A black dog with one blue eye and one brown eye rests its head on the window ledge of a vehicle, looking outside.
A dog looks out the window of an RV parked near 16th and Mission streets on Aug. 16, 2025. Photo by Abigail Van Neely.

Gambit was left tied up at the 16th Street BART plaza five months ago with a note, in Spanish, and a copy of his veterinary records. He was rescued by a plaza regular, and now spends afternoons with him people-watching on the corner of 16th and Valencia. 

Gambit, a tan pitbull who is built like a tyrannosaurus rex, is still “angry,” about this past betrayal, his new guardian said. Pets from strangers are ill-advised. But Gambit snuggles his owner, keeping watch, whenever they sleep on the beds provided by the Gubbio Project. And when someone on the street tried to steal Gambit, his owner said, the dog found his way back. 

A man in a brown leather jacket holds a photo of himself and his dog while sitting outdoors, with his dog wearing a harness in the foreground.
Gambit and his owner, who carries around a photo of them together, on Aug. 16, 2025. Photo by Abigail Van Neely.

Many people who rely on the social services offered around 16th and Mission Streets have pets — nearly all of them found on the street. 

“I don’t know anybody on the street or homeless who would go to an adoption center,” said Pali Boucher, the founder of Rocket Dog Rescue. “They find them tied up, or skinny, or on the road.”

Boucher grew up homeless. Animals saved her life, she said. People who used to live on the streets of the Mission remember how Boucher introduced them to rescue work. 

These people that are out there on the street, they know that they really don’t have stability,” Boucher continued. “But when they see an animal that’s been abandoned they feel it, and they take them in.” 

Small black and brown dog with a harness and leash stands on a sidewalk, tilting its head slightly to one side.
Blue on 16th Street on Aug. 16, 2025. Photo by Abigail Van Neely.

Blue was the runt of the litter. His mother was abandoned when her former owner went to rehab, so neighbors in the building adopted each of the puppies. 

Now, the nearly-hairless chihuahua is eight years old. Only one week of Blue’s life has been spent without his owner, who relied on Animal Care and Control to keep the dog safe when he went to jail a few months ago. Now that his owner is out, the two once again go everywhere together — for visits to the Mission Neighborhood Resource Center for the Homeless, for permanent supportive housing check-in appointments. They’ll be together whenever Blue’s owner finally gets an apartment. 

A person reaches to pet an orange tabby cat lying on its back on a wooden floor, with a collar and leash attached.
Alyssa on Aug. 16, 2025. Photo by Abigail Van Neely.

At the Division Center shelter earlier this year, Regina watched as another resident, a veterinary technician, unpacked her bags. Mewls came from one of them. Shortly after, out came a five-week-old kitten. The vet tech had found the kitten in a plastic ziplock bag on the bus beside an unconscious person, she told Regina. The person looked pretty drunk, she continued. So she took the kitten. 

It was love at first sight. Regina named the little orange cat Alyssa. 

When Regina decided she would rather live on the street with Alyssa than be without her in a shelter, Alyssa learned to ride around on her shoulder. When Regina has to panhandle, Alyssa prowls around their sign “like a little performer.” Regina once joked that cats are the anti-christ. No longer. 

The duo are never without cat food — it’s offered just about every place they go, Regina said. Alyssa basically has her own “shrine.” 

Regina can’t think of anyone she knows who didn’t rescue their pet. Her friends like to say their animals rescued them. “They rescued each other,” Regina concluded. 

Capp Street

  • A person in a yellow hoodie sits on a sidewalk drawing on a large sheet of paper, with a street scene and parked cars in the background.
  • A person in a yellow hoodie sketches an American football player on a white board, referencing three printed photos of football players attached above the drawing.
  • A rough pencil sketch of two American football players on a torn white sheet, with three photo references of players attached to the upper left corner.

Northeast BART plaza

  • Busy city street scene with people walking, storefronts, palm trees, colorful mural, public transit signs, and a bus stop under a clear blue sky.
  • People stand and walk around an urban plaza with palm trees, streetlights, and a graffiti-covered building in the background on a sunny day.

Southwest BART plaza

Street scene with people walking, food stands, and emergency vehicles parked near a modern building with palm trees and a sign reading "AMERICAN CULTURAL.
8/14/25 12:30 p.m. Southwest BART plaza.

Weise Street

A narrow urban alleyway lined with yellow and green buildings, metal barricades, and "No Parking" signs; two people walk in the distance under a clear sky.
8/14/25 12:15 p.m. Weise Street.

Julian Avenue

A city street with parked cars, apartment buildings, and power lines on a sunny day; the sidewalk is empty.
8/14/25 11:45 a.m. Julian Avenue.

Caledonia Street

A narrow city alleyway with graffiti-covered walls, a beige building on the left, and a few people walking in the distance on a sunny day.
8/14/25 11:45 a.m. Caledonia Street.

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I'm covering criminal justice and public health. I live in San Francisco with my cat, Sally Carrera, but I'll always be a New Yorker. (Yes, the shelter named my cat after the Porsche from the animated movie Cars.)

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1 Comment

  1. Any random day, come dark, Gubbio Project and the Huff N Puff Smoke shop around the corner are still a major draw for Fentanyl dealing and use, followed by the misery that comes with it. You still have to zig-zag the east side sidewalk on Mission off the BART plaza. The street scene has seemingly learned to simply ignore the cops, who for a few months now do little more than park their cars and flash their lights. The whole situation is stagnant and stuck in squalor-per-the-usual mode (if that’s a thing). The new non-profit they hired can be seen off-and-on. FWIW, not last night that I’d noticed.
    What are they (the City) waiting for, what is the plan?

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