San Francisco Launches Long-Term Plan to Target Homelessness  

The new mayor’s plan aims to get people off the street and into housing and addiction care.
San Francisco Launches Long-Term Plan to Target Homelessness  
San Francisco Mayor-Elect Daniel Lurie speaks at a rally claiming his victory on Nov. 8. 2024. Lear Zhou/The Epoch Times
Jill McLaughlin
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San Francisco officials unveiled a new “break the cycle” of homelessness plan targeted at tackling the city’s growing homeless population and behavioral health crisis.

The “Breaking the Cycle” vision debuted on March 17 as an executive order signed by Mayor Daniel Lurie.

“I believe our city must be judged by how we care for our most vulnerable residents, and today, we are outlining immediate actions and long-term reforms to address the crisis in our streets,” Lurie said in a statement.

The mayor said he expects the order to break the cycle of homelessness, addiction, and government failure in its homelessness and behavioral health response.

“My administration is bringing a new era of accountability and will deliver outcomes that get people off the street and into stability,” he said.

Lurie, a founder of the nonprofit homeless housing organization Tipping Point, was successful in unseating incumbent Mayor London Breed last year, running on a platform that promised a “comprehensive and sustainable approach to urgently address San Francisco’s unsheltered homelessness crisis.”
San Francisco recorded another rise in its homeless population last year. The city had 8,323 homeless people, with 4,354 of them—or about 52 percent—living on the street, according to its latest count released in August 2024.

This number was up by 572 from 2022, representing about a 7.4 percent rise. The count is done every two years.

Most of San Francisco’s unhoused population—or 51 percent—say they struggle with mental health issues, addiction, or both, according to the mayor.

“We talk a lot about tents and [the] suffering we see on our streets every day,” Lurie said in a speech on Monday, announcing the new initiative. “These are people sleeping in their cars with their kids at night, helping them get ready for school in a gas station bathroom before heading off to work the register, drive ride shares, or wait tables. Sometimes all three.”

Homeless families are the fastest-growing segment of the population, nearly doubling since 2022, the mayor said.

“As a city, our systems are failing. If we don’t at least try to fix those failing systems, we can’t point the finger at someone else when nothing changes,” he said.

Another 36 percent of the chronically homeless cycle through the city’s assistance programs without finding stable housing, which indicates that “the city’s approach has not been working,” Lurie said in the executive order.
JJ Smith checks on the well-being of homeless drug addicts in the Tenderloin District of San Francisco on May 16, 2024. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)
JJ Smith checks on the well-being of homeless drug addicts in the Tenderloin District of San Francisco on May 16, 2024. John Fredricks/The Epoch Times

The city’s existing health, homelessness, and family services programs are fragmented, he said.

“Programs tend to develop in departmental silos without strongly integrated, data-driven decision-making,” Lurie wrote in the order.

As a result, the city’s programs are duplicated, disjointed, and have missed intervention opportunities.

The directive outlines a framework to “transform the system” by adding more accountability, integrated service delivery, and compassionate and responsible management.

In short, the order says, the program’s goals are to create a system that helps people find lasting stability, cleans up sidewalks and makes them safer, and creates responsible governance and accountable services.

A person under the influence of drugs in the Tenderloin District of San Francisco on May 16, 2024. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)
A person under the influence of drugs in the Tenderloin District of San Francisco on May 16, 2024. John Fredricks/The Epoch Times

All city departments were directed to achieve several goals.

The city is expected to launch a new street teams model within 100 days to promote neighborhood-based enforcement, services and treatment, and cleaning goals. It is also expected to invest in prevention and emergency help to keep people housed before they become homeless.

Staff must be ready to create emergency vouchers to help people find housing immediately, the order stated.

Lurie also directed the city to reassess its policies that allow the distribution of fentanyl smoking supplies in public spaces and re-focus on access to longstanding programs, such as clean needle exchanges and connecting people to treatment and recovery.

In six months, the city has set several goals, including expanding short-term housing capacity by 1,500 beds and adding emergency shelter, hotel vouchers, transitional housing, stabilization centers, recovery and sober housing, and residential treatment to help move people off the streets.

A homeless person in the Tenderloin District of San Francisco on May 16, 2024. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)
A homeless person in the Tenderloin District of San Francisco on May 16, 2024. John Fredricks/The Epoch Times

Officials hope to maximize state health care insurance and housing funding in one year to expand and improve services and take other actions to reform programs.

Several nonprofit groups serving the homeless population weighed in on the new plan on Monday.

“Mayor Lurie’s plan gives me hope that people who are struggling, like my son was, will finally get real help to rebuild their lives,” said Tanya Tilghman, cofounder of Mothers Against Drug Addiction and Deaths. “No one should have to wait months for treatment or shelter when they’re ready to turn things around.”

Tramecia Garner, the executive director of Swords to Plowshares, an advocacy organization helping veterans, also hoped to work with the mayor on the new program.

“Expanding treatment capacity and treatment beds to meet a growing level of clinical need and increasing the flow of philanthropic support will help meet the complex needs of veterans facing both mental health and substance use challenges,” she said in a statement.

Jill McLaughlin
Jill McLaughlin
Author
Jill McLaughlin is an award-winning journalist covering politics, environment, and statewide issues. She has been a reporter and editor for newspapers in Oregon, Nevada, and New Mexico. Jill was born in Yosemite National Park and enjoys the majestic outdoors, traveling, golfing, and hiking.