This is more proof that San Fran has collapsed. Large and small firms are fleeing this war zone. The homeless, the drug addicted, the illegal aliens and the criminals control the streets. The hate of cars is killing off the downtown area, along with the dog and human feces everywhere. Now we find that the city PROMOTES drug addicts instead of helping the,
“May to arrest people suspected of using drugs in public.
The initiative, which launched alongside a number of local, state and federal law enforcement efforts targeting the city’s open-air drug markets, has resulted in the arrest of 476 people who were suspected of using drugs or being under the influence of drugs in public.
Police Chief Bill Scott acknowledged the efforts haven’t moved many people with addiction into treatment, but said the city lacks another method of removing people who are using drugs from public spaces.
Two out of 476—and many more should have been arrested—this is an acceptance of drug addicts and dealers controlling the streets.
San Francisco Drug Crisis: 2 People Entered Treatment Out of 476 Arrested
Written by David Sjostedt, SF Standard, 9/8/13 https://sfstandard.com/2023/09/08/san-francisco-drug-crisis-2-people-entered-treatment-out-of-476-arrested/?utm_campaign=SF%20Standard%20Daily&utm_medium=email&utm_source=SF%20Standard&utm_content=hero
Two people have entered drug treatment through a new initiative that San Francisco police launched in late May to arrest people suspected of using drugs in public.
The initiative, which launched alongside a number of local, state and federal law enforcement efforts targeting the city’s open-air drug markets, has resulted in the arrest of 476 people who were suspected of using drugs or being under the influence of drugs in public.
Police Chief Bill Scott acknowledged the efforts haven’t moved many people with addiction into treatment, but said the city lacks another method of removing people who are using drugs from public spaces.
“I know that’s a small number, but we started at zero,” Scott said at a San Francisco Police Commission meeting on Wednesday. “You’ll never hear me say that arresting folks will solve addiction, but these are still crimes.”
Police Commission member Max Carter-Oberstone questioned whether the department should continue the program in the face of the results.
“How much longer are we going to continue experimenting with this?” Carter-Oberstone said.
Fatal overdoses in the city have climbed to record highs this year, with 71 people dying from drugs in July, according to preliminary data from the Chief Medical Examiner’s Office.
Scott said the Department of Public Health has helped advise on the new program, and he contended that no other city department possesses the police’s ability to forcibly remove people using drugs from the public.
When the effort launched in late May, city officials said the program would focus on people whose drug use presented a danger to themselves or others.
“Until some other entity other than the police department deals with this issue, it really doesn’t leave us with much of a choice,” Scott said. “People are fed up with the talk.”
Eight officers and one sergeant are working full-time to arrest people suspected of using drugs, while four officers are working part-time on the initiative and another six officers recently started making arrests of drug users at night, Scott said.
The police department has arrested over 300 alleged drug dealers and seized over 220 pounds of drugs in the last three months. The California Highway Patrol announced last Friday it had made 100 drug arrests since April.
The recent influx of drug arrests caused the local jail population to breach 1,000 people for the first time in years.
All those idiots who wanted proof that a city has shelter beds for every homeless person before permitting the cops to remove them from the public areas should have this statistic. (Most of the homeless are addicts.) We should be able to argue in the next court case, that if only 2 of 473 arrestees would accept treatment offered, that we only need to provide housing for 2 of every 473 homeless addicts rounded up for drug use and removed from the public areas.