San Francisco's APEC Cleanup Hasn't 'Fixed' Its Homelessness Problem
No amount of encampment sweeps and pressure-washing sidewalks is going to solve the problem of thousands of people living on the streets.

World leaders are descending on San Francisco this week for a meeting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum. Most of the coverage of APEC thus far has focused less on trade deals and geopolitics and more on the city of San Franciso's efforts to clean up the streets ahead of the conference.
Headlines in publications both local and international noted the city's energetic efforts to clear homeless encampments, clean streets, and crack down on drug activity in the downtown conference area. The Daily Mail helpfully published some before and after pictures of newly sparkling streets.
California politicians have been pretty open about the fact that the street cleanup efforts are to spruce up the city for APEC.
"I know folks say, 'Oh, they're just cleaning up this place because all these fancy leaders are coming into town.' It's true, because it's true," said California Gov. Gavin Newsom to reporters yesterday. Still, Newsom stressed that the pre-APEC cleanup is part of a new, more proactive approach of the city and the state to crack down on public vagrancy.
This transformation of a few San Francisco streets has sparked two contradicting criticisms.
Some local homeless advocates complain that the city's rush to clear encampments before APEC is disrupting the lives of the now-displaced downtown homeless people and straining shelters elsewhere in the city.
On the other hand, you have some mostly online, mostly conservative detractors who are asking why it took a communist dictator coming to town before San Francisco "fixed" its homelessness problem.
What does it tell us that San Francisco cracks down on lawlessness only when the dictator of a communist country is about to visit that city?https://t.co/X4UaxoN8wu
— Mike Lee (@BasedMikeLee) November 13, 2023
San Francisco finally fixed the homeless crisis. All it took was a visit from a world dictator.
Before Xi: After: pic.twitter.com/2WimoNHC49
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) November 12, 2023
Nobody is talking about this, but the way SF simply said *YOU ARE LEAVING, NOW* to the entire homeless/vagrant/drug addict/criminal population of its downtown ???????????????? ???????? ???????????????? for Xi Jinping suggests either a lack of will otherwise, or the adoption of Xi Jinping tactics. https://t.co/ky7rcuSU10
— Jeff Blehar is *BOX OFFICE POISON* (@EsotericCD) November 12, 2023
Gov. Newsom orders homeless camps removed in San Francisco in an obvious attempt to impress his new best friend, China's Communist dictator. Pity he's had no desire to impress those who actually live in California. https://t.co/d3MhdKjFt5
— Senator Melissa Melendez (@senatormelendez) November 14, 2023
"The speed at which the downtown area has been cleared up shows that when there is impetus, it can be done. It is a shame, then, to see that politicians like Newsom only seem to act when it is politically expedient to do so," wrote Soledad Ursúa at Unherd.
In short, some people are complaining that the city has made its homelessness problem worse, while others are complaining that it could have easily been solved sooner.
This disconnect is partially the product of these two groups talking about different sides of what Matt Yglesias recently dubbed "America's two homelessness problems."
To summarize, there's the one homelessness problem experienced by the homeless themselves through a lack of housing. Then there's the other homelessness problem experienced by the public generally through exposure to a bunch of vagrancy and disorderly behavior spilling out into streets because of that lack of homes.
San Francisco's APEC cleanup did nothing to address the first homelessness problem, which is what the local homeless advocates are complaining about. The city simply moved some homeless people from one area of the city to another. Some have plausibly ended up inside homeless shelters or less visible spots on the street. But, the number of homeless people in the city remains as high as ever.
San Francisco did make some progress on the second homelessness problem by dismantling tent encampments, replacing people on the streets with flower boxes, and creating a heavily policed security cordon covering a few city blocks.
Even still, the city hardly "fixed" its second homelessness problem. It just shifted encampments and vagrant behavior away from the downtown.
In his homelessness essay, Yglesias argues that it's fine to clear a tent encampment even if it doesn't make a dent in the unsheltered homeless population because improving urban quality of life is a worthy goal by itself.
