A group of people pose in front of the D10 Community Market entrance; some wear matching "SF Hip Hop" shirts.
5/31/2025 Mayor Daniel Lurie stands in front of D10 Market on Third St. Along with the founders of Hip Hop SF. Kamel Jacot-Bell (left) and Alex Aquino (right).

On Saturday afternoon, a group of about 50 people gathered in front of Nineteen21, a restaurant and lounge at 1701 Yosemite St. in the Bayview neighborhood for Walk The Block SF.

It was an event organized by SF Hip Hop, a nonprofit organization dedicated to celebrating the Bay Area’s contribution to the hip-hop music genre, locally and around the world.

Kamel Jacot-Bell of San Francisco, along with Alex Aquino, started SF Hip Hop a year ago. This was the first Walk The Block SF event in Bayview-Hunters Point. “We wanted to do something impactful in the community,” said Jacot-Bell. “We want to celebrate the neighborhood and support local businesses.”  

Walk The Block promotes health awareness, safety, and unity in San Francisco neighborhoods. It’s an opportunity for people to get outside, get to know their neighbors and support local businesses in the area. The event Saturday stretched about a mile down Third Street. A mix of young and old participants made stops at local small businesses to shop, gather and socialize. 

Mayor Daniel Lurie arrived around 1 p.m.; he listened to a rendition of “Lift Every Voice” by participants and joined in a group prayer before making the walk up Third Street. Lurie said he joined the walk to support the Bayview community. 

“The energy on this walk, the leadership, this is what every community needs, and Bayview has it,” Lurie said. The mayor said that he enjoyed some good barbecue and sugar cookies during the community walk. He took one last group picture with organizers and participants at Third and Quesada streets before heading out.

The sugar cookies the mayor raved about are from Yvonne’s Southern Sweets at 5128 Third St. The owner, Yvonne Hines, is a lifelong resident; her grandparents moved here in the 1940s to work in the Hunters Point Shipyard. 

Two trays of cookies wrapped in clear plastic are displayed on a turquoise patterned tablecloth, with a blurred indoor background.
Sugar cookies on metal tray. Yvonne’s Southern Sweets on Third Street. Photo by Jose A. Velazquez.

“I’m able to represent my culture through my award-winning Southern sweets,” she said. “I’m around my people. I love it. I love the Bayview.” Hines’ small, warm bakery is adorned with awards and pictures of the Hines family with former mayors London Breed and Ed Lee.

Monique Hayes, the owner of Lets Eat BBQ & More, also got high praise from Mayor Lurie. Hayes opened the restaurant with her husband, “Mr. Lee,” in 2011. Hayes said that she took a break after the death of her husband in 2019, along with the ordeal of the COVID-19 pandemic. She reopened the restaurant on Valentine’s Day this year.

“It was our anniversary. I didn’t even realize it,” Hayes said with a smile. She said it’s been a roller coaster owning a business in the neighborhood.  

Framed photo on a dark wall showing a smiling man in a hat holding drumsticks, with the name "MR. LEE" in large white letters at the bottom.
Picture of “Mr. Lee” inside of Lets eat BBQ & More. On Third St. Photo by Jose A. Velazquez.

“But I love my community. I love my people. We have to get people in the community to support community businesses,” said Hayes. She said she was hopeful that the Walk The Block SF event would help bring people together in the neighborhood.

Hayes, who has lived in here for the last 30 years, says she’s excited about the next generation of entrepreneurs coming from the neighborhood. 

One of those entrepreneurs is Dontaye Ball. A neighborhood local, he is the owner of Gumbo Social on Third Street. He began his business as a pop-up side hustle and committed full-time after losing his job during the pandemic. Ball opened Gumbo Social’s brick-and-mortar restaurant at 5176 Third St. almost two years ago in his childhood neighborhood.

A crowd gathers outside a storefront with the sign "GUMBO SOCIAL" at 5176; people are talking, taking photos, and holding signs in daylight.
Dontaye Ball speaks to the crowd and Mayor Daniel Lurie in front of Gumbo Social. 5176 Third St. Photo by Jose A. Velazquez.

“It’s a place where, if you can capture the mind, soul and hearts of the community, folks will support you,” said Ball on his decision to open a business here.

Residents, activists and organizers took over the entire sidewalk on a sunny day in San Francisco. Among them was Kevin Epps, the executive editor of San Francisco Bayview newspaper and the filmmaker behind “Straight Outta Hunters Point.” Epps said that he hoped today’s event would introduce people to what Bayview Hunters Point truly is.

“What better way to be introduced to the community,” he said. “It’s not what you heard, or what is posted on the Citizen app. It’s really love out here.” The event culminated with a block party at the historic Bayview Opera House, with food, music and entertainment. 

This was the second Walk The Block SF event. The first took place in the Fillmore. The organizers of SF Hip Hop plan to expand the event to more neighborhoods soon. Their next event will be the July 19, SF Hip Hop Festival at the Midway at 900 Marin St.

Two men stand in front of a "Walk the Block" banner; both wear black "SF Hip Hop" shirts and face the camera outside a building.
The founders of SF Hip Hop. Alex Aquino (left), Kamel Jacot-Bell (right). Photo by Jose A. Velazquez.
A group of people gathers on a street corner near a café to listen to a speaker in traditional attire under a traffic light on a sunny day.
Participants stood in front of Nineteen21 on Third Street. A prayer was said before the community walk began. Photo by Jose A. Velazquez.
A group of people gathers around several parked cars in a sunny outdoor lot, with more cars and buildings visible in the background.
Mayor Daniel Lurie met with people at a car meet in the parking lot of the now closed Walgreens on Williams and Third streets. Photo by Jose A. Velazquez.
Mayor Daniel Lurie spoke to music artist Jordan “Stunnaman02” Gomes on Third Street. The mayor was a fan of Gomes’ organic juice. Photo by Jose A. Velazquez.

Follow Us

Reporting from Bayview-Hunters Point. I grew up on 24th and York Street and attended Buena Vista Elementary. As a teenager, I moved to Hunters Point and went to school in Potrero Hill. I'm currently a student at UC Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism. I've developed a toxic relationship with golf.

Join the Conversation

2 Comments

  1. If the mayor wants to do right by the community then he can pass the Peoples’ Budget that rejects SFPD funding for $90 million in overtime, fights Airbnb’s lawsuit against the city to dodge its taxes, and increases funding for the public defender’s office.

    +3
    -1
    votes. Sign in to vote
  2. Great echo of reality in your telling,

    Lurie listens and he’s just 46.

    Don’t forget that as a college student with a range of candidates to choose from amongst the Presidential Hopefuls, he chose Bill Bradley.

    Let’s Elect our Police Chief, Mr. Mayor and give the People the Choice ?

    Jose, I taught at Potrero Hill Middle School for a couple of exciting years in the mid-nineties and I still run into former students buying and selling stuff off sidewalks and not those exploited cosmetics fences.

    Yeah, I grew up on the slum streets in St. Louis and business districts that cater to Tourists are supposed to be active and all great cities have districts where everything from forged passports to sex and drugs and some Jesus Christ …

    In San Francisco that’s always been 16th and Mission in the 45 years I’ve roamed this University of Life City that never stops teaching people like David Talbot.

    And, Joe Eskenazi.

    Welcome to my Simulation, Jose !

    go Niners !!

    h.

    0
    -2
    votes. Sign in to vote
Leave a comment
Please keep your comments short and civil. Do not leave multiple comments under multiple names on one article. We will zap comments that fail to adhere to these short and easy-to-follow rules.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *