Campaign Updates

No New SF Jail Coalition & Defund SFPD Now Call on Supervisors to Push for Divesting

On July 12, 2021, the No New SF Jail Coalition and Defund SFPD Now to the Board of Supervisors urging them to keep working to divest from the San Francisco Police Department and the Sheriff’s Office. The text of the letter is reproduced below:

San Francisco Board of Supervisors
1 Dr. Carlton B. Goodlett Place
City Hall, Room 244
San Francisco, CA 94102

RE: SFPD and Sheriff budgets

Dear Supervisors,

Last year, San Francisco made a long-overdue public commitment to confront the inherently violent nature of policing, in particular as manifested in its Police and Sheriff departments, and instead investing in the life affirming care that creates real public safety for all. We know too well that the prison industrial complex will not address the underlying causes of crime and violence and that policing and incarceration in our city continues to produce deeply racist and anti-Black outcomes that tear families apart and traumatize our most vulnerable neighbors.

Yet despite this clear commitment, the Budget and Appropriations Committee voted on June 29, 2021 to forward the Mayor’s proposed San Francisco Police Department (SFPD) and Sheriff’s Department budgets for the upcoming two fiscal years (through June 2023) substantially unchanged to the full Board of Supervisors for approval. The budgets of these two departments renege on the City’s well-publicized promises last year to divert funds away from policing and incarceration, and invests heavily in carceral departments. In fact, the Dreamkeeper Initiative which was called to divert $120 million between FY 21 and FY 22 from law enforcement to San Francisco’s Black community is no longer even actually funded from cuts to law enforcement.

As it stands, the budget passed out of the Budget and Appropriations Committee increases General Fund support for the SFPD budget by $15 million over the current FY21 budget. The total SFPD budget would also grow substantially in FY23, with an additional $26 million over the proposed FY22 budget. The Sheriff budget would increase in both years with no major reductions in staffing levels despite the closure of County Jail #4 last year.

In fact, the total cuts made by the Budget and Appropriations Committee to the Mayor’s proposed SFPD and Sheriff budgets amount to less than $10.5 million over both years, that is a reduction of barely 0.5%. Out of between 4 and 6 academy classes over both years (depending on the size of classes), the Committee only cut approximately 30-35 new positions over both years. This is unacceptable, especially given that investments in alternative response teams that are already or will become operative over the next year warrant at a minimum a corresponding decrease in the number of officers employed by the City.

Yet it is not too late to put San Francisco back on track to fulfill its promise to communities that bear the brunt of police brutality and the injustice of the carceral state perpetuated by this budget. The Board of Supervisors can still amend the Police and Sheriff budgets at its July 13, 2021 meeting and meet the deadline to pass a budget by the end of July.

To this end, we urge you to consider the following at the July 13, 2021 meeting of the full Board of Supervisors:

  1. Motion to amend the budget to cut all new academy classes and the corresponding positions from the SFPD budget, and to place $24 million from the Sheriff budget on Budget and Finance Committee reserve pending allocation to alternative community investments.

ALTERNATIVELY

  1. Motion to separate the SFPD and Sheriff budgets from Appropriations and Salary Ordinances, followed by either rejecting or continuing the severed portions to a later date for consideration of further cuts.

San Francisco cannot afford to ignore its promises to defund the police and redirect money away from carceral systems towards transformative justice. Now more than ever it is important for City leaders and elected officials to stand strong against the harmful and unjust SFPD and Sheriff budgets that will further perpetuate harm against our most vulnerable communities.

In community,

Defund SFPD Now
No New SF Jail Coalition

City Hall Breaks Last Year’s Promise to Divest from Policing

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Contact: Allie Curry(415) 617-5218defundsfpdnow@gmail.com

City Hall Breaks Last Year’s Promise To Divest from Policing

San Francisco, CA —  In the wake of the George Floyd protests last year, Mayor London Breed and the San Francisco Board of Supervisors made national headlines for their calls to defund the police in favor of investments in San Francisco’s Black community. Most of the specifics of those promises were deferred to this year’s budget process. Today, however, in a unanimous vote, the Budget and Appropriations Committee advanced a budget that reinstates academy classes that were cut last year, and again fails to refund the community the $24.7 million cost of operating the 850 Bryant jail, which employed about 100 deputies and closed last year. 

