Marc Garcia: 1954–2015

On October 1, the Coalition on Homelessness and the Street Sheet lost a vital member of our community, Marc Garcia. Marc was unfailingly kind, and consistently righteous. Marc was a behind-the-scenes, never-in-the-limelight but vital part of our organizing and community.

Marc started with us more then a decade ago, volunteering with the Right to a Roof workgroup—a group comprised mostly of homeless people who were working on improving conditions in San Francisco’s then-brutal shelters,

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SRO Census Released

by Louise Andersen

Single-room occupancy hotels are one of the last remaining affordable housing options for San Francisco’s most vulnerable and low-income residents. In the SROs live families with children, immigrants, victims of domestic violence, the elderly, and individuals with special needs or disabilities, as well as a large number of people working hard but unable to afford decent housing.

The SRO Families United Collaborative—which is an organization placed in four different neighborhoods in San Francisco: Chinatown,

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Bell v. Boise Dismissed: What Now for Camping Bans?

On October 2, Judge Ronald E. Bush of the U.S. District Court for the District of Idaho dismissed the controversial Bell v. Boise suit after an epic, six-year journey from the lower courts to the Ninth Circuit and back. The dismissal means that, for the moment, the City of Boise remains free to enforce a ban on camping in public places.

Anti-camping laws are ubiquitous in the United States, and are especially so in the West,

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Why I Feel So Good

by Lilian Rine

I have two jobs: One is I sell Street Sheet at Rainbow. My second job is baby-sitting two dogs at nighttime until 6 a.m.

When I get depressed, I think about my deceased husband. That’s when I get sad. Then I go to work. That helps me forget all my troubles.

When I work, I have fun. That’s true for both jobs.

I will never forget him.

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Double Whammy Against Criminalization: HUD Joins DOJ in Condemnation

by the Western Regional Advocacy Project

On August 6, the Department of Justice (DOJ) released a statement of interest expressing opposition to the criminalization of homelessness in a Boise, Idaho anti-camping case (see “Bell v. Boise,” this page). More recently, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) released its guidelines for “Continuums of Care”—consortiums vying for a share of the $1.9 billion in homelessness assistance funding. HUD will now require applicants to explain how their communities are combatting the criminalization of homelessness,

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Battle of the Panels

by Judith Klintbol & Stine Dieckmann

On the last day of September, the Western Regional Advocacy Project—a network of West Coast homeless people’s organizations, including the Coalition on Homelessness—organized an action against Business Improved Districts (also known as BIDs), which are geographically defined business areas that tax all buildings in the zone, including government entities and non-profits, but then only allow property owners, most of them large corporations, to decide what to do with the money.

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Yes on F: Protections as (Not) Seen on TV

by TJ Johnston

The ballot proposition to regulate short-term housing rentals will turn neighbors against each other, fuel frivolous lawsuits and publicize your private information.

Or, at least those are the images of Orwellian surveillance and compromised privacy conjured from the No on Prop F campaign’s slick TV commercials. To keep the San Francisco measure from passing on November 3, hosting platform Airbnb is digging deep into its $8.5 million war chest and filling the airwaves—and voters’ minds—with dystopian visions.

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The 411 on 311

This shouldn’t even be news. But in San Francisco, anything touching homeless people, no matter how banal—do they have cell phones? what if we gave them dogs? what do uninformed tech con men or finance writers think should happen?—automatically becomes news. So news it became: 311 added a new category in its SF311 app: The first category for complaints in the app is now “Homeless Concerns.” The possible types of concern are: “Well-Being Check (Non-Emergency),” “Aggressive Behavior (Non-Emergency),” “Encampment,” “Clean Up –

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No on D: No to the Corporate Give-Away

In the midst of a severe housing crisis that is tossing people out of their homes, driving up the numbers of people experiencing homelessness, and depleting the diversity of this great city, our baseball team is developing City-owned land near the ballpark for mostly high-end housing, office buildings, and keeping some open space.

Proposition D, “Mission Rock,” is asking voters to decide the fate of the development because they are proposing to increase the height limit on 10 acres from one story to a range of between 40 to 240 feet along the waterfront.

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Social Margins in the Center of the Page: Collaborative Releases Census, Report on Families in Residential Hotels

In the midst of affluence, San Francisco is facing severe disparities among its residents, with large numbers of people working hard but unable to afford decent housing. A rapidly growing number of families are suffering while trapped in ever disappearing substandard housing. Many of them find themselves barely surviving and living in inhumane conditions in residential hotels or Single Room Occupancy hotels (SROs), which are a last resort in a quickly gentrifying city.

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