XPost: alt.business, ca.politics, or.politics
XPost: talk.politics.guns
She's as dumb as Kamala and sucked as many penises too.
San Francisco Mayor Breed is announcing new legislation to put a curfew in
a section of the Tenderloin district, a part of the city that is notorious
for high crime, homelessness and public drug use.
In a post on X, Breed touted the measure.
"Shutting down open air drug markets requires strong enforcement and new approaches," she wrote. "Last year SFPD doubled the arrests of drug
dealers from the year before. This year we are continuing that work and
federal agents are bringing even more enforcement."
In a press statement from Tuesday, the Mayor's office revealed that it
would introduce legislation to "prohibit some retail establishments
selling prepacked food or tobacco products from operating between 12 a.m. (midnight) to 5 a.m. in part of the Tenderloin."
The proposal has been met with mixed responses from police, business
owners and residents of San Francisco.
"Our challenges still occur at night," Assistant Chief David Lazar told
KTVU in an interview. "Crowds of people that are there selling stolen
property, selling narcotics. We have drug users all over. And the problem
is that when you have businesses that are open, like liquor stores and
smoke shops, it just attracts more people."
A local restaurant manager, Tim Benson, told the outlet that a curfew may
help the neighborhood deal with crime.
"The police have been much more active, [Department of Public Works] has
been out helping the cleanup effort," said Benson. "But, it seems to be
mostly a daytime issue. And at nighttime, it's sort of still a wild, wild west."
CHINESE AMERICANS TURN ON SAN FRANCISCO DEMOCRATS OVER CRIME, EDUCATION:
WSJ
"The reason why we want it to stay open is because we have to make more
money to pay rent, to pay bills, phone bills, internet bills, and we have employees," an anonymous store worker told KTVU.
"We have extra security because of the area," the worker said.
A local San Francisco resident told the outlet that the curfew plan
wouldn't "work at all" because "people are still homeless and they're
still out here all night long, so the markets don't really have anything
to do with the crime."
The San Francisco Police Department did not respond to a request for
comment from Fox News Digital.
https://www.foxnews.com/media/san-francisco-mayor-breed-proposes-business- curfew-reduce-rampant-drug-use-crime
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