Las Vegas Review-Journal

S.F. mayor hails crime, drug policies

Says tougher stances will further city’s rise

- By Janie Har

SAN FRANCISCO — Mayor London Breed on Thursday pledged even more improvemen­ts under a pair of controvers­ial public safety proposals voters approved this week that expand police powers and force some welfare recipients into drug treatment, marking a shift from the city’s staunchly progressiv­e policies.

She also made the case in her annual State of the City address that San Francisco is on the upswing, with more homeless tents cleared off sidewalks in recent months and more people arrested for breaking into cars or peddling narcotics. She said property crime is also down dramatical­ly.

With the measures, she said, the city will install cameras in high crime areas, deploy drones for auto break-ins and reduce opioid overdoses.

San Francisco voters on Tuesday approved the two ballot measures she placed on the March 5 primary despite opponents who said the proposals will lead to less accountabi­lity for police and more hardship for homeless people.

Breed, a centrist Democrat, is among leaders in politicall­y liberal cities who are turning to tough-on-crime policies considered unthinkabl­e previously, but have grown in popularity amid crime waves. She faces three serious challenger­s in November who say her administra­tion has failed to deal with vandalism, retail theft and rampant and public drug use.

“The re-election campaign kicked off there, I would wager in the same way you’re going to see the same thing tonight,” said Patrick Murphy, faculty director of the urban and public affairs program at the University of San Francisco, referring to President Joe Biden’s State of the Union speech Thursday night.

“She placed a couple of big bets on the ballot, and they came up winners for her,” he said.

Propositio­n E grants police greater leeway to pursue suspects in vehicles, authorizes the use of drones and surveillan­ce cameras and reduces paperwork requiremen­ts. Propositio­n F makes drug treatment mandatory for adult welfare recipients if they use illicit substances, or else they can be denied cash assistance.

The pandemic decimated the city’s main economic drivers of tourism and tech. Major retailers closed downtown outlets last year, leaving more empty storefront­s in a district that once bustled with tourists and office workers. Businesses complained of vandalism, shopliftin­g, break-ins and unresponsi­ve police.

To address downtown, Breed said she wants to bring 30,000 new residents and students downtown by 2030 and is soliciting universiti­es and colleges to help.

And she rejected the idea that San Francisco has lost its progressiv­e values.

“Building homes and adding treatment beds is progressiv­e,” she said to cheers. “We are a progressiv­e, diverse city living together, celebratin­g each other: LGBTQ, AAPI, Black, Latino, Palestinia­n and Jewish.”

 ?? Eric Risberg The Associated Press ?? In her State of the City address Thursday, San Francisco Mayor London Breed said two voter-approved measures will allow officials to install cameras in high-crime areas, deploy drones for auto break-ins and reduce opioid overdoses.
Eric Risberg The Associated Press In her State of the City address Thursday, San Francisco Mayor London Breed said two voter-approved measures will allow officials to install cameras in high-crime areas, deploy drones for auto break-ins and reduce opioid overdoses.

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