introduced a resolution at the Board of Supervisors this week, calling on city departments to prioritize and the FBI to investigate the incidents; candidate Bilal Mahmood also announced a draft resolution to the San Francisco Democratic Party to declare racism and hate crimes a public health crisis. While it remains to be seen what these resolutions may achieve, other candidates offered little in the way of ideas or solutions.
Note: I will be at Cafe International at 508 Haight St., on Thursday, May 16, at noon. Come say hi.

Bilal Mahmood
- Job: Founder of private and philanthropic organizations
- Age: 37
- Residency: Tenant, living in District 5 since May 2023
- Transportation: Walking
- Education: Bachelor’s degree from Stanford University, master’s degree from University of Cambridge
- Languages: English, Urdu
The racist harassment Terry Williams has received has no place in San Francisco. It was encouraging and heartwarming to attend the community gathering in his support this weekend in Alamo Square (community fundraiser here). Such community support for survivors can provide a model for addressing hate.
Through my work at 13 Fund, I’ve seen firsthand the benefits of investments in bystander training, and we should explore increasing our city budget allocations for bystander training, language access and accessibility in public safety programs, and health support for survivors. Racism is an epidemic, and it’s time we start treating it as one.
Endorsed by: State Senator Scott Wiener and DCCC Chair Honey Mahogany.

Dean Preston
- Job: Incumbent, tenant attorney
- Age: 54
- Residency: Homeowner, living in District 5 since 1996
- Transportation: Public transit
- Education: Bowdoin College and juris doctorate from University of California School of Law
- Languages: English
The horrific, racist threats delivered to Terry’s home are acts of racial terror, and should never be tolerated. I’ve known Terry for years; I’ll do everything I can to support him. I’m in regular touch with Terry and the police, emphasized urgency to find the perpetrator, requested additional police visibility on the block, and joined the rally of support. This week, I’m introducing a resolution at the Board.
Confronting the legacy of anti-Black racism requires bold action. I’ll continue to center racial justice in my work including reparations, anti-displacement and reducing racial disparities in health, housing, employment, policing and education.
Endorsed by: Bernie Sanders, United Educators of San Francisco, San Francisco Labor Council, San Francisco Tenants Union, National Union of Healthcare Workers.

Allen Jones
- Job: Activist
- Age: 67
- Residency: Tenant, living in District 5 since November 2021
- Transportation: Wheelchair
- Education: Teaching Bible studies at juvenile hall
- Languages: English
This city taught this Black man (me) to respect. Nevertheless, even though we have a Black mayor, this city is racist. And there is enough evidence from San Francisco politics to suggest San Francisco has turned “I have a dream” into, dream on.
The call for monetary reparations for some Black residents is an unrealistic progressive political gimmick. Another gimmick: this year’s SF Board of Supervisors “apology” resolution for past racist acts against Blacks, juxtaposed with the four White males trying to oust our Black female mayor in the same year? You don’t sober up by drinking denial juice.

Autumn Looijen
- Job: School board recall co-founder
- Age: 46
- Residency: Tenant, landowner, living in District 5 since December 2020
- Transportation: Public transit
- Education: Bachelor’s degree from the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena
- Languages: English
I was horrified to hear about this. Racism of any kind is unacceptable in San Francisco.
I’m glad our police are working to protect Terry Williams and solve this crime.
Black people belong in Alamo Square — and in NoPa, in Lower Haight, in Haight Ashbury, in Japantown, and in every neighborhood across San Francisco.
I’m heartened to see San Francisco standing with Terry during this chilling experience. Black families deserve to feel safe and welcomed in EVERY one of our neighborhoods.
Money raised and spent in the District 5 supervisor race

For
Money spent
Against
Dean Preston
$10,530
$301,458
$26,174
$156,791
Bilal Mahmood
$6,846
$63,387
Allen Jones
$0
Autumn Looijen
$0
$0
$100,000
$200,000
$300,000
$400,000
Source: San Francisco Ethics Commission, as of April 3, 2024. Chart by Junyao Yang.
The order of candidates is rotated each week. Answers are capped at 100 words, and may be lightly edited for formatting, spelling, and grammar. If you have questions for the candidates, please let us know at eleni@missionlocal.com.
Read the rest of the District 5 questions here, and the entire “Meet the Candidates” series here. Illustrations for the series by Neil Ballard.
You can register to vote via the sf.gov website.
This article was updated with details about Dean Preston’s resolution that was introduced after publishing.
READ MORE CANDIDATE ANSWERS
Help keep voters informed — double your donation today!This May, every dollar you donate to Mission Local will be doubled. Two donors have pledged to match every dollar given to us in May up to $25,000, helping Mission Local continue to bring you the in-depth election coverage you know and love.Make a tax-deductible donation today to make twice the impact.



