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Operators of corner stores in the Tenderloin are outraged that San
Francisco officials may force them to close earlier as part of efforts to
fight the city's illegal drug markets. Smoke shops may also face tighter regulation.
New legislation from Supervisor Dean Preston would make it more difficult
to open smoke shops in the Tenderloin. Preston’s office says residents
believe such businesses facilitate late-night illegal behavior.
Meanwhile, conversations are reportedly taking place behind closed doors between Mayor London Breed and other city officials about a proposal to
limit the hours of operation for some stores in the neighborhood.
The city has cracked down on drug activity since last spring, making
thousands of arrests and finding some success in cleaning up the
Tenderloin's streets during the day. But nighttime drug dealing and
illegal vending persist.
Much of this late-night activity tends to congregate around stores that
sell snacks, drinks and—more notably—pipes and torches used to smoke
drugs. At least three of these businesses are open 24/7; others are open
until 2 or 3 a.m.
‘The problem is the drugs, not the stores’
Store owners and staff are furious about the proposals. They say the
problem is drugs, not their stores, many of which opened before the
fentanyl crisis hit San Francisco. Owners contend the neighborhood wasn’t exactly a utopia when they arrived.
Ameer Ahmed, who has worked at the Hyde & Turk Market for three years,
said he worries that such changes could endanger jobs. He called proposed
new regulations on businesses unfair, claiming they may worsen the neighborhood’s problems.
“The problem is the drugs, not the stores,” Ahmed said. “If I don’t have a
job, what do I do? I’d have to go to the street to make money.”
A few blocks away at New Princess Market, owner Willie Masarweh balked at
the ideas—especially considering the issues Tenderloin business owners
have dealt with.
Masarweh acknowledged that some stores stock their shelves with drug paraphernalia, potentially making them complicit in the crisis. However,
he said he still believes the answer isn’t to punish law-abiding business owners.
“If they came to my store and they saw my shelves were empty and selling nothing but a crack pipe, I’d understand,” Masarweh said. “But every drug addict is walking through the neighborhood with a torch and a pipe. If
those stores didn’t have the clients, they wouldn’t have the product.”
Masarweh noted that the city’s health department funds harm reduction
programs that provide people with drug paraphernalia. He gestured around
his shop, which closes at 2 a.m., pointing at groceries and other
necessities that fill the shelves.
“They’re going after retailers? What happens next?” he asked. “People are
going to walk 10,000 blocks to buy milk?”
Preston’s proposal has passed through the Planning Commission and will
soon be heard by the Board of Supervisors. But it still has to pass
through the board’s Land Use Committee and then garner a majority vote
from the full board before it becomes law.
The legislation would effectively bar new businesses in the neighborhood
from stocking more than 10% of their shelves with tobacco products—unless
they receive special authorization from the city, which is likely to be
costly and challenging to acquire. Similar restrictions are already in
place on Haight and Polk streets. Existing stores would be exempt from the
law.
Preston’s legislative aide, Li Lovett, confirmed that city officials,
including Breed, are holding separate conversations about restricting
hours of business for markets in the Tenderloin. But Lovett said those discussions are in the early stages.
“Businesses have been hurting, especially since the pandemic,” Lovett
said. “So that becomes a whole other set of considerations.”
Breed’s office wouldn’t confirm that such conversations are ongoing but
said in a statement that it’s “working on a multi-strategy coordination involving city departments and the Tenderloin community.”
“We must disrupt and remove the problematic night markets harming our neighborhoods,” Breed’s office said.
Randy Shaw, executive director of the Tenderloin Housing Clinic, said he supports Preston’s legislation—as well as restrictions on store
hours—because he believes the neighborhood is flooded with businesses that
are complicit in the drug trade.
“They open up these tobacco stores that end up being open 24 hours just to subsidize and help drug dealers,” Shaw said. “They just proliferated in
the last few years, and they don’t have any viable business except from
the dealers and the drug users.”
One notable example, Shaw said, is the Plaza Snacks & Deli shop in Civic Center. Most nights, people engaging in drug activity and selling stolen products crowd around the shop. At its front counter, the store
prominently displays torches and pipes used to smoke drugs.
A man working behind the counter, who identified himself only as Jay and
said he was an owner of Plaza Snacks & Deli, said Wednesday it was unfair
the city was blaming business owners such as himself for the street
crises.
“This area was not Hollywood before we opened the store,” he said. “Even
if we shut down, the people will still be there.”
https://sfstandard.com/2024/03/08/tenderloin-stores-close-drug-crisis/
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We live in a time where intelligent people are being silenced so that
stupid people won't be offended.
Durham Report: The FBI has an integrity problem. It has none.
No collusion - Special Counsel Robert Swan Mueller III, March 2019.
Officially made Nancy Pelosi a two-time impeachment loser.
Thank you for cleaning up the disaster of the 2008-2017 Obama / Biden
fiasco, President Trump.
Under Barack Obama's leadership, the United States of America became the
The World According To Garp. Obama sold out heterosexuals for Hollywood
queer liberal democrat donors.
President Trump boosted the economy, reduced illegal invasions, appointed dozens of judges and three SCOTUS justices.
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