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San Francisco’s vaunted tolerance dims amid brazen crimes

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – Politically liberal San Franciscans are used to living on an equal footing with open drug use, faecal streets, and petty crime. But a surge in home break-ins and outrageous shoplifting leads some residents to believe that the city they fell in love with is on the decline.

Caitlin Foster is one of those San Francisco shopkeepers who repeatedly had to put used needles and other drug paraphernalia away from the bar she ran. And after too many encounters with armed people in the crisis, Seattle’s transplant affection for its adopted home has grown sour.

“It was a goal to live here, but now I’m here thinking, ‘Where should I go now?’ I’m over it, ”said Foster, who runs the Noir Lounge in the hip Hayes Valley neighborhood.

A series of headline-grabbing crime stories – crowds breaking windows and stealing luxury purses in downtown Union Square, and daytime shootings in touristy Haight-Ashbury – have only added to the general feeling of vulnerability. Residents wake up to the news of attacks on elderly Asian Americans, broken-in restaurants, and boarded-up shop fronts in the city’s once-vibrant downtown area.

The pandemic emptied parts of San Francisco, highlighting some of its drawbacks, including a laissez-faire approach by officials to open drug trafficking just steps from the Opera House and Symphony Hall. Parents were desperate as public schools remained closed for most of last year as nearby counties welcomed the children back into the classroom.

“There is a widespread feeling in San Francisco that things are on the wrong track,” said Patrick Wolff, 53, a retired professional chess player from the Boston area who has lived in the city since 2005.

The San Franciscans will vote in June on whether to remove District Attorney Chesa Boudin, a former public defender who was elected in 2019 and whose critics say he is too lenient about crime. Its supporters say there is no spike in crime and that corporate wage theft is a more pressing issue than cases like that of a San Francisco woman who was eventually arrested after stealing more than $ 40,000 in goods from a target in 120 visits had.

“Where is the progress? If you say you’re progressive, we’ll get the homeless off the street and get mental health care, ”said Brian Cassanego, a San Francisco native who owns the lounge where Foster works.

Cassanego moved to Wine Country five months ago after stepping out one day to find a man who “looked like a zombie” with his pants up to his knees and bleeding from a syringe in his hip. Nearby, a woman cried out in shock.

“I went upstairs and said to my wife, ‘We’re going now! This town is ready! ‘”He said.

While overall crime has been declining for years, reports of thefts – shoplifting from a person or company – have increased by nearly 17% year-over-year to more than 28,000. They stay lower than the 40,000+ thefts reported in 2019. Inquiries about cleaning dirty streets and sidewalks are most calls to 311, the city service number.

San Francisco’s well-publicized problems have served as fodder for the conservative media. Former President Donald Trump recently stepped in again, releasing a statement saying the National Guard should be sent to San Francisco to prevent robberies.

Elected officials say they are grappling with deep societal problems that are common in every major US city.

A high percentage of an estimated 8,000 homeless people in San Francisco are struggling with chronic addiction or severe mental illness, usually both. Last year, 712 people died from drug overdoses, compared to 257 people who died from COVID-19.

LeAnn Corpus, an administrative assistant, said a homeless man used a bike and a sheets to pitch a makeshift tent in front of her house and relieved himself on the sidewalk. She called the police, who came two hours later and cleared him out, but a homeless man camped in the back yard of her aunt’s house for six months after trying to get the authorities to remove him.

“This town just doesn’t feel like it anymore,” said Corpus, a third generation local.

In Hayes Valley, business owners who are tired of trash lying around and the city is doing nothing to address the problem have come together to lease closed trash cans from a private company, said Jennifer Laska, president of the neighborhood association.

After the lease expired, the association managed to get the city to buy and install new public garbage cans designed to keep rubbish in and thieves out. That was four months ago.

“We’re still struggling to actually buy the trash cans,” Laska said.

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