Lying On The Sidewalks In San Francisco
Wednesday, April 28th, 2010by Clarissa Ersoz
Yesterday Chris Daly, Supervisor for District 6 of San Francisco which includes the Tenderloin area, proposed a ban on lying on the sidewalks. This legislation differs from the proposed sit/lie law sponsored by Chief of Police Gascon and Mayor Gavin Newsom in that it doesn’t prohibit lying down, but telling lies while on the sidewalks.
Although far-fetched and a bit bizarre, Daly’s proposal portrays the equal ridiculousness of the sit/lie law which gives police the power to fine or arrest people for innocent behavior. In addition, sit/lie would criminalize certain groups including the poor and homeless.
Last Saturday, individuals and groups gathered peacefully all across the city of San Francisco to participate in Sidewalks are for People, a decentralized, city-wide event that encourages people to utilize their city sidewalks as places of community-building. Over 2 dozen events, including poetry workshops, bbqs and tea parties, occurred in all areas of the city and demonstrated how sit/lie would eliminate sidewalks as community space.
A sit/lie hearing will take place at City Hall on Monday, May 10th at 10:00am. Stand up for your right to sit down and oppose sit/lie.

San Francisco may be the next city to enforce sit/lie laws prohibiting people from inhabiting public sidewalk space. Mayer Gavin Newsom will be introducing his two new proposals to the Board of Supervisors today. One is modeled after sit/lie laws in the Pacific Northwest, affecting only commercial areas while the other is the first of its kind: a citywide decree prohibiting sitting or lying on any sidewalks. Anywhere.
On the poor, of course. President Obama told governors that the federal stimulus was meant to “help ensure that you don’t need to make cuts to essential services Americans rely on now more than ever.” So “How to spend it?” would seem like an easy question to answer. But homeless advocates in San Francisco are afraid it won’t play out that simply. Many fear that the proposed cuts in the budget will still go through despite the emergency funding.
Nearly five years after the Mayor Gavin Newsom’s release of the 
San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom dropped by the Tenderloin Tech Lab this morning to showcase his latest initiative: wireless internet coverage to 12 low-income housing projects in San Francisco’s Tenderloin.