San Francisco patches over homelessness, drug-abuse for APEC
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[November 15, 2023]
By Anna Tong and Peter Henderson
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - On a sunny Sunday before world leaders were
scheduled to gather for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC)
forum, the United Nations Plaza, one of the epicenters of San
Francisco's drugs and homelessness crisis, wore a festive air.
Until recently a bustling marketplace for stolen goods and open-air drug
trade, the area had been spruced up with a brand-new skate park, and
trainees from a dance company performed to a crowd. There was hardly a
homeless person to be seen. Police officers and city officials watched
too.
By Tuesday, the day of U.S. President Joe Biden's arrival, Christopher
Crandall, 50, who usually sleeps on the street in a part of downtown San
Francisco west of the APEC convention center, said he'd noticed the city
had planted new trees along the arterial Market Street.
He'd also seen waist-high gates going up on Tuesday morning in the area
where he usually beds down. "I'm wondering if I will be able to sleep
there tonight," he said.
California Governor Gavin Newsom, speaking at an event on Thursday
focused on beautifying the state, said local, state and federal leaders
had been discussing the issue for months.
"I know folks are saying, 'Oh, they're just cleaning up this place
because all those fancy leaders are coming to town.' That's true ...
This is momentum. And I want folks to know, you are seeing a lot more of
this around town and around the Bay Area."
San Francisco has been waging for years a multi-pronged war on drugs and
related crime, homelessness and unaffordable housing. It has grabbed
headlines as a city in an economic "doom loop" as some businesses have
shuttered, public transport ridership has dropped and offices lie empty
after the pandemic.
Officials have tried to clean up the city's streets, with limited
success. The crisis has drawn sharp criticism from residents and
conservative politicians who have blamed the city's problems on its
liberal policies.
Clean up efforts ahead of the summit - where President Biden and China's
Xi Jinping will meet - have not convinced some people who are skeptical
that these improvements will last.
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The Transamerica Pyramid building is seen as tourists ride a cable
car in downtown San Francisco, California, U.S., July 7, 2023.
REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
Forcing homeless people to move - called "sweeps" - will never solve
the real problem, which is that there isn't enough affordable
housing, said Paul Boden, director of the Western Regional Advocacy
Project, a coalition of homeless groups.
"They do this for the Superbowl, they do this for conferences ...
but nothing ends homelessness like a home," Boden said.
The city has a homelessness rate of 887 people per 100,000
residents, according to a 2023 report from the San Francisco
controller's office on 16 American cities. That was the
third-highest rate in the country behind neighboring Oakland, and
Los Angeles.
"Where did they go?" Tesla boss Elon Musk on Friday tweeted at a
video from conservative media Fox News that reported tents used by
the homeless had been cleared. Musk, who bought Twitter now called X
last year, has previously tweeted on San Francisco's problems.
The company's headquarters abut the Tenderloin, the city
neighborhood that is usually full of homeless encampments and people
taking and selling drugs.
Trevor Chandler, a public school teacher who is running for local
office, said many residents in his district noticed homeless
encampments getting pushed away from near the APEC conference and
into their neighborhood.
"I’ve knocked on 2,000 doors and what voters are telling me is they
are sick of Band-Aids going on these problems and pushing them
elsewhere. That is why people are both simultaneously excited and
upset to see how clean downtown is right now," he said.
(Reporting by Peter Henderson and Anna Tong in San Francisco;
Editing by Sayantani Ghosh and Stephen Coates)
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