I agree with that idea to a point. In a libertarian world, there obviously wouldn't be public parks. If the park shouldn't ideally exist, it follows that there's also no inherent right to sleep in it. Likewise, there's no fundamental right to pitch a tent on a public sidewalk and create nuisances for adjacent property owners and passersby.
Nevertheless, dismantling a homeless encampment isn't free. It requires tax dollars and the exercise of actual state force. In the process of enforcing camping ordinances and responding to public nuisances, police also have a habit of violating people's well-established rights.
Indeed, routine police abuse of the homeless has produced a long string of court decisions that place limits on cities' abilities to sweep homeless encampments and arrest people for being poor in public.
It also costs the general public in the form of more taxes, more surveillance, and more interactions with law enforcement.
There's a difficult balancing act to be struck then between making streets and parks a nice and safe place to be for the general public and protecting the rights of people who would bear the brunt of quality-of-life-focused law enforcement.
That balancing act is made no easier if you're a city like San Francisco, which boasts one of the highest rates of homelessness in the entire country. The more homeless people a city has, the more force the police will have to use to maintain a given amount of public order and cleanliness.
The city's APEC cleanup measures should make that clear enough. Right now, whole blocks of downtown San Francisco are effectively a miniature police state, with security fencing, pedestrian and vehicle checkpoints, and whole areas closed off to the general public.
Those measures have worked at temporarily walling off the downtown from the city's persistent homelessness problem. They're not measures that can or should be made a permanent citywide effort—at least not if one places any value on not living in a police state.
Indeed, some of the people attacking Newsom and the San Francisco city government for only cleaning up the streets for Xi Jinping's visit seem to be flirting (sometimes explicitly) with the idea perhaps Chinese Communist Party–style public order wouldn't be such a bad thing.
i'm downtown sf and there are heavily armed policemen everywhere — underground, drug stores, street corners. "how you doing?" one asked, super friendly, hand on his gun. all in advance of xi's visit i guess, but crime has evaporated.
it could be like this every day.
— Mike Solana (@micsolana) November 10, 2023
That's a bad attitude for sure, but it comes from some very justified frustration.
San Francisco is one of the richest cities in the free world. Its residents shouldn't have to choose between a degraded quality of life that comes with thousands of people living on the streets and an aggressive police state that keeps those thousands of homeless out of sight and out of mind.
Escaping that unhappy tradeoff would require the city, and the surrounding region, to radically liberalize housing construction.
That would bring housing prices down and bring a lot more people inside. That wouldn't solve everyone's problems, but it would mean a lot of dysfunctional behavior playing out in public will instead move behind closed doors.
A less overwhelmed San Francisco city government (and voluntary philanthropic actors) could also more judiciously deal with those remaining people that insist on pitching a tent in the park or smoking meth on the street.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Did they fix it?
No.
But they sure as hell showed they can make the problem less horrific for their citizens if they have any desire to do so.
But they sure as hell showed they can make the problem less horrific for their citizens if they have any desire to do so.
A fact not lost on the locals.
Sorry Christian but affordable housing is not possible in an expensive and dense city like San Francisco. Market forces, dontcha know. I’d love a villa on the Côte d’Azur but will never, ever be able to afford that.
The main reason San Francisco’s homeless population has risen during the past decade is that the tax payers pay for the hoard. Around two dozen non-profits receive millions of dollars from the city each year to help the homeless and solve the problem. Each year their funding increases and each year the number of homeless increases. Part of the loot the non-profits receive finds its way into the election efforts of the politicians who then vote for more funding to fix the homeless problem. Typical Democrat Party modus operandi.
Locals who will still vote Democrat, overwhelmingly, every election.
Of course it isn't fixed. I guarantee the problem will be back the day after the conference ends.
Anyone remember when the USSR was ridiculed for painting only the side of the buildings along the parade route during the Moscow Olympics? At least they didn’t have to hose shit off the sidewalks and relocate thousands of homeless.
That was only 43 years ago, and since then US Democrats have created a city more embarrassing than even old-school communism could produce.
