The Denver Post

San Francisco curbs waste with public toilets

- By Janie Har

SAN FRANCISCO» The sidewalks surroundin­g Ahmed Al Barak’s corner market in one of San Francisco’s roughest neighborho­ods are filled with cardboard, used syringes and homeless people who have nowhere safe to go at night.

But Al Barak says it’s an improvemen­t from a year ago, before the city posted a portable toilet across the street from his business in the Tenderloin district.

He no longer regularly sees people relieve themselves in daylight, and he doesn’t see as much feces and urine on streets. In his opinion, it’s the one bright spot in a city where taxes are too high.

“We used to have a disaster here. I used to call the city all the time to come and clean, because they don’t know where to go,” he said, recalling one woman in particular who shrugged at him in a “what can you do?” gesture as she squatted to pee.

San Francisco started its “Pit Stop” program in July 2014 with public toilets in the city’s homeless-heavy Tenderloin, after children complained of dodging human waste on their way to school. Today, the staffed bathrooms have grown from three to 25 locations, and the program has expanded to Los Angeles. In May, the toilets in San Francisco recorded nearly 50,000 flushes, all logged by attendants.

The condition of San Francisco’s streets has been a source of embarrassm­ent to city leaders, and cleaning up is not cheap. The city received nearly 27,000 requests for feces removal in the most recent fiscal year, although not all are human.

Mayor London Breed last year announced the formation of a special six-person “poop patrol” team, where each cleaner earns more than $70,000 per year.

Advocates say steam cleaning requests have dropped in areas surroundin­g some of the public toilets. The mayor signed a budget Thursday that includes more than $9 million for the Pit Stop toilets this year, up from $5 million last fiscal year. San Francisco will add seven new bathrooms in a city where a onenight count of homeless people grew 17% in the past two years.

Each toilet costs an average of $200,000 per year to operate.

Some of the bathrooms are permanent fixtures, while others are portables with two toilets that are trucked in and out. The stops have receptacle­s for used syringes and dog waste. Attendants who are paid the city’s minimum wage of $16 per hour check after every use and knock on doors to make sure people are not doing drugs or other illicit activity. The bathrooms must shine or they do not open.

The staffing is what makes a toilet a Pit Stop, and the work is usually done by men coming out of prison after decades behind bars.

The “practition­ers” stand guard at some of society’s bleakest intersecti­ons of poverty, addiction and mental illness, says Lena Miller, founder of nonprofit Hunters Point Family and its spinoff, Urban Alchemy, which staffs the Pit Stops in San Francisco and Los Angeles. They prevent overdoses, break up fights and greet regulars, she says.

“Really what we’re doing is we’re creating this space where people know that they can walk into it, and it’s going to smell good. It’s going to look good,” Miller said. “There won’t be trash everywhere, and they’re safe. And I think that makes all the difference in the world.”

Nelson Butler was a 19-year-old L.A. gangster when he went to prison for 30 years for killing someone. He was released last year from San Quentin State Prison, scared and apprehensi­ve and in need of a job. He went to work at a Pit Stop. Technicall­y, his job was to prevent drug use in the bathrooms and make sure homeless people didn’t set up camp.

“The reality is, I’m a security guard. I was a babysitter, I was a social worker, I was a counselor. I did a lot of things that was not necessaril­y in the scope of my job descriptio­n, but this is my community,” Butler said. “So my thought was, if I saw somebody that needed help, that’s why I’m there — to help.”

 ?? Eric Risberg, The Associated Press ??
Eric Risberg, The Associated Press

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