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	<provider_name>Action Network</provider_name>
	<provider_url>https://actionnetwork.org</provider_url>
	
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	<author_name>SOMA West Neighbors</author_name>
	<author_url>https://actionnetwork.org/groups/soma-west-neighbors</author_url>
	<title>Follow State Law: Stop the Concentration of Supportive Sites</title>
	<thumbnail_url>https://can2-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/petitions/photos/000/716/566/normal/petition_banner.png</thumbnail_url>
	<description>We&#x27;re asking for your support: tell the City to stop concentrating shelters and public services in a containment zone operated in a few neighborhoods and to require that the entire City bear its fair share. For years, the City has concentrated its highest-need social services into western SOMA while withdrawing the baseline infrastructure, sanitation, and public safety resources required to manage them. The practical effect has been to shield better-resourced neighborhoods from sharing this responsibility, and to leave our streets, our small businesses, and our neighbors bearing a disproportionate burden. State law requires San Francisco to deconcentrate poverty and integrate neighborhoods. The City has done the opposite, directing over $157 million in discretionary funding since 2023 to entrench and concentrate services into a small number of neighborhoods, including SOMA. The SOMA West Neighborhood Association (SWNA) has formally filed a 48-page civil rights and fair housing complaint with the State of California. The details of the filing and the underlying municipal data were published by the San Francisco Chronicle: [Link]. You can also see an explainer video for the complaint here: [embed] 60 percent of all city shelter beds are concentrated in just the Tenderloin and South of Market. According to the City&#x27;s own data from the 2024 Point-in-Time Count, SOMA is home to 11% of the city’s unhoused population but is forced to host 28% of the city’s shelter beds. We are currently oversubscribed by 660 beds relative to our equitable share. View interactive map source These City policies have life-threatening consequences. By placing vulnerable people struggling with addiction into neighborhoods that already suffer from open-air drug markets, the City is deepening an extraordinary concentration of overdose deaths. SOMA and the Tenderloin alone account for more than 40 percent of the city&#x27;s fatal overdoses. Many of the shelters and services sited here are accompanied by open drug use, violence, and hazardous conditions for both the people they serve and the surrounding community (as documented in articles here and here). We love our neighborhood and want to help the City succeed. SOMA is the economic and cultural engine of San Francisco; it&#x27;s home to its largest employers, its newest housing, and thousands of residents and small business owners who chose to invest here. The fight to have the City restore geographic equity would demonstrate that San Francisco can solve its most complex systemic challenges while supporting all of its many vibrant neighborhoods.</description>
	<url>https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/follow-state-law-stop-the-concentration-of-supportive-sites</url>
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