We are finally seeing real urgency and change in the TL. Over 500 people brought overwhelmingly into hotels over last 3 weeks. This is what we wanted and envisioned when we all worked so hard to pass our hotel legislation, for the TL and entire city.https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/SF-cleans-up-Tenderloin-dramatic-65-15383753.php …
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Replying to @MattHaneySF
Thank you! And now please get
@chesaboudin & DA office to deal with open drug dealings next. Yes, addiction is not a crime, but they don’t commute to Palo Alto to buy drugs! The dealings are right there, OPENLY, in the TL. Please make it stop
3 replies 5 retweets 74 likes -
Replying to @chezpim @MattHaneySF
Fact: approximately 20% of my general felony team's caseload are drug sales. We do prosecute these cases, everyday, for better or worse. As we've learned from the war on drugs after all these decades of failure: this is not a problem we can police or prosecute our way out of.
26 replies 8 retweets 29 likes -
Replying to @chesaboudin @MattHaneySF
All due respect, stats don’t mean anything to me. Driving between my two restaurants, one in Japantown and the other at the edge of the TL, I see open drug use and drug dealings EVERY DAY along the route. That’s the reality for us who live and work in the city.
7 replies 15 retweets 143 likes -
Replying to @chezpim @MattHaneySF
Stats mean a lot to me. My policies have to be data driven. Also, I've been in office less than 6 months. If the drug epidemic or the problems in the Tenderloin are so easy to solve by a single department or elected official, don't you think they would have been solved long ago?
33 replies 1 retweet 13 likes
You can make stats say anything you want them to. Listen to your constituents. You are failing, BIG TIME.
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