SEC. 4.107. HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION.

§ 4.107

Complex
In plain language

The Human Rights Commission is an eleven-member body appointed by the Mayor for four-year terms, tasked with investigating discrimination complaints, monitoring city affirmative action plans, promoting civil rights awareness, mediating intergroup tensions, enforcing anti-discrimination contract provisions, and proposing human rights ordinances. The Commission has authority to hold hearings, subpoena witnesses, and issue orders.

San Francisco has a Human Rights Commission with eleven members chosen by the Mayor, each serving four years. The Commission's main job is to look into complaints that people have been treated unfairly because of discrimination. It also checks that the city's plans to promote equal opportunity are up-to-date and working. The Commission helps reduce discrimination by providing information and advice, studies problems between groups, and makes sure city contracts don't allow discrimination. It can hold meetings, require witnesses to testify, and issue orders to enforce these protections.

  • Complex:The section lists seven distinct duties across multiple paragraphs with cross-references to other code sections, making the full scope of the Commission's authority somewhat hard to grasp quickly.

AI-generated · claude-haiku-4-5 · informational only, not legal advice.

Official text

View official source