Current:Home > MyTerrified residents of San Francisco’s Tenderloin district sue for streets free of drugs, tents -TradeWise
Terrified residents of San Francisco’s Tenderloin district sue for streets free of drugs, tents
View
Date:2025-04-12 21:41:46
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Two hotels and several residents of San Francisco’s troubled Tenderloin district sued the city on Thursday, alleging it is using the neighborhood as a containment zone for rampant illegal drug use and other vices, making residents terrified to leave their homes and businesses unable to recruit staff.
Plaintiffs do not seek monetary damages, according to the complaint filed in federal court. Instead, they want officials to clear sidewalks of illegal drug dealers and fentanyl users, violent behavior and tent encampments and to treat the Tenderloin as it would any other neighborhood where crime is not tolerated.
They say city officials have allowed such behavior to flourish in the area — and not spill into other neighborhoods — by refusing to keep sidewalks clear for people using walkers or wheelchairs and failing to ban sidewalk vending, among other acts of omission.
“They demand an end to the rampant illegal street vending, and from the squalor and misery that exists throughout their neighborhood because the city has decided that people in the throes of addiction can live and die on the Tenderloin’s streets,” said Matt Davis, one of the attorneys, in a prepared statement.
The Tenderloin has long troubled city leaders, including Mayor London Breed, who declared an emergency in the district and twice vowed crackdowns on drugs. She is in a tough reelection contest in November, when she faces three serious challengers who say her administration has failed to address homelessness, encampments or the open-air drug market.
Breed’s office said the recently approved Proposition E, which she put on the ballot, will bring more officers and resources to the neighborhood, including surveillance cameras.
“We have made improvements in the neighborhood, but the mayor understands the frustrations of residents and businesses in the Tenderloin and will continue her efforts to make the neighborhood safer and cleaner,” the statement read.
Her office cited a court injunction from a 2022 lawsuit filed by homeless people and their advocates against the city that Breed and other officials say limits their ability to dismantle encampments.
The judge in that case ordered city officials to stop forcing homeless people from public camping sites unless they have been offered appropriate shelter indoors. The issue is pending before the U.S. Supreme Court.
There are five anonymous plaintiffs in Thursday’s lawsuit along with entities that operate the Phoenix Hotel and the Best Western Road Coach Inn.
They include Jane Roe, a married housekeeper with two young children who doesn’t make enough money to move. Drug dealers block the entrance to her building and she often sees “users openly injecting or smoking narcotics” and people on the ground “who appear unconscious or dead,” the complaint states. Her children can never be outside without a parent, she alleges.
Susan Roe is elderly and uses a walker, but shopping carts and broken down bicycles block the sidewalk, forcing her to step out into the busy street, according to the complaint. She also has to navigate around “excrement, used syringes, vomit and garbage.”
Operators of the Phoenix Hotel said a hotel employee was struck in the head when they asked a trespasser to leave the parking lot and its restaurant has been unable to recruit a qualified chef because of street conditions.
The same lawyers on Thursday also filed a new motion on behalf of College of the Law, San Francisco, demanding that city officials reduce the number of tents in the Tenderloin, as they had pledged to do to settle a lawsuit over street conditions filed by the school in May 2020. The city initially showed “significant success,” the motion states, but has since lost ground.
veryGood! (21)
Related
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Anyone who used Facebook in the last 16 years can now get settlement money. Here's how.
- Investigators dig up Long Island killings suspect Rex Heuermann's backyard with excavator
- 'Wait Wait' for Jan. 7, 2023: Happy New Year with Mariska Hargitay!
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Wisconsin drops lawsuit challenging Trump-era border wall funding
- Shop Summer Essentials at the Nordstrom Anniversary Sale 2023 for Sandals, Sunglasses, Shorts & More
- DeSantis uninjured in car accident in Tennessee, campaign says
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Russia warns of tough retaliatory measures after Ukraine claims attack on Moscow
Ranking
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Hugh Carter Jr., the cousin who helped organize Jimmy Carter’s ‘Peanut Brigade,’ has died
- 10 years later, the 'worst anthem' singer is on a Star-Spangled redemption tour
- Investigators dig up Long Island killings suspect Rex Heuermann's backyard with excavator
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Biden honors Emmett Till and his mother with new national monument
- 23-year-old Clemson student dead after Rolling Loud concert near Miami
- Court says OxyContin maker’s bankruptcy and protections for Sackler family members can move ahead
Recommendation
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
Serving house music history with Honey Dijon
Adam Rich, former 'Eight Is Enough' child star, dies at 54
Baltimore Won’t Expand a Program to Help Residents Clean up After Sewage Backups
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Indonesian ferry capsizes, leaving at least 15 people dead and 19 others missing
No, Alicia Keys' brother didn't date Emma Watson. 'Claim to Fame' castoff Cole sets record straight.
Here are nine NYC shows we can't wait to see this spring