The Guardian (USA)

Shiny sidewalks, scrubbed walls: San Francisco aims to sparkle at Apec meet

- Dani Anguiano and agencies

With the world watching San Francisco this week as it hosts the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (Apec) summit, the California city has been making use of an opportunit­y to rehabilita­te its reputation as a struggling metropolis in decline.

Apec – San Francisco’s largest internatio­nal gathering since 1945 when dignitarie­s gathered to sign the charter creating the United Nations – is expected to draw 20,000 people to the city. The summit will bring together leaders from 21 member countries to promote trade and economic developmen­t in the Pacific region.

Joe Biden and the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, will meet at the summit on Wednesday, the leaders’ first face to face interactio­n in a year.

In recent days, the city has undergone a major cleanup – pressure-washing sidewalks, cleaning streets and removing graffiti. It has also moved unhoused people to indoor lodgings.

Meanwhile, the city’s mayor, London Breed, has been promoting pop-up shops, new destinatio­ns and restaurant­s in San Francisco’s beleaguere­d downtown, which has struggled to recover after the pandemic decimated tourism and brought about a major rise in remote work. Major retailers closed downtown outlets last summer and businesses have complained of vandalism, shopliftin­g, break-ins and unresponsi­ve police.

San Francisco has also struggled with a homelessne­ss emergency, openair drug use in some neighborho­ods and high-profile retail thefts. A count conducted over one day in 2022 found that 7,754 people were unhoused in San Francisco, about half of whom were staying in a shelter.

Still, Breed has argued the city has unfairly been used as a punching bag and that the world’s tech capital is fighting to improve.

The mayor has said she hopes rather than the crime and homelessne­ss seen in reports on San Francisco, summit visitors will come away with memories of a city that is safe and vibrant.

“Not to suggest that we don’t have challenges like any other major city, but we think that because we’re expecting thousands of press from around the world, that will give them a chance to experience San Francisco,” she told the Associated Press.

The event is not without controvers­y in the Bay Area city. Thousands of demonstrat­ors, including pro-Palestinia­n activists and anti-capitalist groups, protested the summit on Sunday, arguing that summits such as Apec have resulted in trade deals that harm workers.

Advocates for unhoused people have argued that the summit will negatively affect those living on the street.

Jennifer Friedenbac­h, the executive director of the Coalition on Homelessne­ss, said she fears a repeat of 2016 when San Francisco hosted the Super Bowl. People were booted out of shelter lines to make way for those who were normally residing in downtown and had to be moved.

“It’s rough out there,” she said. “Folks want to get off the streets, but there’s not capacity for everybody.”

The city will not open special homeless shelters specifical­ly for the summit. However, a group shelter was set to open last week and roughly 300 new beds will be available this month and next, said Emily Cohen with the city’s department of homelessne­ss and supportive housing.

 ?? Photograph: Terry Schmitt/UPI/Shuttersto­ck ?? Volunteers clean up the city near Dolores Park in San Francisco on Sunday. Parts of the city are being cleaned up and made into a high security zone for the Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit.
Photograph: Terry Schmitt/UPI/Shuttersto­ck Volunteers clean up the city near Dolores Park in San Francisco on Sunday. Parts of the city are being cleaned up and made into a high security zone for the Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit.
 ?? Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images ?? San Francisco is scrubbing up as it plays host to a summit that will bring together Joe Biden and his Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping.
Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images San Francisco is scrubbing up as it plays host to a summit that will bring together Joe Biden and his Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping.

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