what San Franciscans want is vastly apart from what the governing body has delivered. virtually zero non-existent representation of constituents, having crushed civil rights and liberties of tax paying citizens
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Replying to @BastionoftheBay @DeanPreston and
Actually I agree that city hasn’t delivered on what it’s citizens desire but also be clear that we have a split political system and two camps which see a path to solutions very differently... the Supervisors passed unanimously legislation to@open 8000+ hotel rooms, the mayor...
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Replying to @christinevans @BastionoftheBay and
...hasn’t moved to open more than 2000 to people who were living in SF pre-Covid. Her HSA director says it’s “not fiscally prudent”... so instead they have said they will open 1000 shelter beds but that still leaves thousands of people out on our streets.
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Replying to @christinevans @BastionoftheBay and
there are a lot of open beds currently in rehabs. maybe we could force some folks actively using on our streets to agree to get clean and take those beds. housing in exchange for sobriety seems like a pretty good deal. meth labs and overdoses in hotels not ideal
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Replying to @masterlongevity @BastionoftheBay and
Can you explain where the “many” beds are? Last I checked there were 2 beds and people on the waitlist were being contacted and offered those. Because of COVID there has been treatment programs closing to new participants because they are in congregant living settings.
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Replying to @christinevans @masterlongevity and
Harbor light has 32 beds open. The ARC on Valencia has 40 beds. Men and Women. It depends on where you look.
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Replying to @Twolfrecovery @christinevans and
@MyTwolffamily , So to be clear, if I have a existing addiction and am willing to give it up, I might have free food, shelter, medical care. However if I am merely elderly with no addictions on our streets, there are no opportunities for shelter for me? Why punishment over care?
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Replying to @netfire4 @christinevans and
That is a harsh reality and I agree with you completely.
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Replying to @Twolfrecovery @christinevans and
If I am poor in Hondores, I am likely to work hard to barely avoid starvation, never have access to medical care, and die young. If I choose to deal drugs the worst that will happen to me is someone feeds, shelters, clothes, and cares but confines me for the rest of my life?
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Replying to @netfire4 @christinevans and
Quality of life in Honduras should not be San Francisco's burden to bare if said Hondurans are engaging in illegal activity in SF as a means to survive. And we bare more than our fair share of that. What do you suggest
#SanFrancisco do about this?1 reply 1 retweet 3 likes
The only way we may helpfully effect the quality of life in hondores is in enabling those tempest tost immigrants into sufficient strength to fix their own home. To do that first we must be better. We are not responsible for hondores, but we are for our golden beacon, and legend.pic.twitter.com/KyPqvONQrO
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Replying to @netfire4 @christinevans and
I think Paul is a robot!! SMFH ever time he has something to say. God help SF
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