San Francisco Supervisorial District 11: Excelsior and Outer Mission

Supervisorial District 11 covers the southernmost residential corridor of San Francisco, anchoring the city's working-class immigrant communities in the Excelsior, Outer Mission, and adjoining neighborhoods. The district is one of 11 geographic units established under the San Francisco City Charter through which a single elected Supervisor represents residents before the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. Understanding District 11's boundaries, governance role, and internal geography matters for residents navigating land use decisions, public services, and electoral participation.


Definition and scope

District 11 is one of the 11 supervisorial districts into which the City and County of San Francisco is divided for purposes of legislative representation at the Board of Supervisors. Under San Francisco Charter Section 13.101, each district elects one Supervisor to a four-year term using ranked-choice voting. District 11's seat is formally designated as the District 11 seat of the Board of Supervisors.

Geographically, District 11 encompasses the following primary neighborhoods:

  1. Excelsior — the district's largest neighborhood by population, centered on Mission Street south of Cesar Chavez
  2. Outer Mission — a residential strip running along Outer Mission Street and the adjacent blocks
  3. Ingleside — bordered by Ocean Avenue and the historic streetcar corridor
  4. Crocker Amazon — the district's southernmost neighborhood, bordering Daly City at the San Mateo County line
  5. Oceanview — a smaller residential enclave adjacent to the Ingleside district

The district's southern boundary follows the city limit with Daly City in San Mateo County. Its northern boundary approximates the Cesar Chavez Street corridor. The western boundary approaches the Glen Park and Noe Valley areas of District 8, while the eastern edge touches the Portola neighborhood.

Scope, coverage, and limitations: District 11 governance applies exclusively within the city and county boundaries of San Francisco. State law, including the California Government Code and California Constitution, governs the framework within which supervisorial authority operates. Actions taken by the District 11 Supervisor have legal effect only through the full Board of Supervisors (which requires a majority of the 11-member body to pass legislation) or through constituent-service functions. This page does not cover unincorporated San Mateo County territory, the City of Daly City, or any other adjacent jurisdiction. Matters involving state or federal agencies operating within the district — such as BART stations or CalTrans corridors — fall outside supervisorial jurisdiction, even when physically located within District 11.


How it works

The District 11 Supervisor holds one vote on the 11-member Board of Supervisors, which functions as San Francisco's legislative body. The Board passes ordinances, approves the city's annual budget (which exceeded $14 billion in Fiscal Year 2023–2024, per the San Francisco Controller's Office), confirms mayoral appointments, and sets land-use policy through zoning legislation coordinated with the San Francisco Planning Department.

At the district level, the Supervisor's office performs four primary functions:

  1. Constituent services — connecting residents to city departments including the San Francisco Human Services Agency, Department of Public Health, and Department of Homelessness
  2. Land use and zoning — shepherding local planning matters, conditional use authorizations, and neighborhood plan amendments through the Board and Planning Commission
  3. Legislative sponsorship — introducing and co-sponsoring ordinances, resolutions, and budget amendments affecting district residents
  4. Budget advocacy — negotiating for departmental allocations that benefit District 11 neighborhoods during the annual budget cycle coordinated with the Mayor's Office

District 11 Supervisors have historically prioritized small-business corridor management along Mission Street and Ocean Avenue, housing affordability near the BART line, and pedestrian safety infrastructure, reflecting the district's high density of immigrant households and multi-family residential zoning.


Common scenarios

Residents and stakeholders encounter District 11's supervisorial function across a range of practical situations:


Decision boundaries

District 11 supervisorial authority is bounded in three important ways, distinguishing it from both city-wide offices and from bodies with independent executive power.

Contrast: District Supervisor vs. City-Wide Elected Officials

Dimension District 11 Supervisor City-Wide Offices (Mayor, City Attorney, etc.)
Electoral base District 11 residents only All San Francisco voters
Legislative power 1 of 11 votes on the Board Executive or independent authority
Veto power None individually Mayor holds veto over Board ordinances
Appointment authority None independently Mayor appoints most department heads

The Supervisor cannot unilaterally direct any city department, hire or fire department heads, or commit the city to contracts — those powers rest with the Mayor or, in some cases, independent commissions. The Supervisor also cannot override state or federal law; the San Francisco Relationship to California State Government page details the vertical hierarchy that constrains local legislative action.

Boundary disputes and territorial questions — including which district a parcel falls within after decennial redistricting — are resolved through the official redistricting process described on the San Francisco Redistricting page. After the 2020 Census redistricting cycle, District 11's boundaries underwent adjustments to reflect population shifts, as documented by the San Francisco Department of Elections.

For a complete overview of how District 11 fits within the broader structure of San Francisco municipal government, the home page provides a navigational framework for all 11 districts and the departments that serve them.


References