麻豆社国产

Skip to content

San Francisco ready to grant new mayor greater powers to battle fentanyl crisis

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) 鈥 San Francisco's Board of Supervisors is poised to grant newly elected Mayor Daniel Lurie greater powers and flexibility to expedite the city's response to a fentanyl crisis that has turned sidewalks into open-air dens of drug con
b5eeec2cf0dbc5e6e3f528515bb69d365a077d79542610aeb5d0b2452ea14d42
Demostrators gather at a rally at City Hall to support legislation that gives the mayors extra power to address the city's fentanyl crisis Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2025, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) 鈥 San Francisco's Board of Supervisors is poised to grant newly elected Mayor Daniel Lurie greater powers and flexibility to expedite the city's response to a fentanyl crisis that has turned sidewalks into open-air dens of drug consumption and homelessness.

The legislation, which supervisors will vote on Tuesday, eliminates competitive bidding requirements for some contracts and allows the administration to solicit private donations to quickly add 1,500 shelter beds and hire more public safety and behavioral health specialists. It is the first piece of legislation for who had never held elective office until he squashed Mayor London Breed's reelection bid last year.

The proposal already has the six votes needed to pass, and will likely pick up more votes Tuesday.

The 11-member board relinquishing oversight powers for an effort with no concrete plan or metrics underscores how desperate supervisors are for a solution. It also signals their embrace 鈥 for now 鈥 of a political outsider who pledged to work collaboratively to create common sense solutions.

Supervisor Connie Chan said last week at the budget and finance committee she chairs that board oversight helps ensure taxpayer money is spent judiciously and transparently. But she also said this is 鈥渢ruly an unprecedented time" that calls for unusual measures, and she appreciated the mayor's willingness to compromise. Breed had a frosty relationship with the board's progressive members, Chan included.

San Francisco has long been known for its liberal politics, but during the COVID-19 pandemic. Overdose deaths fueled by cheap and potent fentanyl reached a record high in San Francisco of over 800 in 2023.

In response, frustrated residents and backed . They also elected more moderate Democrats to the board.

Lurie's proposal would allow the city to bypass the competitive bidding and procurement process for contracts, grants and leases related to addiction, homelessness and public safety hiring. City departments could sign new leases without board approval. He wants to open a 24-hour drop-off center that would be friendly to police and an alternative to jail.

Supervisors would have only 45 days to vote on contracts up to $25 million 鈥 down from the original $50 million proposed by the mayor 鈥 or relinquish their oversight. Expedited contracting would sunset in one year, down from the original five.

San Francisco AIDS Foundation opposes the proposal because it lacks metrics and details, such as how it would actually reduce fentanyl use, said Laura Thomas, the nonprofit's drug policy expert and senior director of HIV & harm reduction policy.

She applauds the mayor's desire for more housing and treatment services but hopes he will not endorse policies forcing people into treatment, which has shown to be ineffective and often counterproductive.

鈥淲e want to know more about what the proposal is,鈥 Thomas said Monday. 鈥淲e're raising notes of concern and we want to know more information before we can support it.鈥

At Wednesday's budget and finance committee, legislative analyst Nicolas Menard warned that waiving competitive bids would likely increase service costs and 鈥渃reate opportunities for waste, fraud and abuse.鈥 The fiscal impact is unknown, but the grants and contracts budget for the affected city departments totals just over $1 billion.

鈥淚 need to be very clear that you鈥檙e giving up a lot here," he said.

Still, it passed out of committee to the full board with a unanimous recommendation and in a statement released later that day, Lurie said that with the ordinance 鈥渨e are no longer looking the other way 鈥 we are treating the fentanyl crisis like the emergency it is,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is a new era in City Hall.鈥

Janie Har, The Associated Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks