Posted on 08/02/2018 1:56:15 AM PDT by Drango
San Francisco's streets are so filthy that at least one infectious disease expert has compared the city to some of the dirtiest slums in the world.
The NBC Bay Area Investigative Unit surveyed 153 blocks of the city in February, finding giant mounds of trash and food on the majority of streets. At least 100 discarded needles and more than 300 piles of human feces were also found in downtown San Francisco, according to the report.
San Francisco's new mayor, London Breed, had proposed adding nearly $13 million to the city's $65 million street cleaning budget over the next two years, according to NBC Bay Area.
"I will say there is more feces on the sidewalks than I've ever seen growing up here," Breed told NBC Bay Area last month. "We have to make sure people who live here, [and] sadly, people who are homeless here, that they are also held accountable for taking care of our streets. This is our home."
Mohammed Nuru, San Francisco's director of public works, is the city's point man charged with cleaning up the streets. He tells Here & Now's Jeremy Hobson that "it's definitely challenging times" and that the department has been diverted away from normal trash pickup routes into the areas concentrated by people who are homeless.
"Our resources have been focused on really trying to clean up areas that mostly have been trashed by homeless, had tents where people [were] living in them," Nuru says. "People were using the streets for the bathroom. ... It creates definitely a different problem."
The sprawling California city that is a hub for major tech companies such as Uber and Twitter is being choked by an affordable housing crisis that is pushing more people onto the streets.
The 2017 San Francisco Homeless Point-in-Time Count, a report on the city's homeless population, identified 7,499 sheltered and unsheltered homeless people in the city of 884,000. Nearly 49 percent of those were counted in neighborhoods surrounding downtown.
San Francisco has become "a magnet" for the homeless because the city has boosted spending to fight the crisis over the past five years, Nuru says. The West Coast cities of Seattle, San Diego and Sacramento, Calif., are also experiencing severe shortages of affordable housing.
"A large number of the people we see on our streets are not necessarily from San Francisco," he says. "They are coming from surrounding counties and, in some cases, across state lines."
The filth in the street is raising alarms among medical experts. The biggest concern: the spread of disease.
Dr. Lee Riley, an infectious disease expert at the University of California, Berkeley, told NBC Bay Area that dried feces can release dangerous viruses, such as rotavirus, which is the most common cause of diarrhea in infants and children worldwide. Getting pricked with discarded drug needles can also spread HIV, hepatitis C and hepatitis B, among other viruses, Riley said.
"The contamination is ... much greater than communities in Brazil or Kenya or India," says Riley, who researched health conditions caused by extreme poverty in some of the world's poorest regions.
Street conditions in San Francisco are so bad that a Chicago-based medical association recently decided to cancel future events in the city, including a major convention that normally hosts more than 15,000 attendees, according to the San Francisco Travel Association, which declined to name the organization.
Nuru says the tourism industry is concerned that street conditions will affect the bottom line. According to the San Francisco Travel Association, spending by tourists reached more than $9 billion in 2017.
"We have been working with the convention staff ... our tourist industry and really trying to address the concerns," he says. "I would hope that this is just a short-term type of concern and that we can really get our city to where it should be: a nice clean destination for people who want to come out to the West Coast."
If you fund it, they will come.
Situation normal, re the streets. Why wasn’t it reported months or years ago?
Hello, NPR! Its outfits like yours who glorify the homeless and demand more and more and more funding. Well, here is your predictable result.
Couldnt happen to a nicer state.
I am very surprised that NPR did report this as well, if they are saying this, then it must be bad also any FReepers that live in SF and see this daily?
I cant believe it, this place is really a sh!thole.
Where I live, people dump in the crapper and pick up after their dogs. It is inexcusable for San Francisco to have become such a shit hole. Why the citizenry aren’t in revolt is beyond my ken. It seems totally fitting, though, that this is happening in Nancy Pelosi land.
Not to mention the leftist trash and feces in the SF City Council.
Just a few months ago, leftists were denying this:
https://www.mercurynews.com/2018/02/28/san-francisco-poop-map-real-thing-or-a-rumor/
The “good” news is that the street people are now victims of an affordable housing crisis, not drug addiction or mental illness.
Coming to a city near you.
It’s all over social media. They have no choice.
Wait until Typhoid breaks out.
Poop-A-Roni the San Francisco treat.
Oh look everybody, NPR chimed in...
“... victims of an affordable housing crisis...”
We had neighbors that got hit with a huge rent increase on their rental house. It went from $1,400 a month to $2,600 a month. They ended up buying their “dream home” a few years earlier than they wanted. About 30 miles farther out of the city. Pre-built house on 4 acres, half of it is fenced, a 60’x60’ work garage with tall doors for his work truck, several other out-buildings, etc.
I’m guessing that most folks that can afford the rents around here (Seattle) in the first place probably won’t end up homeless. Although I have read in the papers of a few of them. But I’m guessing they aren’t the type to poop on the sidewalk.
Some of the younger high-tech folks have vans or box-trucks and park at the campus and use the campus gym for showers.
Heck - I knew a 20-something that had made a bunch of money in the oil-fields and paid off his college loans and still has a bunch in savings. Summers he does trail work for the forest service and does climbing. Winters he’s a ski bum and works at the resorts. Spring and fall he parks cars at a fancy downtown hotel. He lives out of his car spring-fall. “The forest work we’re out anyways. At the hotel, I get to use the gym showers and get a great breakfast at half-price! But yeah - in another year I’ll go and get my Masters. But I figure I’m in my prime for skiing and climbing now.”
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