Take a bow, assholes.
They could pressure wash the actual homeless into the ocean as well.
San Franfeces
Be sure to wear some flowers in your hair...
/to cover up the stench.
Potemkin on the Bay
Pooptempkin.
Isn’t that a battleshit?
San Francesspool, my buddy calls it.
Literally a shit-hole
One of these two groups is closer to a realistic solution and has a better handle on the problem. I'll let you figure out which one, Britches.
How can they be displaced if they're homeless?
Mic drop.
And by "disrupting the lives" of the homeless in that area, what they mean is that those people will be arguing with lightpoles, sharing needles, and shitting on a different patch of sidewalk for 5-7 days, and if it's anything like L.A. Skid Row, maybe being harrassed by a different group of gang members during that time as well.
SF hasn't fixed anything for anyone, except to put something that the left can't seem to agree is actually a problem (maybe it's just a bunch of people "experiencing homelessness" as if it's some kind of day-camp for adults) that needs to be addressed by anything more corrective than a needle "exchange" where people are given syringes by the dozens (or sometimes hundreds) for the asking without having to return a single "dirty" one, so those end up in the gutters and storm drains which run to the bay (in the first city in the country to ban plastic straws). All they've been motivated to do by the arrival of the dictator whose policies Gavin Newsom tried so hard to replicate during the pandemic, is to move those people to where they're unlikely to be seen by that dictator and others.
I'm pretty sure that there is some amount of encampment sweeps that would stop people living on the streets.
And the encampments aren't there because of lack of housing. They are there because they are tolerated.
Yes, I have talked about this at length. I literally have a homelessness plan which would address the issue with aggressive, and continuous sweeps combined with expanded shelter space, vigorous law enforcement.
The aggressive and continuous sweeps makes the high-functioning homeless people (of which there are quite a few) decide that the lifestyle is no longer worth the hassle. They spend several days piling up their stolen mountain bikes, their stolen barbecue grill, build their little shanties out of appropriated construction site wood and *wham* it all gets torn down and moved. Do that 972 times, and they'll either give up, or go elsewhere. If enough give up and or go elsewhere, the problem becomes more distributed and diffuse, making it easier to deal with and target.
Then what you're left with is the critically addicted and mentally ill, which you provide expanded services for, and aggressively weed out the criminals and fuckheads that soak up the services and displace the desperate, dysfunctional groups that can't maneuver within the system as well.
Aggressive law enforcement then starts chipping away at the criminal behavior and solves another portion of the homeless problem by giving them a home in the city or county jail (or state prison) where they get three hots and a cot.
It annoys me to no end that it has been allowed to get to the point where that is the sane solution, but I think you are right.
Take it up with the hobos
Then what you’re left with is the critically addicted and mentally ill, which you
EXTERMINATE
Oh, sorry, I've been told that's an acceptable position for the last five weeks, and hell, those people just picked "Jews" as the criterion, not "shitting in the street, screaming, attacking people randomly".
Other places doing that is part of why 25% of the nation's homeless population is in the "sanctuary" cities in California.
The L.A. County Sheriff apparently ran a sweep on Venice beach a few weeks before the City of L.A. was going to start puttin up "tiny homes" on the beach to lay the starting groundwork for a permanent slum and in response the County Supervisors (4 Dem, one left-leaning "Independent", combined total of 1.25 brains among them) put an initiative on the ballot which gave them the power to remove any Sheriff from their elected position by a unanimous vote of the board. The sweep of the beach may have only been the "last straw" though since that same Sheriff had refused to enforce several of the more senseless restrictions enacted by the county in the later part of the pandemic, when the data from the CDC had long been indicating that many of the policies their "Director" was advising were unwarranted and/or completely useless.
If CalTrans hadn't dismantled the old Bay Bridge, I'd be wondering if William Gibson's story "Skinner's Room" was on the verge of becoming a fulfilled prophecy.
Not just tolerated but incentivized.
"Not just tolerated but incentivized."
