SF CARES is an umbrella 501(c)3 non profit comprising multiple San Francisco religious orgs: Saint Paulus, Saint Francis, St. Mary & St Martha, SF Night Ministry. We advocate for the homeless (current or past) and run multiple long term events including the Friendship Banquet and Eye Vision Tests.
San Francisco opens service center for people living in cars, RVs
San Franciscans who live in their vehicles now have a space with access to bathrooms, showers and other services.
The long-awaited Bayview Vehicle Triage Center opened Friday at the
Candlestick Point State Recreation Area’s boat launch parking lot. It is
a joint project between The City, California State Parks and residents
in Bayview-Hunters Point.
The center includes as many as 135 parking spaces for 203 people, and
will have 24-hour security and staff onsite, as well as bathrooms,
showers, and water access.
Residents will also have access to services such as health care, assistance with housing and job placement.
“We must take advantage of every opportunity we get, and all do our
part, to ensure that our unhoused residents have a safe place to sleep
and regular access to stabilizing services,” Mayor London Breed said in a
statement. “As we continue to move forward with our Homelessness
Recovery Plan, we must find solutions for people living in their RVs or
their cars and provide them with a path out of homelessness.”
A report released by the San Francisco Department of Homelessness and
Supportive Housing in June found the Bayview District is the
neighborhood impacted most by vehicular homelessness, with some 677
vehicles being used for shelter in the area.
“The Candlestick area has been under-resourced, neglected and overrun
with challenges for way too long. For years, our housed neighbors
living in the Candlestick area have been calling on The City to tackle
these very issues,” said Board of Supervisors President Shamann Walton,
whose district includes the Bayview. “All of our community members
deserve to live in a neighborhood that’s clean and safe and our
vehicularly housed folks deserve access to basic services like
restrooms, electricity and pathways to housing. This VTC is the first
step towards answering the calls of all our neighbors in the area who
deserve better.”
The center is being funded by November 2018’s Proposition C, a gross tax receipts initiative to pay for homelessness services.
The center will be operated by the nonprofit organizations Urban Alchemy and Bayview Hunters Point Foundation.
According to city officials, the site is temporary as the city has negotiated a two-year lease with California State Parks.
The Bayview neighborhood is the city’s greatest area
impacted by vehicular homelessness, with 677 vehicles occupied in June,
according to San Francisco’s Department of Homelessness and Supportive
Housing. (Bayview Hill Neighborhood Association)
Please read this blog post from the New York Post. Now we've all seen some type of illegal activity in our city, whether it's public defecation, store theft, car break ins, porch pirates etc. And we all know that the extreme left DA won't prosecute, which therefore gives the law breakers even more ammunition to destroy our city because it's now not a crime to be a criminal. So you'd think that if you reported the illegal activity to the police, it'd run on deaf ears so 'what's the point...' attitude. Well we all need to rally around this issue now that the Mayor and District Supervisors have said 'enough is enough.' Every time we report incidents, even when we know they'll never be actioned because the police aren't legally allowed to pursue, each reported incident is logged. And the more logs, the more the stats grow of theft, violence, defacing our city etc and this data is important because we need a track record of illegal acceleration. If we say nothing, the stats stay low and it looks like SF has blown criminality out of proportion. So by reporting incidents, knowing nothing will be done about it, we're stating that 'yes, there is a major problem in our city, we're documenting it and we're not making this up. It's real, it's scary and our city is being taken over by criminals that the DA won't stop.' So when you see something, say something because again...it should be a crime to be a criminal and we must ensure that law & order returns. Please share this.
DA Chesa Boudin won’t give San Francisco one thing it needs: tough love
Last month, San Francisco Mayor London Breed said she made an
emergency request to the city’s Board of Supervisors for more money to
help support a police crackdown on crime, including open air drug
dealing, car break-ins and retail theft.
“I’m proud this city believes in giving people second chances,” said
Breed. “Nevertheless, we also need there to be accountability when
someone does break the law . . . I was raised by my grandmother to
believe in ‘tough love,’ in keeping your house in order, and we need
that, now more than ever.”
