Two individuals at a protest, one holding a megaphone and the other holding a sign with "No" visible. Both wear casual clothing and stand in front of a building with steps.
A speaker rallies the crowd at a Coalition on Homelessness protest on the steps of City Hall on August 22, 2024. Photo by Io Yeh Gilman

City Hall may have outflanked a planned protest by homeless rights advocates on Thursday, according to organizers who were readying a rally during a scheduled encampment sweep at Sixth and Jessie streets today. 

When organizers with the Coalition of Homelessness, a group that advocates for unhoused people in San Francisco, showed up in the SoMa at 11:30 a.m., they found that the city had already completed the sweep. The sweep had originally been scheduled for 1:30 p.m., according to a city schedule.  

Not a single person from San Francisco Public Works remained on site, though a few tents had already been set up again. The Coalition wanted to draw attention to โ€œhuman rights abusesโ€ and pressure the city into stopping them. 

Organizers speculated that the city had swept the area early to avoid encountering the protesters โ€” the rally time and location had been advertised to press earlier this week. 

โ€œThey really didnโ€™t want people seeing what happens,โ€ said the Coalitionโ€™s policy and communications director, Julian Highsmith.   

โ€œThe city is avoiding bad media as much as they’re avoiding helping homeless people,โ€ added River Beck, a human-rights organizer with the Coalition. 

On Friday, Kristin Hogan, a spokesperson with the Department of Emergency Management, said there had been an “unrelated operation” on the block earlier that day, but that the encampment clearing schedule had not changed. She said the city’s homeless outreach teams conducted their regularly scheduled activities.

“The 1 p.m. [operation] did take place,” she said. “They were there until at least 1:50. They were still there when the rally had already been located.”

In July, Mayor London Breed promised that the city would conduct โ€œvery aggressiveโ€ encampment sweeps in August following the U.S. Supreme Court Grants Pass ruling, which allowed cities to conduct sweeps without offers of shelter. 

Breed said the city would still offer shelter before dismantling encampments, and that the goal of the sweeps was to make life โ€œso uncomfortable on the streets of San Francisco that they have to take our offer.โ€

During the sweeps, city officials have thrown away homeless peopleโ€™s belongings, and have encouraged homeless people to leave San Francisco by giving them bus tickets. Mission Local documented several encampment clearings in the Mission and Bayview, finding that some homeless people were arrested, and that residents returned to their old haunts after just a few days. 

Homelessness has become a staple of the campaign trail ahead of the November election. Breed has promised a tougher hand with those living on the streets, saying that the city will still lead with โ€œcompassion,โ€ but that repeated refusals to take shelter may result in arrest.

Most of her opponents have seized on a perceived lack of action towards encampments, saying the mayor had the power to aggressively clear tents well before the Supreme Court ruling. Board of Supervisors President Aaron Peskin, for his part, has taken a different stance and, on Tuesday, put out a plan that emphasized โ€œshelter, not sweeps.โ€

Highsmith, of the Coalition on Homelessness, saw Breedโ€™s enforcement plan as an election strategy. โ€œIt’s kind of just saying, โ€˜Hey, look, we cleaned the streets, we cleaned the sidewalks, we’re doing our job. Re-elect me,โ€™โ€ he said.  

On Thursday, after learning their original location had already been swept, the Coalition decided to relocate its protest to City Hall, toting their signs and a banner with a spoofed court order for Breed. They rallied a crowd of around 20 people on the front steps, shouting slogans like โ€œSweeps kill, housing heals.โ€ Three speakers from the Coalition demanded that the sweeps stop. 

โ€œThis is San Francisco. This is what should be the moral epicenter of the United States. People from all over the country come to San Francisco for a sanctuary city,โ€ said Beck. โ€œThis should be a safe place for everybody on the sidewalks.โ€

Protesters holding signs outside a building. Signs read "FINE EMPTY HOMES," "SWEEPS KILL," "STREET SWEEPS THAT VIOLATE HUMAN RIGHTS & PERPETUATE HOMELESSNESS," and "HOUSING NOT HANDCUFFS.
Protestors hold a banner with a spoofed court order for Breed on the steps of City Hall at a rally organized by the Coalition on Homelessness on August 22, 2024. Photo by Io Yeh Gilman.

Shortly after the speeches ended, a duo from Skywatchers, a group that creates performances inspired by the concerns of Tenderloin residents, read a poem with musical elements and sang a song with the crowd. 

โ€œYour encampment resolution sounds like โ€˜Final solution,โ€™ treating people like pollution,โ€ they read, referencing the Nazi extermination plan. They ended the poem by chanting โ€œThere will be revolutionโ€ with the crowd. 

As the rally wrapped up after about half an hour, the Coalition on Homeless speakers emphasized that, though things had not gone to plan this time, they would continue protesting until the city ends its sweeps. 

For Highsmith, sweeps are not a real solution to homelessness, because they just temporarily move people to shelters, rather than finding them permanent housing. โ€œThings might look clean on the surface, but weโ€™re not really solving the issue,โ€ he said. 

Still, despite the criticism of Breed, Highsmith emphasized that ultimately Coalition on Homelessness hopes to work with City Hall on homelessness.

โ€œWe don’t see the city as an enemy, but as someone that we want to hold accountable to keeping San Franciscans safe and housed,โ€ he said.


This piece has been updated with comments from the Department of Emergency Management.

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Io covers city hall and is a part of Report for America, which supports journalists in local newsrooms. She was born and raised in San Francisco and previously reported on the city while working for her high school newspaper, The Lowell. Io studied the history of science at Harvard and wrote for The Harvard Crimson.

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8 Comments

  1. Glad to see the city accomplishing something! Keep up the good work. Most of us fully support these homeless sweeps. It’s what we have been begging for.

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  2. Final solution!๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿ˜‚these “people” are truly entitled and sick. We must aggressively move them out of the city and make sure they stay out of the bay. No one has the right to impose their filth and themselves on public streets streets taxpayers paid to maintain. No one owes these parasites anything they are not owed a thing.

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  3. Pro-homelessness activists have been at the forefront of this city’s decline. It is sadly unsurprising that they would have the gall to compare any action to make the city a more liveable place to the literal Holocaust. It is just more proof that their only concern is the ability to act sanctimonious towards others rather than any actual improvement or solution

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  4. So many people and organizations fight for the homeless but who fights for the children of San Francisco? If we d9nt prioritize our children some will become our next generation of hostesses.

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  5. Keep up the good work! I donโ€™t think these protesters understand what the opinion of the average San Franciscan is.

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