Right here is the problem: SF pays bums to be bums, so more bums arrive and Mayor Breed can't seem to understand why.
To summarize, there's the one homelessness problem experienced by the homeless themselves through a lack of housing.
Wrong.
Wrong wrong wrong. Wrong.
Wrong.
Wrong.
Worse than wrong.
If you gave CaYimby's literally everything they wanted... if you could literally suspend politics in some magical universe and give them 478% of dream policy they have, you would not suddenly see a glut of new housing in San Francisco with rents in the sub-$300 a month price range. To believe that it would is to border on the clinically insane.
The guy with the meth pipe around his neck, living under a bridge cannot afford $300 a month in rent. So even if we agree to disagree, and I again give in to every fantasy you believe in, the problem is not a "lack of affordable housing"... the problem is, as it currently stands, a lack of COMPLETELY FREE housing. Better described as publicly subsidized, taxpayer funded 100% free housing. These are sometimes known as or referred to as "homeless shelters".
You can shout YIMBY! MISSING MIDDLE! UPZONE! platitudes to the sky gods until you're hoarse, and you're simply not going create the market conditions where a large group of homeless junkies suddenly become productive working-class citizens, paying their $250, $275, $300 a month rent and carrying on reasonable, disruption-free lives and being good little citizens of San Francisco.
Someone: "Yeah, but who said anything about $300 a month rent?"
Me: Um, the guy Reason retweeted today who's trying to get "moderate democrats" installed back into SF politics who's a big YIMBY advocate who believes that with the right wonky policy tweaks, SF will be filled with $500 a month rental units... rental units that literally no homeless person could afford.
Then there's the other homelessness problem experienced by the public generally through exposure to a bunch of vagrancy and disorderly behavior spilling out into streets because of that lack of homes.
The disorderly behavior spilling out into the streets is not because of a lack of homes, it's because of a lack of law enforcement, combined with a lack of free housing that have no enforced rules, combined with policies where homeless people are literally paid to be homeless.
More to the point, if there were suddenly a huge glut of housing in SFO at sub-$300 a month... you'd get more people moving to SFO.
Well, you would get "more people", but lots of people would also move out. Most sane people do not want to live in government subsidized housing projects if they can help it: history has shown that. That's why such housing projects have been torn down in most places.
This is something I've recognized since the late 90s, when SFO was a place I still wanted to live.
(Hey, I was young and stupid, back off.)
Same issue in NYC or wherever.
"Not everyone gets to live in the extremely high rent real-estate with all the great clubs."
Trying to house literal homeless people there is absolutely fucking retarded.
San Francisco was a pretty cool city in the late 1990s. Still crazy expensive; I had friends paying $3200/month for a 2BR with no parking in the Mission, plus another $300-400/month in parking tickets around 99-2002 and they only had to deal with human feces on their front steps a handful of times in that span.
SF, L.A., and CA as a state were all close to their apex for livability around that time. Then one-party rule set in, and after 15 years of that, it's a state where it seems like the only place it's relatively difficult to go camping is outside of the major cities. Good luck trying to find a spot to put up a tent in the forest or mountains where someone won't come along and either force you to move or write up some kind of citation with a fine attached....
That's a problem we can export to China. Let's bring it up while Xi is here. No, really. Xi's got the space:
https://www.businessinsider.com/china-empty-homes-real-estate-evergrande-housing-market-problem-2021-10
Just round 'em up, and put them on a slow boat to China.
Hey, come to think of it, I think I just solved our illegal immigration problem too. And this should go a long way to disrupting America's drug problem as well!
I have no concerns here.
the problem is, as it currently stands, a lack of COMPLETELY FREE housing. Better described as publicly subsidized, taxpayer funded 100% free housing. These are sometimes known as or referred to as “homeless shelters”.
Since most of the homeless in SF are also criminals, they could already be assigned "completely free housing". We call that "prison". SF city government doesn't even want to enforce its criminal laws, however, because SF city government is not interested in solving this problem, never has been.
Does this mean the Doom Loop© tour has been suspended?
