Several people sit or lie on a city sidewalk near a building with a colorful mural and storefront windows, with clothing and personal belongings nearby.
2:30 p.m 6/15, west side of Mission Street, Photo by Lydia Chávez


You can see all of our 16th Street posts here.

The Mobile Unit Two had not returned to the southwest plaza at 2 p.m. Sunday, but it was hard to say that it mattered.

Unpermitted vending and drug use, as it does every weekend day and often during the week, boomed on the west side of Mission Street and spilled over onto the side streets.

Both vending and drug use thrive, despite the block being home to an early childhood development center and families who live at the 100 percent affordable housing complex, La Fenix at 1950 Mission St.

One father, who walked out of La Fenix on Sunday with his daughter, said he wants out of the complex managed by Bridge Housing. Bridge, he said, is helping him find a new unit elsewhere. He was not happy with their management at La Fenix.

“They have community meetings, but I don’t feel like they do anything,” he said. “The security guards don’t watch the door and I’m tired of hearing people fornicate in the alley.”

He’s ready to move on.

It is surprising how many children, just walking by after a shopping trip or needing to get home, have to navigate the block.

Southwest Plaza and the west side of Mission Street

  • People wait at a bus stop and socialize in a city plaza with murals, palm trees, and buildings in the background under a clear sky.
  • A man photographs another person sitting on the sidewalk near a storefront, while pedestrians walk by and cars are parked along the street.
  • People are selling food and household items on a city sidewalk; some are sitting, while others stand under a blue umbrella. Goods are spread out on blankets and bags.
  • People set up food and groceries for sale on the sidewalk in an urban area; some are standing and others are seated nearby.
  • A person rides an electric scooter past a person lying on the sidewalk and items displayed on cardboard, including a keyboard, nail polish, and a cricket bat.
  • People are gathered on a city sidewalk near parked cars. Belongings are scattered, and a person sits on the ground reading and eating, surrounded by bags and personal items.
  • A person stands near a sidewalk display of various power tools and equipment laid out on a cloth at an outdoor market.
  • A group of people gather on a city sidewalk with bikes, belongings, and scattered items; some are sitting or standing near a tree and building.
  • Two people sit on a city sidewalk near bags and belongings; one plays a guitar while the other reaches toward the guitar player with a small object in hand.
  • People selling clothes and various items on a city sidewalk; pedestrians and buildings are visible in the background.
  • People stand and sit with belongings along a city sidewalk in front of a building labeled "California Savings." Some items and carts are scattered along the curb.
  • A crowd of people stands in line on a city sidewalk beside parked cars and buildings on a sunny day.

Northeast Plaza and the east side of Mission Street

  • Several people sit or lie on a city sidewalk next to a mural-covered wall, while a person with a purple backpack stands nearby under a tree.
  • People are sitting on benches and standing in an urban plaza with palm trees, graffiti, and buildings visible in the background under a clear blue sky.

Caledonia Street

  • A person sits on a chair under a tree's shade on a city sidewalk near a street with cars and red bus lanes.
  • A narrow urban alleyway with graffiti-covered walls, a chain-link fence, and a beige building on the left; trees and signs are visible in the background.
  • A narrow urban alleyway with graffiti-covered walls, metal fencing on the left, and utility lines overhead on a clear, sunny day.

Julian Street and 15th Street

  • A person with a shopping cart stands by a building on a city sidewalk; parked cars line the street on a sunny day.
  • Several people stand and sit on a city sidewalk next to scattered belongings, a bicycle, and blankets, with parked cars and buildings in the background.
  • A city sidewalk lined with trees and parked cars, featuring a metal fence on the left and a utility box on the right; sunlight creates dappled shadows on the pavement.

Wiese Street

  • A narrow alley with graffiti-covered walls, metal barricades along the sides, and several people gathered or sitting in the distance. Trash is scattered on the ground.

Capp Street

  • A city intersection with yellow crosswalk lines, a red building on the right, white buildings on the left, and clear blue sky overhead.
  • A person with long gray hair crosses a city street at a crosswalk; the traffic light is green and a white car waits at the intersection.
  • A sidewalk with a large utility box obstructing the path, alongside parked cars and buildings in an urban area on a sunny day.

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Founder/Executive Editor. I’ve been a Mission resident since 1998 and a professor emeritus at Berkeley’s J-school since 2019. I got my start in newspapers at the Albuquerque Tribune in the city where I was born and raised. Like many local news outlets, The Tribune no longer exists. I left daily newspapers after working at The New York Times for the business, foreign and city desks. Lucky for all of us, it is still here.

As an old friend once pointed out, local has long been in my bones. My Master’s Project at Columbia, later published in New York Magazine, was on New York City’s experiment in community boards.

At ML, I've been trying to figure out how to make my interest in local news sustainable. If Mission Local is a model, the answer might be that you - the readers - reward steady and smart content. As a thank you for that support we work every day to make our content even better.

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19 Comments

  1. Sad to mention but looks like the Mayor has simply moved on with the cleansing of San Francisco’$ major drug and stolen articles vending…Yes it was a good start but .. evidently the administration is now …..yawn ..getting sleepy,sleepy, where it goes maybe a miracle will take place ..yawn!

