Against the backdrop of the typical Sunset morning fog at the Ortega Branch Library, Isabella “Beya” Alcaraz, an arts and music teacher and former pet shop owner, was sworn in on Thursday — her 29th birthday. She is the newest San Francisco city supervisor, representing the Westside neighborhoods of District 4 including the Sunset and Parkside. 

Mayor Daniel Lurie said his unconventional choice, a Sunset lifer with no political experience, would provide “accountable leadership” — she is of the Sunset, by the Sunset and for the Sunset. 

Alcaraz has never worked in city government or even been involved in a political campaign. Her first city job will be a hard one: Sunset residents recalled their prior supervisor, Joel Engardio, for his support of closing the Great Highway. 

Alcaraz, who owned the Animal Connection pet shop for six years and most recently taught art and music to children in an enrichment program, has no political baggage of the sort that sank her predecessor. She is also a near-complete unknown among politically active San Franciscans. 

“My first reaction was ‘Who is that?’” said Jamie Hughes, the campaign manager of the Engardio recall. “People are definitely disappointed. There are lots of community leaders who did lots of work in the Sunset, who are ready to take the job.” 

“Nobody knows her,” Hughes continued. “Does [Lurie] take the job of a supervisor seriously, by appointing someone with no political experience?”

Two people in business attire shake hands outdoors next to a podium with an official seal, surrounded by greenery and metal fencing.Isabella “Beya” Alcaraz, the new District 4 supervisor, shakes hands with Mayor Daniel Lurie on Nov. 6, 2025. Photo by Junyao Yang.

It’s great, says former District 4 supervisor Gordon Mar, that Alcaraz has roots in the community and has a “big heart and love for animals and people alike.” 

However, Mar called the appointment of Alcaraz, who has no prior political experience, “unusual.”

“Representing District 4 on the Board of Supervisors is a major leap for someone without experience navigating the complex and often contentious issues facing San Francisco,” Mar said. 

Alcaraz, who is of Filipina-Chinese heritage, does not speak Chinese. Her voting record in San Francisco is spotty: She did not cast a ballot in last year’s Democratic primary, a loaded ballot featuring myriad state and local issues as well as the presidential contest. She also did not vote in the February 2022 election featuring the school board recall and a State Assembly contest, nor in the November 2019 municipal election featuring races for mayor, DA, school board and five ballot propositions. 

A poll surveyed District 4 before the appointment to gauge Alcaraz’s favorability: District voters on Oct. 20 described a woman whose background and ethnicity match Alcaraz’s, but with the pseudonym “Sarah Reyes.” It seems the woman polled well: Three weeks later, Alcaraz is supervisor. 

A screenshot of text providing background on Sarah Reyes, a first-generation Filipino-Chinese American and small business owner from San Francisco’s Sunset District.

Albert Chow, an outspoken recall supporter and hardware store owner, was also in the running for the seat and had three interviews with Lurie’s team. He says he received a call from Lurie last night informing him that he would not be appointed — but Chow said he will run for the seat in 2026 anyway. 

Natalie Gee, a 40-year-old Sunset native, fluent Chinese speaker and the chief of staff for District 10 Supervisor Shamann Walton, officially declared her candidacy on Oct. 28. Gee says she had never heard of Alcaraz until Lurie’s announcement: “I look forward to meeting her,” she said. 

Pressing issues

Recall supporters made it clear on the campaign trail and at community meetings that they want a supervisor who will reopen the Great Highway and vote no on the mayor’s upzoning plan.

The new supervisor will need to hit the ground running on both hot-button issues. On Thursday, Alcaraz seemed ready. 

“Our neighborhood isn’t impressed by who worked on what campaign or how long you’ve been in politics,” Alcaraz said today. “We want to be represented by real, down-to-earth people with community ties. People who experience life in the same way we do in a unique neighborhood full of working class, monolingual, multigenerational families.”

When it comes to the Great Highway and the mayor’s upzoning plan, she said she wants to listen. 

“I don’t want people to just feel included. I want to actually include them,” she said. “As your supervisor, if that means working toward a compromise on the Great Highway, then that’s what we’ll do. If that means making an amendment to the zoning plan to strengthen it and help us maintain local control, I’m prepared to take that action.” 

Wide road flanked by vegetation and sand dunes under a clear blue sky. A child rides a bicycle on a paved path. Hills and buildings are visible in the background.Runners and bikers use the Great Highway on April 5, 2025. Photo by Junyao Yang.

Undoing last year’s Prop. K and putting cars back onto what is now called Sunset Dunes, however, would require a second citywide vote — for a ballot measure that passed 55-45. Supporters of the park today made it clear that they consider putting cars back on the highway to be a “park closure” and not a “compromise.” 

As for the upzoning plan, Alcaraz’s hypothetical proposed amendments remain unknown. But, like the mayor, she has noted that failure to pass an adequate upzoning plan will result in a state takeover and “50-story skyscrapers where they should not be.” 

‘Grit and care’

Lurie described Alcaraz as someone who has the “grit and care” needed at City Hall, and said she loves the Sunset the same way he loves San Francisco. 

