San Francisco cracks down on drug campers

 National Review:

The San Francisco board of supervisors voted 8-2 early Friday morning to codify Mayor London Breed’s state of emergency declaration, which will allow the city to take aggressive action to clear homeless camps populated by opioid addicts from the Tenderloin neighborhood.

The decision will empower the Department of Emergency Management to take over crisis response and eliminate unnecessary red tape so the city can quickly open up a special facility in the area to provide services to drug users, per a plan Breed announced last week.

Breed’s original pitch caused some unease among the board, however, as some members feared she would use the emergency declaration to justify more aggressive policing and criminalizing drug users. Ahead of the vote, supervisors Matt Haney, Hillary Ronen, and Dean Preston were extremely vocal in their opposition to the emergency declaration, which will last for 90 days, arguing it will be weaponized against people struggling with drug addiction. They said they favored a rehabilitation-based approach for those dealing with substance abuse.

Two people per day die of drug overdoses in San Francisco, with one in five of those deaths in the Tenderloin, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.
...

It looks like the Mayor of San Franciso has awakened to the drug problem and its spin-offs in San Francisco.  She has also looking at the out-of-control lawlessness impacting retailers in the city. 

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