“The City has once again abdicated its responsibility to refund the people for the hard-fought closure of the jail at 850 Bryant, an effort driven and supported by 90+ community organizations over 7 years,” said Christine Wei from the No New SF Jail Coalition. “The $24.7 million should be immediately reinvested into the housing, healthcare, and education we need to thrive instead of bankrolling the eviction of vulnerable San Franciscans, creating barriers to accessing needed care, and tearing families apart.”

Today’s proposed budget shows that the City will not honor its promises or listen to the hundreds of people who mobilized against policing during the past year. While the budget partly funds some important programs including a community-led, non-police response to homelessness, the Compassionate Alternative Response Team (CART), it also increases both the San Francisco Police Department and Sheriff’s Department budgets compared to last year. 

“This budget doubles down on our city’s investment in the racist and violent institutions that have never been able to keep us safe. The only way to create real public safety is to reduce the number of interactions between police and our communities and to invest in the life-affirming care needed to prevent harm from occurring in the first place,” said Jamie Chen from DefundSFPDNow. 

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The No New SF Jail Coalition is a coalition of local organizations, residents, and community members joining together to fight the expansion of imprisonment and criminalization in San Francisco. 
The Defund SFPD Now campaign is a grassroots abolitionist campaign committed to re-imagining public safety by replacing policing and prisons with the life-affirming care needed to support and empower us all.

NNSFJ joins activists across the state in a solidarity action urging Governor Newsom to #StopICEtransfers and #FreeThemAll

Jail Fighters, 

Yesterday, the No New SF Jail Coalition joined the Sister Warriors Freedom Coalition outside of County Jail 2 in a Banner Drop Statewide Day of Action to echo our community’s calls for California Governor Gavin Newsom to immediately:

  • Free people from state prisons, use power, including mass clemency and emergency release
  • Stop transfers from state and local custody to ICE and between California prisons;
  • Stop the expansion of immigration detention
  • Hold the detention industry accountable.

The statewide banner drop coordinated dozens of groups from San Diego to Yuba to rename jails, prisons, and other detention facilities after Governor Newsom. We are especially grateful to have been part of this event alongside SF members of the Sister Warriors Freedom Coalition, who are doing rad work to push for decriminalization, decarceration, and transformative justice across the state.  

Continue reading “NNSFJ joins activists across the state in a solidarity action urging Governor Newsom to #StopICEtransfers and #FreeThemAll”

WE’VE DONE IT: 850 BRYANT ST JAIL SHUTTERS ITS DOORS

It’s official: County Jail 4 in 850 Bryant St has closed its doors! There are no people being imprisoned there, and we have officially shut it down.

On Wednesday, September 23, 2020, at the SF Sentencing Commission’s Safety & Justice Challenge Subcommittee meeting, city leaders including representatives of the SF District Attorney and the SF Public Defender released the first draft of the subcommittee’s “Final Report” on the successful completion of the operational plan to close County Jail 4.

We couldn’t have done it without each of you. You met us in the streets. You met us at City Hall. You showed up and called in to give public comment. And, as of September 5, County Jail 4 has officially reached a “zero” jail count, effectively closing its doors for good. We want to take a moment to appreciate your support and dedication over the years, and especially over the past several months. Our people power and persistence is what passed legislation, introduced by Supervisor Sandra Lee Fewer in tandem with the No New SF Jail Coalition, to close County Jail 4 after decades of inaction by our city. The legislation also prohibits San Francisco from transferring imprisoned people out-of-county and restricts the city from building a new jail.

Despite the pandemic, wildfires, and countless other urgent matters, our supporters also showed up to even more digital actions and public comment sessions after Sheriff Paul Miyamoto announced initial plans to keep using the jail to house kitchen and laundry workers, as well as continue using the jail’s holding cells. While the Sheriff will temporarily continue bringing incarcerated workers to cook meals and do laundry for County Jail 2, the closure of the jail without exceptions for the use of holding cells or for housing kitchen and laundry workers is nothing less than a People’s victory. Our coalition remains committed to monitoring this closure until “closed” means “closed” for every single person, including the 17 incarcerated kitchen workers who are expected to keep cooking meals at County Jail 4 until early next year.

The Hall of Justice at 850 Bryant Street has been slated for demolition since 1996, and has since gotten more dilapidated. In 2013, then-Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi sought to build a new replacement jail – a move that was met with swift opposition from community members, formerly imprisoned people, and housing and healthcare advocates. As a result of pressure from the No New SF Jail Coalition, the Board of Supervisors unanimously rejected the idea of a new jail in 2015.

We are so proud of the work we have done together. Our victory demonstrates that we can make real, material gains against the prison industrial complex through committed and sustained organizing. We hope you will keep an eye out as we send updates and plan our Coalition’s next steps in the ongoing fight toward abolition. In the meantime, we invite you to continue joining us at our Abolition in Action event series to engage in political education and keep up the abolitionist momentum. All power to the people! Free them all!

We look forward to continue strengthening our movement for a jail-free San Francisco with you. 

With Gratitude,

No New SF Jail Coalition 

Death by drug overdose & COVID cases both on the rise in SF

How can we respond to harm without punishment, even now during the COVID crisis?

Our frontline workers & grassroots experts have the answers! 

 

In San Francisco, COVID has exacerbated both the housing and poverty crises as well as the opioid epidemic. For the past several years, San Francisco has faced a serious problem with opioid overdose, as 1 in 6 cardiac arrest deaths in SF were fatal overdoses and fentanyl and heroin overdoses more than doubled in 2019. Now, Covid cases continue to rise as well, with the number of Bay Area cases tripling over the past 6 weeks. The isolation resulting from the requirements of social distancing to stop the spread of coronavirus has led to an increased risk of fatal overdoseKristen Marshall, with the Drug Overdose Prevention and Education (DOPE) Project at the Harm Reduction Coalition and one of our speakers for next week’s event, told the SF Chronicle: “We know people are more likely to pass away from an overdose, simply because they are alone,” as shelter-in-place and social distancing cuts people off from life-saving relationships, options and support.

 

Miss Ian (center), another one of our event speakers, preparing harm reduction supplies at SF Drug Users Union on Turk St with volunteer Michael Richardson (left) and Frances Fu (right; DOPE Project). Photo from SF Chronicle by Scott Strazzante

 

 

COVID has also exposed the reality of jailing and imprisonment being a public health crisis in and of itself, with 452% higher covid infection rates in the prisoner population than California overall. After San Francisco released hundreds of people from its jails earlier this Spring in an effort to stop the spread of COVID inside, the numbers of folks arrested and jailed in the city are increasing. With overdoses dramatically increasing and unemployment reaching historic highs, we can assume many of the arrests may be drug related. While the situation is dire for us all, our most vulnerable are the most affected.

Rather than responding to these compounded crises through imprisonment, policing, criminalization and stigmatization, our city must prioritize creative, resourceful and straight-forward problem-solving that upholds care and honors and protects human dignity. In San Francisco, it is our service providers, community organizations and frontline workers who have been showing us the way out of this crisis, using harm reduction and decriminalization approaches where they meet people where they are at and provide them with the resources they need to survive, no matter what. Check out what this looks like in this video below featuring  one of our Abolition in Action speakers, GLIDE’s Harm Reduction Case Manager Felanie Castro, as Felanie shows how GLIDE uses their community outreach van to disrupt isolation, stigmatization and marginalization by distributing resources like tents, meals, water, syringe access services, and smoking services even during shelter-in-place.

Continue reading “Death by drug overdose & COVID cases both on the rise in SF”

Next Week: Abolition in Action #4–On Harm Reduction & Decriminalization!

Para información en español, haga clic aquí.

How can we care for each other and our communities without relying on prisons, policing and punishment? How can we define and create safety to support our most vulnerable and help each other meet all of our  needs for wellness? How can we strengthen existing harm-reduction and decriminalization work and continue to fight for abolition?

AiA 4 Banner

Folks who do sex work, use drugs, or struggle with addiction are often our communities’ most vulnerable–regularly enduring police violence, the threat or reality of getting locked up, of premature death, and of continuous exploitation. While harm can and often does happen with these activities, these practices are methods of survival, as a source of income or for self-medication and coping. Rather than responding with understanding, care and support, the state upholds and perpetuates stigma, using the violence of policing, criminalization, jailing and punishment in part to respond to harm or potential harm and also to control capital within the sex and drug trades. Instead of punishment, we can respond to harm or its potential and whatever people feel they have to do in order to survive by helping folks minimize risks instead of punishing them for struggling to live. In this way, harm-reduction and decriminalization give us concrete tools and approaches  to take care of our folks who need it most and push for true safety for all of us. 

Care Not Cages: 

Harm Reduction, Decriminalizing Survival & Liberating SF

Thursday, August 27th, 5:30-7:30pm

Register before the event here! 

Continue reading “Next Week: Abolition in Action #4–On Harm Reduction & Decriminalization!”

Friday 8/14/20: Submit Public Comment to Defund Policing in SF

Since 2013, the No New SF Jail Coalition has been working to end criminalization and dismantle the sheriff’s power and control in SF. The vote to close 850 Bryant by November of this year was a big win, and now it’s time to move even more money to the life-affirming resources and infrastructure our communities actually need to create true safety, security, health, sustainability and collective well-being.

For years, the City of San Francisco has increased its spending and resources to policing. Now with more public pressure and calls to cut funds for policing and reallocate these resources to our communities, Mayor Breed has announced a few budget cuts, but they are simply not enough. The Mayor’s current budget and proposed cuts to the Sheriff Dept are very insignificant compared to proposed reductions to other city departments, many of which provide the programs and spaces our city needs to thrive: 5.7% compared to about 11.3% for the SF Public Library, 16% for the Dept of Children, Youth & Families, and 31% for Public Works. This follows a harmful trend in San Francisco leadership of prioritizing criminalization, policing and jailing at the expense of our communities. Last year for instance, the average total compensation for a Deputy Sheriff was $210,000 — the equivalent of more than 2 teachers in the city.

Furthermore, the proposed cuts for the Sheriff’s Department exploit the much-needed and already mandated closure of 850 Bryant, and these cuts don’t reflect the real change we need in our city’s budget. Through jailing and policing, the Sheriff’s Depart perpetuates anti-Blackness and white supremacy in SF and separates families, snatching our people away and caging our loved ones in jails where social distancing is impossible during a global health crisis.

The people are asking for fundamental, significant shifts in the way we view and protect our safety; the call to defund the police continues to grow and amplify. We need to show the legislators policing is not the answer.  We can’t reform the Sheriff’s Department or SFPD and get different results. The only way to stop police violence is to reduce the number of cages and cops in our city and county. Now is the time to make sure the money, resources and city-focus is moved toward our communities.

Continue reading “Friday 8/14/20: Submit Public Comment to Defund Policing in SF”

TOMORROW: Funding Our Communities Budget Workshop — Abolition in Action Event #3

Our communities are safe and can thrive when we ALL have housing, healthcare, living wages, quality education, public transit, and the community-based supports and resources we need. These priorities are where San Francisco should be spending its money, NOT on jails, SFPD, nor other policing programs. “Defunding the police” isn’t our end goal – it’s just the beginning.

TOMORROW, July 25th, 1 pm:
Funding Our Communities:
SF’s $11 Billion Budget as a Strategy for Abolition
A Virtual Collective Visioning Workshop

REGISTER NOW (before 7/25) :
https://bit.ly/SF-Abolition-3

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We know what we need best to survive, thrive and take care of one another.  In this moment of calling for racial justice, divestment from the legal punishment system, and re-investment in community, we must uplift the needs of Frisco’s diverse, complex and multifaceted community, along with the memories and names of those who have not survived. In honor of the experience of Kajon Busby and the police executions of Mario Woods, Alex Nieto, Luis Góngora Pat, Jessica Williams, Amilcar Perez-Lopez, Sean Monterrosa and so many more – it’s time to come together to call for a San Francisco budget that prioritizes the needs of our most vulnerable and historically exploited communities – our Black,  Brown, disabled, trans, queer, and undocumented community members – and that will sustain us all. We deserve to live in a city that emphasizes care and humanity. We must fight for that San Francisco every chance we get.

TOMORROW: Come envision, learn and skill-up with us, as we strengthen people power and imagine how to truly re-invest in our communities. Together, we will:

  •  look at SF’s budget and understand budget advocacy as an abolitionist strategy to dismantle oppressive City structures and practices,

  • vision collectively to build life-affirming support and infrastructure,

  • and learn how to apply legislative pressure in budget advocacy via a mini-training on submitting public comment to decision-makers!

Continue reading “TOMORROW: Funding Our Communities Budget Workshop — Abolition in Action Event #3”

Thank You for a Night of Reentry & Abolition: Getting Out & Getting Free!

Thank you so much for coming to our webinar on SF Reentry Experiences, Struggles & Resources– “Getting Out & Getting Free”– this past Tuesday night.

The event was a great success. We were joined by over 100 people, many of whom have family members currently imprisoned in prisons and jails, as well as a few former prisoners, service providers and community organizers.

Screen Shot 2020-07-06 at 10.17.21 AM
Graphic of the Event by Jasmin Pamukcu

Continue reading “Thank You for a Night of Reentry & Abolition: Getting Out & Getting Free!”