San Francisco Board of Supervisors D2: Stephen Sherrill

SF Board of Supervisors District 2: Stephen Sherrill Man in a blue suit faces the camera and smiles Image credit: JD Casaletto, used with permission

Stephen Sherrill is a public servant, parent, and current District 2 Supervisor. He’s running to continue his work on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. He was appointed in 2024 to fill a vacancy on the Board, and we look forward to seeing him elected to the position on June 2nd.

Sherrill worked in the New York City Mayor’s Office, where he was involved in a program expansion for recycling, composting and sustainability. In San Francisco, he has served as SF’s Director of the Office of Innovation, where he focused on improving how city services work. 

Stephen has a solid understanding of what San Francisco has done, and where it needs to go to lower emissions and move toward an equitable transition to net-zero. 

We feel he keeps his eye on what is important: engaging political will, finding creative solutions, and making good on our promises to meet critical climate goals, even as we balance the many conflicting needs in the city. He supports leveraging state and federal funds and using creative funding models to support low-income and lower-income residents in the growing transition off of fossil fuels.

He strongly supports protecting Muni, including through the SF parcel tax and the Bay Area regional transit sales tax on the November ballot, stressing that the cuts to Muni would be catastrophic to working families and seniors. At the same time, he supports fiscal responsibility and accountability in SF transit. 

His vision includes decarbonizing energy use in our buildings, garage and street-side EV charging for better access, transit-oriented housing, and other common-sense climate and environmental justice solutions.

350 Bay Area Action is pleased to endorse Stephen for District 2.

Campaign website: https://www.votestephensherrill.com/

Volunteer some time: https://join.votestephensherrill.com/

Pub: Apr 17, 2026
Image credit: JD Casaletto, used with permission

350 Bay Area Action