A multi-story beige and tan apartment building on a sunny day, with parked cars along the street and several people gathered near the entrance.
5/22/2025 Julian & 15th streets. Mark Garcia (bottom left) walks back into Friendship House after fire drill. Photo by Jose A. Velazquez

At 15th and Julian streets on Thursday morning, a large group of people gathered on the sidewalk under the shade of a large apartment building.

A woman wearing a construction vest uttered, through a bullhorn, the first and last names of residents from Friendship House. Members of the crowd said, “Here” one by one as their names were read aloud.

A man, who did not want to be identified, stood in the patio area of his Julian Avenue home; he had no idea what was going on. The man, wearing a baseball cap and surgical mask, was waiting for a social worker. 

“It’s just a fire drill,” explained Mark Garcia, who has been a chef at the indigenous-lead addiction treatment center Friendship House for the last 14 years. 

Garcia, for his part, said the police presence near the plaza has helped the situation on 16th Street. But he’d like the city to do more to help the unhoused community in the area. “They need to pay more attention to the homeless. They have to make it easier for people to get help,” said Garcia, before walking back into the building with the large group. 

The Julian Avenue resident looking over the crowd said that the situation on Julian Avenue has gotten a bit worse in recent days, but that “it’s mainly people wandering around.”

The San Francisco Police Department’s mobile command unit has now been parked at the southwest plaza for 73 days, and this neighbor at least said he’s noticed a difference.

“Where the dollar store used to be, there’s always people hanging around,” he said, pointing to the northeast BART plaza at 16th and Mission streets, before his social worker arrived.

Weise and Caledonia streets were both quiet today. Julian Avenue had a couple of people waiting outside the Kailash Hotel, a single-room occupancy hotel that has become the source of neighbors’ ire and has a long history of complaints.

But there wasn’t too much foot traffic. On Capp Street, a small group of people on the right side were huddled around together, smoking.

At the northeast plaza, things were fairly quiet, too. Some people gathered around the plaza. A woman sitting in a chair looked on as people came up from the BART station. A large group of people waited for the 14-Mission bus headed toward downtown. At the corner of the plaza, two women sitting in chairs faced in the direction of the mobile command unit.

At the southwest plaza, the situation was even more quiet. Two SFPD vehicles accompanied the mobile command unit. There was a steady group of people who came out of the BART station and headed towards the Muni stop. A single food vendor waited by herself as people and traffic passed her by going in both directions.

A police car and a mobile command vehicle are parked near the 16th St Mission BART station in an urban area on a sunny day.
5/22/2025 southwest 16th Street Plaza. Two SFPD patrol units alongside Mobile Command Two. Photo by Jose A. Velazquez.
A narrow urban alleyway lined with metal barricades, graffiti-covered walls, and a yellow building on the left under a clear blue sky.
5/22/2025 Wiese Street. The street is empty, with police barricades on both sides of the sidewalk. Photo by Jose A. Velazquez.
Narrow urban alley with graffiti-covered walls, a "No Parking Any Time" sign, overhead wires, trash bins, and some debris scattered on the ground under bright daylight.
5/22/2025 Caledonia Street. One person on the right is laying down with a blanket over themselves. Photo by Jose A. Velazquez.
Cars parked along a sunny city street lined with multi-story buildings; a person stands with bags near the sidewalk on the left.
5/22/2025 Julian Avenue, Eastside. Person with luggage looking through his belongings. Photo by Jose A. Velazquez.
A sunny urban street with parked cars, a beige building on the left, and leafy trees lining the right side of the road.
5/22/2025 Julian Avenue westside. Cars parked along both sides of the street, people in the distance headed in the direction of 16th Street. Photo by Jose A. Velazquez.
A white SUV waits at a crosswalk on a sunny day at an urban intersection with buildings, power lines, and clear blue sky.
5/22/2025 Capp Street. Car passes through the street. Photo by Jose A. Velazquez.

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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.

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7 Comments

  1. “They need to pay more attention to the homeless,”

    Hey Mission Local, did you know San Francisco spends nearly $2 billion a year on homeless people? No? You should read a newspaper sometime.

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    1. Pedro — 

      Your inability to parse a quote of a man on the street in a news article and the editorial voice of the paper is disturbing. More disturbing still, you felt comfortable memorializing this and writing a condescending bit of “advice” to us.

      Thanks for reading.

      JE

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  2. Ppl are so fed up. The city’s being sued cause a tenant in her bldg set fire to her dog and it set bldg on fire. City was supposedly negligent allowing dog. Yet, as landlord try and legally exclude a tenants dog from living in bldg, won’t happen. Extreme policies mean prop. Owners aren’t going to try and why should they when they are always the enemy in the city’s eyes?

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    1. Sounds rough, Ray. I don’t know how landlords survive in this commie state with its socialist Prop 13 and Costa=Hawkins provisions. Conditions being so awful for landlords, they might consider selling their properties and looking for other investment opportunities (crypto is all the rage..).

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  3. Hey

    How about providing the same coverage to Lower Polk and Larkin?

    Come and visit .
    Report the daily suffering and tradegy there .
    Drug dens on every block.
    Addicts out of their minds harming themselves 24/7.
    That area is run by drug activity .
    Unbelievable
    Coverage would help those on the street and the neighborhood there which is a no go zone and unsafe.

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  4. For 40 + years San Francisco has been ‘helping’ vagrants destroy the city. San Francisco ‘progressives’ are now known worldwide for their expertise in urban destruction. Nobody does it better. Maybe just a few more billion will finish the job?

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