But a few days later, San Francisco’s progressive District Attorney Chesa Boudin denounced
her plan as “knee-jerk” and “short-sighted,” thereby throwing a monkey
wrench in her plans. Boudin called for San Francisco to “shift our focus
to . . . addressing root causes of crime.” Without Boudin’s
participation, Breed will struggle to achieve her goal of shutting down
open-air drug use and dealing, and rising property crimes.
o be sure, there is still a lot that Breed can do without Boudin. On
Christmas Eve, after a 12-hour meeting, the city’s Board of Supervisors
voted to support her declaration of a state of emergency in the
Tenderloin neighborhood, where open-air drug use is widespread. This
puts the city’s emergency management department in charge of responding
to the drug overdose crisis, which kills about two people a day, and
will allow the city to open a “linkage center” capable of referring
addicts to housing and rehab.
But Boudin’s opposition, along with that of progressives on the Board
of Supervisors, was enough for Breed to pull back from her promise to
increase funding for the police and arrest people for using drugs in
public. And without the active participation of Boudin, the arrests that
are made are unlikely to result in prosecution — so dealers and other criminals are likely to just return to the street.
Why is Boudin so opposed to Breed’s actions? According to the DA,
“Affordable housing, quality education, access to health care and
addiction services can provide the stability that empirical evidence has shown actually deters criminal activity.” But the “empirical evidence” Boudin pointed
to simply found that, in 12 cities where more than 10% of the
population received welfare benefits, “more crime occurs when more time
has passed since welfare payments occurred.” It did not explore the role
of any factors he cited.
Like other progressive prosecutors around the US, Boudin is a former
public defender, and in office has acted as one, undermining the natural
checks and balances that our fundamentally antagonistic
criminal-justice system creates between public defenders and DAs. Unlike
other DAs, Boudin grew up with his parents in prison, something he made
a central selling point of his campaign.
Boudin routinely expresses animosity
toward the police. At his election-night party, a supporter led the
crowd in a chant against the Police Officers’ Association: “F–k the POA!
F–k the POA!” Today, the San Francisco Police Department is short 400
officers and demoralized.
When he ran for office in 2018, Boudin announced,
“We will not prosecute cases involving quality-of-life crimes. Crimes
such as public camping, offering or soliciting sex, public urination,
blocking a sidewalk, etc., should not and will not be prosecuted.
Boudin has explicitly claimed that some laws shouldn’t be enforced
because doing so supposedly increases victimization. “Jails do nothing
to treat the root cause of crime,” he claimed. Boudin called “open-air
drug use and drug sales . . . technically victimless crimes.” When
Boudin announced that he was not going to prosecute street-level drug
dealers, he said it was because they are “themselves victims of human trafficking.”
In fact, there is little evidence to support Boudin’s claim that the
fentanyl dealers in San Francisco are dealing drugs against their will.
Tom Wolf, a member of San Francisco’s Drug Dealing Task Force, who was
once a homeless fentanyl addict himself for several months, knows
several dealers. “These guys would show me pictures of the houses they
were building back home in Honduras,” Wolf told me.
Boudin and other progressive criminal-justice reformers, such as
Manhattan’s new DA, Alvin Bragg, oppose enforcing laws when addicts and
mentally-ill people break them because they believe our system is
fundamentally unfair and racist. This explains why Boudin and his ilk
are narrowly focused on emptying jails and prisons.
“The challenge going forward,” said Boudin in 2019, “is how do we close a jail?”
The results speak for themselves. In 2019, Boudin reduced San
Francisco’s jail population by 73%, to 766 from 2,850 in 2019, despite
the fact that more than half of all offenders,
and three-quarters of the most violent ones who are released from jail
before trial, commit new crimes. The charging rate for theft by Boudin’s
office declined from 62 percent in 2019 to 46 percent in 2021 and for
petty theft declined from 58 percent to 35 percent.
Car break-ins were 75 percent higher in May 2021 than in 2019, before
the pandemic, and reached an astonishing 3,000 last month. Meanwhile,
many business owners and residents tell me they long ago stopped
bothering to report crime.
As Breed seeks support for her crackdown, Boudin is fighting for his
political life. A recall election has been scheduled for June, and many
people believe San Francisco’s progressive voters will elect to remove
him from office, eliminating one obstacle to the mayor’s efforts.
The recall of Boudin — and the success of Breed — may signal a
rebalancing in America’s attitudes toward drugs and crime. The US went
too far in the 1980s and 1990s in terms of incarceration but then too
far in the other direction over the last 20 years. Breed knows that many
so-called “victimless” crimes have real victims, including her sister,
who died of an overdose, and her brother, who is in prison for pushing an accomplice, who later died, out of a robbery getaway car.
Breed’s grandmother was right about “tough love.” Hopefully, in the
face of rising crime, San Franciscans, and progressives nationwide, will
finally start to deliver some.
In this very short post, we want you to click the link and share this because there are people who are really hungry and can't afford food. Today, with inflation now hitting 7%, people are deciding if they can eat or heat their homes. This should NOT ever be up for discussion with a country that has food in abundance (albeit, also food waste in abundance). Here are food banks where you can get free food for the entire week. Please, please, please share.
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- Former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown isn't sugar coating his assessment of San Francisco these days.
"It looks pretty bad there is no way to hide it," Brown said in an interview with ABC7 News contributor Phil Matier Tuesday.
The
former mayor is speaking about the impact of high visibility crimes,
the ever-present homeless problem, and the drug-addicted or mentally ill
people are having on a city once known for both its tolerance and
beauty.
"When you walk in certain parts of the city, you can't
even walk on the sidewalk without getting permission from the people who
control the sidewalk. And they are the allegedly the homeless," Brown
said.
Never one to shy away from controversy, Brown lays much of the blame on the city's overly "humanitarian" ethic.
"Anything
you do in this town with reference to the homeless is a political
risk," Brown says. "Why? It's simple. San Francisco has a reputation for
being so humane. And there are so many organizations and individuals
who want to display that. They don't want you and they don't want San
Francisco accused of not being humane."
Matier: "So what you're saying is that at the heart of the
problem is that when it comes to the homeless and drug-addicted, San
Francisco offers an array of carrots but it refuses to pick up any kind
of stick?" Brown: "No question because, you see, once you want
to help the homeless, sometimes homeless don't want to be helped. And
if you don't have any legal way in which to force it upon them, you got a
real problem."
Brown says the only elected leader at City Hall
trying to make a change is Mayor London Breed, who is drawing heavy
criticism from homeless advocates for bringing in police as well as
social and medical workers to deal with the problem
On the other hand, Brown says the residents of the city are fed up with the situation.
One reason for the change in heart is the images of robberies, open drug dealing, and drug use they are seeing on TV.
And that ongoing coverage is "in fact, what caused, in my opinion, the
mayor's reaction," and her police crackdown in the Tenderloin, Brown
says.
"No politician would move, simply because I have no reason to. Period," Brown says.
But, "I think London Breed is genuinely committed to the idea that we ought to make San Francisco for everybody," Brown said.
Whether the city's legendary "humanitarian" voters will back Mayor Breed has yet to be tested.
"When
it comes to voting or going or getting involved, they say 'I know I
want it to be humane. I don't want it to be I don't want people having
the choice between rehabilitation and jail," said Brown.
It's a political Catch-22 that has residents demanding a clean-up but unwilling to back the mayor when she pulls out the broom.
Meanwhile
Brown says if residents don't see and feel a change on the streets then
every elected official - especially the mayor - will be in peril.
"They'll elect somebody else. And if she doesn't succeed, it'll be trouble. It'll be trouble," said Brown.
Multiple suspects have been arrested after a Louis Vuitton store in San Francisco was hit by thieves.