“I see someone who is not a career politician but has spent her life in service to this community. She doesn’t owe anyone anything other than the people who live right here in the Sunset,” he said. “She has the work ethic, the small business experience, and a deep understanding of the cultural fabric of this neighborhood.” 

A man stands and talks to seated people at an outdoor event with a crowd, photographers, and trees in the background.Family members of Beya Alcaraz sit in the front row at the new District 4 supervisor’s swearing in ceremony. Photo by Junyao Yang on Nov. 6, 2025.

Alcaraz, a graduate of Holy Name School and St. Ignatius, became a Sunset pet shop owner at 22 and has long been a music teacher; she began taking lessons on the piano at age three. Being a small business owner taught her patience, she said, and made her “a problem solver and a good listener.”

Alcaraz was born and raised in the Sunset. Her family initially lived in a downstairs unit at her great aunt’s house on 45th Avenue and Lawton Street. She shared a bed with her mom and sister, while her dad slept on a cot, until her parents finally saved enough money to buy a house of their own from a neighbor across the street. 

“It’s important to me that families like mine continue to be able to buy homes in this neighborhood and pass them on to their children,” she said. Now, Alcaraz still lives with her parents, but owns a home with her sister. 

An unfamiliar name

For many Sunset residents and neighborhood leaders, Alcaraz is an unfamiliar name. “She’s a little bit unknown outside of her business,” said Laurance Lee, a former candidate for the school board and the Democratic Party Central Committee. “It’s going to be an effort for people to try to know anything about where she stands.” 

During her seven-minute-long speech at the courtyard outside the Ortega Branch Library, Alcaraz touched on street safety and cleanliness, increasing foot traffic for small businesses, and keeping parks and playgrounds accessible. “We have to ensure that people can still drive to work and get to the doctor. That affordable housing exists for the next generation,” she added.  

Alcaraz doesn’t yet have a Chinese name, nor does she speak any Chinese, said her mom, Jackie. In District 4, where many residents are monolingual Chinese-speakers, Alcaraz will need staff who can help her communicate with these constituents, community leaders agreed. 

“In an ideal world, we would love somebody who speaks the language,” said Lily Wong of the Sunset Chinese Cultural District. “But what’s more important is somebody who hears the community, gets the culture and gets the interests.” 

Dawn Stueckle, executive director of the nonprofit Sunset Youth Services, also felt hopeful after hearing Alcaraz’s pledge that she will listen to Sunset residents and include them in conversations. 

“It’s really important for anybody who is the supervisor of this district to understand that this district consists of multiple neighborhoods,” said Stueckle, who has worked in the Sunset for decades. “It is not one giant neighborhood. There’s so many different identities and priorities. And that makes it difficult to be one supervisor with one set of policies.” 

This, ostensibly, shouldn’t be news to Sunset lifer Alcaraz. 

Two people in business attire stand at a podium outdoors; one is speaking while the other stands nearby, facing the camera, with greenery and a fence in the background.Isabella “Beya” Alcaraz, a 29-year-old former small business owner, was sworn in as the new District 4 supervisor on Nov. 6, 2025. Photo by Junyao Yang.

Poppy Gilman, a business owner on Noriega Street, just gave the mayor’s office a nudge earlier this week to appoint someone. While she doesn’t know anything about Alcaraz, Gilman said she is impressed that the supervisor just walked up to the mayor and recommended herself for the job. 

She hopes Alcaraz, with the experience of owning a business, could push for initiatives to help small businesses in the Sunset: Cutting red tape, reducing taxes, working with the state to provide commercial tenant protections. 

But Gilman is worried that with  big issues such as upzoning and the Great Highway on her plate, Alcaraz won’t be able to get to any of those things — and she will soon have a campaign to run.

A birthday gift

Alcaraz will run for the seat in June 2026, to fill out the remainder of Engardio’s term. If she wins, she will run again in November 2026 for the next four-year term. The race has already started to become contentious: Gee, the District 10 legislative aide and Sunset resident, filed paperwork to run for the seat last week. Chow, the recall supporter and hardware store owner, has also said he’ll run. 

Jim Ross, a longtime Bay Area political strategist, said Alcaraz is in for a test. “This would be really challenging even for a previously established person,” Ross said. “A huge challenge for someone who has never run for election before and doesn’t understand the system.”

With much still up in the air, Ross and fellow consultant David Ho both said Lurie’s pick for Alcaraz is “high risk, high reward.” 

On the one hand, Alcaraz has no political base of her own, Ross explained. But if she gets re-elected, Lurie will likely “have an ally” on the Board of Supervisors for seven years. “You’re not independent until you’re elected on your own by voters,” Ross said. 

On Thursday, surrounded by her family, Alcaraz stepped into the job that she asked the mayor for at the Sunset After Dark night market just a little over a month ago. She made a promise to some 60 audience members, including former District 4 supervisors Katy Tang and Carmen Chu, who were also appointed to the job at age 29 — albeit with years of government experience. 

“Too many of these decisions have been made without us from the top down. I believe the Sunset has shown we are ready to rally from the ground up,” Alcaraz said.