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      1. I can easily recall when the Mission District had no more than about one dozen homeless characters. The worst thing was weekend nights, when people would show up from outside the neighborhood, to act as if they controlled the street parking spaces, and would ask for a donation to look after your car when you were gone; leaving the impression that something might happen, if you didn’t pay something. Now, there isn’t nearly the same level of interests in the clubs, bars, cafes, and restaurants. However, there are one helluva lot more homeless. I wonder if there is some sort of correlation?

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  2. Whatever happened to all the opponents of the “monster in the mission”housing development that was stopped at the former Walgreens site?
    I can remember the plaza for decades was a perfectly decent area. Now I’m afraid to enter BART on that side and the other side isn’t much better.
    Yesterday afternoon a young man overdosed and was being given oxygen while a crowd silently looked on.
    I though how things might not have been l se chaotic had the lat monster mixed income developed hmbeen allowed to go forward but the “anti-gentrification”lobby won and now families are afraid to live in the “affordable housing”that was created instead.
    IInteresring playing out of the laws of unintended consequences.

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    1. The anti monster in mission folks got exactly what they wanted. This is good for lower home prices when junkies are visible on the street. They don’t want the area to get nicer as that would cause gentrification.

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    2. I saw a crew offering a guy emergency breathing, a device that was working his lungs, only, the electric pulse was so great that it looked like they were going to do serious damage to the organs. I mean, we all know how people naturally breath, and we know what very extremely pronounced and prolonged contortions look like when we see them.

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    3. One literally has nothing to do with the other except location proximity.

      You’re trying to make anti-gentrification responsible for mission homelessnes and drug abuse as if that’s how it actually works. The opposite is probably closer to being somewhat accurate but even that is inherently flawed logic. It’s two very different things going on and I guess human beings like to link things when making a political argument without actually researching it.

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      1. So you think if the monster in the mission was built, the junkies between 15-16th on mission would still be there?

        A shiny new building tends to clean things up around it. That is the benefit of gentrification.

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        1. One literally has nothing to do with the other.

          Conflating things is the hallmark of simple (political) minds that don’t care to explore reality as it actually is, but invent narratives that reinforce what they already thought entirely from scratch. AKA, what you are doing here now.

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  3. I am a 44 year old woman that is currently working at a navigation center it seems to me that the people that they are helping don’t want help they house them feed them pay for everything that they need and they continue to do drugs most of them end up dying they give them no type of counseling as a woman that works at a navigation center and is also homeless and can’t seem to get no type of help getting housed I was literally have to quit my job to get help seems backwards to me

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  4. The SFPD Station is two blocks away at Valencia & 17th: why aren’t the police foot-patrolling and just -walking- to 16 & Mission? Why all this mobile command business??

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  5. Lydia and Mayor Lurie who must read here,

    Hope he does anyway.

    Skippy and I circled the Armory area picking up trash and buying stolen items I guess from a variety of vendors.

    I buy mostly raw honey and coffee and used clothing plus beef jerky for Skippy.

    And, bracelets !!

    None this weekend as my friend and vendor wasn’t there and I still have enuff for the week I’m sure beyond the stuff I keep hanging for decor.

    I do the weave through the crowded vendors like I own the place.

    Imagine dragging a luggage cart holding a plastic laundry basket 3 feet high and a dog on a leash and I can’t believe I do this stuff.

    Anyway, there are lots and lots of bargains for things that aren’t stolen but simply used or outdated.

    I mean, who buys tools with cords on them anymore

    There are a hundred available on the street from various vendors who also have wonderful arrays of old hand tools and heavy duty used coats (got my army coat from one at 7 bucks a decade or more back) … the Street Vendors feed off of the crowd from the Weekend regular La Pigue Lita Flea Market in the parking lot just south of the armory and has more of the feel of an outdoor department store with the same people in the same area with varying sized spaces weekly and skippy and pick up trash as we move through there shopping too and after a decade I know pretty much all of the vendors cause I’m the talkative sort and your focus is trees and forest with you looking for everything illegal which misses the Living Life Experience it is just to walk past the collapsed junkies in their own filth lying next to a street kitchen vendor whose patrons sit close on the sidewalk and eat while ignoring the filth and junkies and Fenties who are entirely different tribes of ‘Narco Nomads’ you get to know while putting kitty litter on their shit.

    lol

    16th and Mission needs a Permanent Security Presence in a Koban style from the European models with one officer always in the Koban and the other two on rotating single officer foot patrols in radius of 2 blocks or so.

    Put a little stage next to the Cop Box and a podium for those wanting to share poetry or their love of the good book.

    go Niners !!

    h.

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  6. I’m tired of hearing people fornicate in the alley.’
    You all should be used to it now because it’s not going to get better any time soon.
    Haha. Sorry.

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    1. I live two blocks from 16th & Mission and walk through all the alleys unafraid with hundreds of dollars in my pocket and I never see any of the horrors that I hear about, including anybody fornicating in alleys.

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  7. You and yours are a great community. 2 things stand out, closed stores for mixed use and few places for creative arts by the people.

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  8. It’s relatively simple. Please forgive me if my tone is immodest or is dismissive. If you want to move junkies and many of the vendors, you gotta move the Hondos. The Hondos are actually quite reasonable. Well, the one’s over age 20. Relocate them and the crowd will follow. Trying to eliminate it totally is futile and is foolish.

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