Is San Francisco a Sanctuary When You Don’t Have Housing?
Civic
by Madison Alvarado, Liana Wilcox
3w ago
Increases in the number of migrants arriving in San Francisco have stress-tested the city’s shelter system, revealing the dire need for more housing and support for families. We talk to migrant parents driven out of their homes by violence and political upheaval about navigating San Francisco’s homeless response system and its impacts on their families’ health and wellbeing as they fight for a better future. A housing provider shares the limitations of the city’s data on family homelessness, and an immigration attorney tells us how a stable living situation helps migrant families with their co ..read more
Visit website
Unheard: The Plight of Mayans Struggling with Addiction in SF
Civic
by Liana Wilcox, Sylvie Sturm
1M ago
The impact of the COVID 19 pandemic led to a rise in fatal overdoses among the tens of thousands of Indigenous Mayans living in the Bay area. That alarmed Latinx advocates and officials at the Mexican consulate in San Francisco. Indigenous Latin Americans are categorized as Latinx even though many speak limited Spanish. That means vital information, like drug awareness campaigns and the dangers of fentanyl, may not be reaching the Maya-speaking community. And service providers say culturally-sensitive treatment programs are crucial for healing but are nearly non-existent for the Indigenous pop ..read more
Visit website
Forgetting the Lessons and Losses of Covid
Civic
by Mel Baker, Liana Wilcox
1M ago
The first years of the COVID-19 pandemic are behind us and it’s time for an early reckoning of our successes and failures. An epidemiologist shares how a lack of public trust led to unnecessary deaths. AIDS activists discuss the importance of facing trauma and a woman who lost her father to COVID is fighting for a memorial for those who died.  ..read more
Visit website
Group Helps Asian American Communities Feel Safe
Civic
by Zhe Wu, Liana Wilcox
1M ago
Three years ago, when violence against Asian Americans spiked, local organizations took action to improve public safety. One group, the Coalition for Community Safety and Justice in San Francisco, is still doing that work. In this episode, we join them for one of their recurring community visits in the Richmond District. Outreach workers share how they connect with business owners and residents and help them feel safe ..read more
Visit website
Civic Roundtable: Three San Francisco Reporters Talk About Covering Drug Use and Overdoses
Civic
by Liana Wilcox, Lila LaHood
2M ago
Lila LaHood, publisher of the San Francisco Public Press, talks with Nuala Bishari from the San Francisco Chronicle, Sydney Johnson from KQED, and Sylvie Sturm from “Civic” and the San Francisco Public Press about their reporting on drug use, public policy and and substance use disorder treatment in San Francisco. They discuss the harm reduction philosophy and practice, San Francisco’s inconsistent stance on overdose prevention centers, public safety perceptions, Proposition F, and what other cities are doing to address drug use, sales and treatment in their communities ..read more
Visit website
What You Might Find on Your San Francisco Ballot: Party County Central Committees
Civic
by Lila LaHood, Liana Wilcox
2M ago
Election Special: Voters in San Francisco registered with the Peace & Freedom, Green, Republican or Democratic parties have extra choices in the March 5th election that only come around once every four years — the party county central committees. We talk to a political strategist to discuss the power dynamics of these committees in San Francisco and find out what voters are tasked to choose. We also hear from representatives of each of these parties to learn a bit more about how they operate. Democratic County Central Committee: https://www.sfdemocrats.org/our-party/the-dccc Republican Par ..read more
Visit website
Proposition F: Tying Cash Welfare to Drug Screening
Civic
by Liana Wilcox, Sylvie Sturm
2M ago
March 2024 Election Special: Mayor London Breed is facing one of the most pivotal moments of her political career as she campaigns for reelection amidst a dual crisis of addiction and homelessness. Her solution is a ballot measure that would compel welfare recipients to submit to drug addiction screening and treatment in order to get cash benefits. We explore the fierce debate that has rippled across San Francisco and beyond, and a very similar measure that catapulted a former San Francisco supervisor onto the national stage and political stardom — Gavin Newsom ..read more
Visit website
The War on Drugs Revisited: San Francisco and the Overdose Crisis Part 4
Civic
by Sylvie Sturm, Liana Wilcox
2M ago
The War on Drugs Revisited: San Francisco and the Overdose Crisis Some San Francisco city officials are advocating jail for unhoused people who use drugs and murder charges for people who sell drugs. Critics say their approach mirrors the abysmal failure of the 50-year-old war on drugs. In the fourth episode of our series on San Francisco and the overdose crisis, we take a historical look at the justice system’s approach to drugs, its racial inequities, what has changed, and what may be making a comeback ..read more
Visit website
FIXED: The Grassroots Effort to Save Lives: San Francisco and the Overdose Crisis Part 6
Civic
by Liana Wilcox, Sylvie Sturm
5M ago
*Audio fixed - Previously uploaded episode was the wrong audio and has been fixed* Fentanyl-related deaths among teens more than tripled across the U.S. from 2019 to 2021. And the CDC reports that two thirds of teens who died had someone nearby who didn’t provide an overdose response. Now San Francisco high school students are signing up for training sessions on how to recognize drug abuse and reverse overdoses. And it’s not just teens who want to help. City residents are carrying overdose reversal nasal spray in case they come across someone in need of rescuing. But reversing an overdose isn ..read more
Visit website
The Grassroots Effort to Save Lives: San Francisco and the Overdose Crisis Part 6
Civic
by Liana Wilcox, Sylvie Sturm
5M ago
Fentanyl-related deaths among teens more than tripled across the U.S. from 2019 to 2021. And the CDC reports that two thirds of teens who died had someone nearby who didn’t provide an overdose response. Now San Francisco high school students are signing up for training sessions on how to recognize drug abuse and reverse overdoses. And it’s not just teens who want to help. City residents are carrying overdose reversal nasal spray in case they come across someone in need of rescuing. But reversing an overdose isn’t quite as simple as it might sound. In this sixth and final episode of our series ..read more
Visit website

Follow Civic on FeedSpot

Continue with Google
Continue with Apple
OR