A nighttime urban street scene with police cars, flashing lights, and a crowd gathered on the sidewalk near colorful murals and a lit-up building.
12/6/25, 9:05 p.m. northeast plaza, Photo by Lydia Chávez

For months, vendors selling everything from shampoo to jeans and pistachios have been congregating during the late afternoon near the northeast 16th Street BART Plaza.

Over the last month, however, the San Francisco Police Department and BART police have been more present.

BART police in an SUV are often there in the afternoon and early evenings, and then an SFPD SUV arrives anywhere between 7 and 9 p.m. The SFPD SUV generally parks with its headlights facing north, where the vendors congregate. Officers said that they stay through the night, unless they get called to move elsewhere. 

On Saturday, Day 270 of Mayor Daniel Lurie’s crackdown, the plazas and nearby side streets remained mostly clear. But again, by 5 p.m., drug activity and vending took hold on the east side of Mission Street, as it has nearly every night I’ve checked on it in the last month.  

As I’ve witnessed over the past month, the SFPD arrived again on Saturday at 9 p.m. to clear the group of vendors, drug users and others from the area.

Officer Knoble walked with another officer and someone from the Department of Public Works through the crowd of people lined up along the wall of the former Walgreens. They stood by, waiting for people to pick up their belongings. 

How long would it take before the place cleared? 

Some people just don’t have a place to go, Knoble said.

“This fentanyl, we’ve just never seen anything like it,” he added and pointed to a man at the plaza, his back turned to us, his feet akimbo, his body held up by the low wall around BART. 

Three hours ago, Knoble said, the young man was trying to sell some instant coffee. From the looks of him now, he said, he had succeeded. All he’d needed was $5 for some fentanyl. 

The operations clearing people from around the northeast corner have been going on for at least a month, according to different officers. The SFPD spokesperson has yet to confirm the start and frequency of the operations, but they’ve seemed pretty consistent.  

While far from the success achieved in clearing the west side of Mission Street, the consistency of the night operations is new. Clearing the west side took around 200 days; at Day 100, it was still a mess. 

The west side remains clear but, late in the afternoon, the east side becomes a free-for-all of open drug use and illegal vending.

“It can get crazy over there,”  said Stephen earlier this week as he looked across to the east side of Mission Street.  Stephen works with Ahsing, a city-contracted crew of formerly incarcerated men who, since July, have been patrolling the side streets and the west side of Mission Street. And, indeed, the east side can get crazy. 

It’s a major transit hub that is often rough. Mostly, I experience it as a reporter, circulating without having to stay still. On one recent evening in late November, however, I was there at 6:30 p.m. to catch the 49-Van Ness to McAllister Street. If you’re waiting for the bus, you generally don’t wander.

That night while I waited, I shared the shelter with four other people. Two smoked from a glass pipe; the other two were bent over. It was not a place anyone with a child — and there are plenty of families who live nearby — would spend any time. 

When I got on the bus only a few others boarded. Those sitting at the shelter stayed. 

Saturday, Dec. 6

  • People gather on a city sidewalk with bikes and scooters in front of a mural and graffiti-covered building. A street sign, palm tree, and banners are visible.
  • People wait at a city bus stop with a red canopy; some stand, some sit, and a vendor sells bottled drinks. Palm trees and street signs are visible nearby.
  • People stand and walk along a littered sidewalk at night in an urban area, near a bus stop and illuminated storefronts.
  • A group of people stand on a dimly lit city sidewalk at night near a tree and a trash bin, with scattered items on the ground.
  • A large group of people gathers on a sidewalk at night in front of a mural-covered building, illuminated by streetlights and passing car headlights.
  • Nighttime street scene with parked cars, people walking on the sidewalk, a tree, and metal barricades along the left side of the building. Streetlights illuminate the area.
  • People stand and sit on a littered sidewalk at night near a bus and a mural-covered wall; a police car is partially visible in the foreground.
  • Two police officers stand near a police vehicle with flashing lights at night on a city street, talking to a man; debris is scattered on the ground in the background.

