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Crime and Homelessness Are Linked in the Minds of San Franciscans

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Leroy N. Soetoro

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Nov 20, 2022, 6:24:08 PM11/20/22
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https://sfstandard.com/criminal-justice/poll-crime-and-homelessness-are-
linked-in-the-minds-of-san-franciscans/

Crime and homelessness are top of mind for the San Francisco electorate, a
majority of whom back so-called “tough on crime” measures paired with a
stronger take on rehabilitation, according to a new poll by The Standard.

Some 29% of respondents to the survey conducted earlier this month
identified homelessness and crime as the top two issues facing the city.


“I’ve been here 27 years and love San Francisco, but the crime and
homelessness are seriously depressing,” said one respondent, who did not
give their name.

The majority of those polled supported tougher prosecution to deal with
drug dealing and drug use while backing more compassionate carrot-and-
stick tactics to address the problem.

The fall SF Standard Voter Poll surveyed 944 registered voters in English
and Simplified Chinese about their opinions on the city, its government
and its challenges.

Despite the poll’s findings, violent crime rates in the city for robbery,
burglary and some property offenses have fallen below already-low pre-
Covid levels. But experts say people often unfairly link homelessness and
poverty to an uptick in crime—even though data doesn’t support a
connection between the two.

Sarah Gillespie—an analyst with the nonprofit think tank Urban Institute
who has studied crime and homelessness in Denver—says much of the nation
is encountering burgeoning homelessness alongside increases in some types
of crime.


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“It’s so visible, and it’s increasing,” she said. “That’s the connection
they are making. […] I think that people link homeless and crime because
the only solution is to call 911.”

Cambridge University’s Charles Lanfear, who studied homelessness and crime
in Seattle, echoed Gillespie’s point.

“We found little relationship between encampments and nearly all forms of
reported property crime,” Lanfear said, “but a very strong link between
reported property crime and complaints about homelessness.”

No matter the reality on the street, San Franciscans polled by The
Standard said they feel less and less safe and think the city isn’t doing
enough to solve its most pressing problems.


About 64% of respondents say they feel less safe now than a year ago, and
roughly half of them said they feel much less safe.

When asked why they felt less safe, 71% cited homelessness as the main
reason. At the same time, 78% of respondents said homelessness makes them
feel sad—yet half said the issue has made them less progressive.

The second most common reason for why people said they felt safety has
declined, according to the poll, was because of interactions with people
on the streets—even if those encounters don’t rise to the level of a
crime.

A third of respondents who felt more unsafe than last year said their No.
1 reason was because they had been the victim of a crime.

“As a woman in my twenties, I definitely [feel] less safe in SF than I did
a year ago,” one respondent wrote. “I feel like it’s only a matter of time
before I’m the victim of a crime. SFPD and the criminal justice system
feel very ineffective lately, especially when dealing with repeat
offenders. But at the same time, I love it here and there's no other city
in the U.S. where I’d want to live.”

Nearly half of people who responded to the poll (47%) said they have
changed their routines due to safety concerns, while 46% said they believe
Muni and BART have become less safe.

When it comes to solutions to crime and homelessness, though, the answers
were mixed.

<https://sfstandard.com/wp-
content/uploads/2022/10/PoliticsPolicyPoll101222_INLINED-650x433.jpg>

For instance, 74% of those surveyed said narcotics users should be forced
into court-ordered treatment after being cited five times for public drug
use. And a slim majority back clearing homeless camps regardless of
whether the people targeted in such sweeps have anywhere to go.

Yet 69% of respondents said they back District Attorney Brooke Jenkins’
efforts to level murder charges against fentanyl dealers whose drugs lead
to fatal overdoses.

“Homeless who are addicted to drugs or mentally ill will not voluntarily
move to shelters,” respondent Garrett Gaudini said. “It is up to the
government to force them to do so, and provide them [with] mandatory drug
addiction and mental health treatment when they are there. Leaving them to
wallow on the streets is not only a humanitarian issue, it is a health and
safety hazard to everyone else in the community. The streets are
disgusting and unsafe to everyone involved.”


Despite support for more draconian enforcement, most poll respondents back
some progressive diversion efforts, such as 62% who said their top policy
solution was to deploy more civilian intervention teams to decrease
overdose deaths and deal with mental health crises.

Still, only 35% back Mayor London Breed’s efforts to open a site for
sanctioned drug use.

When it comes to law enforcement, 56% approve of Jenkins and a small
plurality of respondents said they plan to vote for DA Jenkins this fall,
but respondents expressed a less-than-positive view of the police.

Just shy of a majority of those surveyed said they disapprove of the San
Francisco Police Department.

A poll respondent who did not want to be contacted for comment said he
feels SFPD isn’t effective because of a “lack of police response when
residents and business owners call for help.” He said he feels officers
often shirk their responsibilities and simply tell people to fill out a
form online when they have been the victim of a crime.

“Police are not doing their job,” he added.

But many still back giving SFPD more tools.

For example, 59% support the recent move by the city to give police access
to live video feeds. And 54% support hiring more officers.


READ MORE FROM THE SAN FRANCISCO STANDARD VOTER POLL
Nearly One-Third of SF Voters Don’t Know Their Supervisor District
Beyond the Rainbow: A Closer Look at San Francisco’s LGBTQ+ Voters
San Franciscans Aren’t Going Back to the Office Anytime Soon
Meet SF’s Dog Owners: A Unique Breed of Voter
SF Public Schools Get Middling Grades in New Poll, With Worse Marks From
Parents
Is Car-Free JFK Here to Stay? Many Support It—But Poll Says Vote Could
Still Go Either Way
Voter Poll: San Francisco Moves a Step to the Center
DA Brooke Jenkins in Driver’s Seat Ahead of Election, But Many Voters
Still Undecided
Asian Voters Drove SF’s Recalls. Will That Momentum Continue to November?
Jonah Owen Lamb can be reached at jo...@sfstandard.com


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Under Barack Obama's leadership, the United States of America became the
The World According To Garp. Obama sold out heterosexuals for Hollywood
queer liberal democrat donors.

President Trump boosted the economy, reduced illegal invasions, appointed
dozens of judges and three SCOTUS justices.

gymRatRedneck

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Nov 22, 2022, 2:32:59 PM11/22/22
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That's because "San Franciscans" (exactly which ones out of millions?)
have brain flukes, and parasites like you feed on them scumbo.
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