Someone should pay a few hundred of the homeless $20 or so a piece to march on the APEC conference hall, and poop in the lobby.
They would be doing their doody.
Sarc this article is in your wheelhouse. Get after it.
Someone start a timer after Winnie's jet takes off back to the forbidden city.
Gavin also wants to run for President in 2024 and the images of CA will be mighty hard to explain away.
How did such poor people live (or not live) >130 years ago? We might catch glimpses of it in the novel 'Les Miserables' or 'Maggie: A Girl of the Streets' or similar, maybe catch glimpses in the photos Jacob Riis took and published in 'How the Other Half Lives', but even they do not dive as deep as San Francisco is experiencing. It is certainly true that by our individual and municipal handouts we are enabling people to live so miserably; else they would starve.
At the extreme of the police end, we can recall that the USSR had anti-parasite laws. The USSR could and did sweep up such people and send them to work, or to die, in Siberia. China and North Korea do likewise.
At the hyper end of Libertarianism, there would be no laws protecting private property or personal safety. Organized, some of the homeless would take your home, driving you out, and eat what is in your pantry. That would resolve the complaints opponents of gentrification have. A large % of San Francisco's population would have to decide if living in San Francisco is worth it or where they should move to instead. That could 'solve' San Francisco's housing problem. Only dockworkers and teamsters would actually need work and live in San Francisco. They could hire 'tough guys' to give themselves some breathing room.
On the flip side, straight killing those invaders would be perfectly legal, and would rapidly solve the problem. Bullets plus the salaries of those to put them downrange is a lot cheaper than twenty million homeless two legged rats.
At the hyper end of Libertarianism, there would be no laws protecting private property or personal safety.
No, that's not "libertarianism", that's just the nonsensical "utopia" that imbeciles at Reason are falsely pushing in the name of "libertarianism".
Yes. No property rights, no civilization. See North Korea.
a2plusb2 is full of shit.
"To summarize, there's the one homelessness problem experienced by the homeless themselves through a lack of housing. "
What about the homelessness problem experienced by the homeless themselves through an abundance of addition and untreated mental illness?
That is inconvenient to the pro-drug narrative.
“You not fuck up summit, you make rrots of money, bitch!” - Xi to Newsom
replacing people on the streets with flower boxes, and creating a heavily policed security cordon covering a few city blocks.
That's how the commies do.
No amount of encampment sweeps and pressure-washing sidewalks is going to solve the problem of thousands of people living on the streets.
Removing trespassers without hurting them seems like a very libertarian solution.
Escaping that unhappy tradeoff would require the city, and the surrounding region, to radically liberalize housing construction.
There is plenty of cheap housing available across the country, e.g. in Detroit. I don't see why high-end real estate locations should be turned into densely populated slums just because impoverished drug addicts like the view and the weather.
A less overwhelmed San Francisco city government (and voluntary philanthropic actors) could also more judiciously deal with those remaining people that insist on pitching a tent in the park or smoking meth on the street.
San Francisco city government and philanthropic actors are creating this problem in the first place! Homeless pitch a tent in San Francisco because they are allowed to trespass, allowed to commit retail theft, and get free healthcare and other services from the city.
When you spend billions on homelessness, you have zero desire to ever fix the problem. Too many folks on that gravy train.
Tom Wolfe already wrote a book about this in SF 40 years ago; it has only gotten worse since then.
I don't understand how anyone can be as foolishly naive as the writer of this article.
"...Still, Newsom stressed that the pre-APEC cleanup is part of a new, more proactive approach of the city and the state to crack down on public vagrancy..."
Newsom is full of shit; this is a one-time, expensive, sweep of the bums. Until SF stops paying bums to come and stay there, there will be no solution.
Is there any truth to the rumor that the original plan in SF was to give all the homeless around the Federal Building new suits to wear, but Secret Service was worried that if Biden tripped and fell, they wouldn't know which half-coherent, confused looking, half-wit to take back to DC at the end of the conference?
IDK, but it sounds like a reasonable take to me.