Scenes from November and earlier this month

  • A crowd of people lines up outside a building at night near a brightly lit bus stop; street markings and palm trees are visible in the scene.
  • A group of people gather at night in front of a mural in San Francisco’s American Indian Cultural District; some appear to be receiving goods or services.
  • A person walks across a city street at night carrying a box, with a crowd and colorful illuminated building in the background.
  • A city street at night with scattered trash, a police car with flashing lights, and a person standing near a bus stop.
  • A San Francisco police car is parked on a littered city street at night as people gather near a crowded sidewalk.
  • People stand and walk near emergency vehicles and uniformed officers outside a building entrance at dusk in an urban setting.
  • A street vendor stands by a cart of goods under a red canopy at a city intersection, with pedestrians and a large building in the background.
  • A street corner with a food vendor and pedestrians crossing the road; a multi-story building and traffic signals are visible in the background.
  • Street scene at an urban intersection with people walking, a street vendor displaying goods on the ground, traffic lights, buildings, and palm trees in the background.
  • People stand at a red-roofed bus stop next to a street, with palm trees and a billboard in the background on a cloudy day.
  • People gather on a city sidewalk in front of a building with colorful murals and graffiti art, including a sign reading "Welcome to Xicanx/Latinx Cultural District.
  • People gather on a graffiti-covered sidewalk in an urban area; some stand, others work on bikes or ride scooters near a mural and a sign welcoming to Ramaytush Ohlone Land.
  • A group of people stand on a dimly lit city sidewalk at night near a tree and a trash bin, with scattered items on the ground.
  • People stand and walk along a city sidewalk at night; some wear winter clothing, and a bus and illuminated signs are visible in the background.
  • People stand and walk along a city sidewalk at night near a mural-lit wall, with parked cars and a bus visible in the street.
  • A dimly lit city sidewalk at night with several people walking, parked cars along the street, and buildings on both sides.
  • A large group of people gathers on a sidewalk at night in front of a mural-covered building, illuminated by streetlights and passing car headlights.
  • A nighttime street scene shows people gathered near a brightly lit bus stop with a mural and colorful cube structure in the background as cars pass by.
  • A nighttime street scene shows a group of people gathered on the sidewalk near illuminated buildings and streetlights, with cars and a red-painted crosswalk in the foreground.
  • A group of people gather on a city sidewalk at night, across a wide street with red transit lanes, under streetlights and illuminated signs.

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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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17 Comments

  1. Thanks for staying with this (disaster) story.

    I sure would like to hear from the people who stopped anything (housing) from being built on the Walgreens parcel. How has this kept the neighborhood “culture” alive. How has this protected the neighborhoods traditional occupants?

    Next time someone fights any kind of market rate housing in the Mission I hope they first answer for the results we now see at 16th and Mission.

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  2. Yeah now they’re moving into other neighbors on Bush between jones and Taylor. I called the cops non stop for drug use selling drugs and even staking out cars . Now the drug users are being the look outs for the dealers to break into cars. I cannot even leave my apt after 8 especially Sundays !! I call the cops non stop since I have a child my window not to far from the street !!! They have not done one patrol on this block since September!!! No matter if they’re attempting to break in to cars or into my apartment building waiting for me to leave and trying to grab the door I have to slam it shut . They don’t care I call the cops they’re literally blocking the front door and you can’t get out . Sfpd hasn’t been doing nothing for other communities. Early in the morning I’m afraid to let my son 1 1/2yr old to walk because I don’t know if they’re drugs or used needles or pipes on the sidewalks . I pay a higher rent sometime even struggling with money to avoid this activity but at this point I’m piss off at the sfpd … Refuses to do patrols especially after 8 pm if they just did one once a hour you would see the difference. the fact I see so many freaking parked cop cars in North Beach during these hours if I’m lucky enough to be out pass 8 and also in the tenderloin sfpd I’m beyond pissed . I’m asking a lawyer to look at my lease to see if I can break it . And then again leave this city that only care about tourists not it families or residents that live here .. really need to step up your game cause these dealers and users now know you never never never respond to calls about them

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  3. I’m dying to see what happens when the site starts construction (was hoping that would start in December). Where will all those people go then?

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  4. Screw 16th and Mission!! What about 24th and Mission? Which has gotten so bad, that you can’t even stand at the Bus Stop, the one across the street from McDonalds,and I even had to help direct a gentleman in a wheel chair navigate around, the vendors and their ill gotten gains. Yes, they do put police there, but not on weekends, but the vendors, wait until they leave, and come back.

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  5. The vendors and drug users are generally harmless. Instead of just sitting around there accomplishing nothing, the SFPD should focus on responding to calls about actual crimes, and then following up with real investigations into car and bicycle thefts, robberies, burglaries, etc.

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    1. At bare minimum they are preventing people from using a major transit hub. BART should get fully reimbursed annually for the operation of the station from the homeless and drug nonprofit funds since the community can’t use it.

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    2. “drug users are generally harmless’

      While I was conversing with a cop three feet away from me, a bent-over fentanyl addict didn’t like me doing that so he deliberately crashed into me as he walked past me. He certainly wasn’t and isn’t “harmless.”

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    3. @Starchild, they are not harmless if you are disabled, and need to navigage around them and their ill gotten gains. And what about the Asian & Brown merchants, who own stores in that area,where a lot of the stolen,merchandise comes from, did you ever think about how they’re impacted. What will happen, the merchants, will leave and then their will be a food desert there and you,{ it rumored that Walgreens is thinking about leaving,}, and other liberals will whine about it. Oh! Wait they should get a Kitty!

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      1. Walgreens?!? Why should we care about keeping an organization that contributed waaaaay more to the opioid crisis than any street dealer ever has?

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    4. Shoutout to Ahsing aka the whitewhests. From what I’ve seen, they’ve done a great job clearing the west side of Mission and keeping it that way. We need more of that.

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    5. ..unless the “actual crimes” lead to investigations into bicycle theft, robberies, burglaries that maybe crack down on the harmless vendors and drug users. You can say the quiet part out loud.

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      1. I can hardly wait until the disablity right folks get involved, since it’s impossible, for,not just a blind person, but anyone in a wheel chair, to navigate both areas. And don’t get me started on the noise.

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