Oh San Francisco.

Just a month after Google agreed to give $6.8 million to support free rides for low-income youth on the city’s public transit system, activists are out again in force. They staged a protest ahead of a city vote on whether a pilot program to manage tech commuter shuttles is exempt from environmental review.

Activists blocked a bus at 24th and Valencia, this time with bouncy balls and colorful suits. They’re asking the city to ban private shuttles in public bus zones (without suggesting an alternative place for them to go and pick-up workers), stop fare hikes and offer free public transit for all city residents and stop all no-fault evictions in the city.

#GoogleBus protest at 24th & Valencia happening now. Very visual: pic.twitter.com/xcbCbf7fOU — Jessica Kwong (@JessicaGKwong) April 1, 2014

More stilts, can can dancing, acrobatics at #googlebus protest. CEQA appeal hearing 2pm today. pic.twitter.com/d8rdWj4tmt — Ellen Huet (@ellenhuet) April 1, 2014

Google bus protest pics are the most San Francisco thing ever. pic.twitter.com/AqUxBbVpPJ — Clara Jeffery (@ClaraJeffery) April 1, 2014

San Francisco’s city supervisors are voting this afternoon on whether a new plan for tech commuter shuttles should be exempt from environmental review. A few activist groups have threatened to file suit against the bus program under the California Environmental Quality Act, even though they take cars off the road.

Here’s what the activists, from Heart of the City, are demanding: