RVs on Circular Avenue – Letter from Supervisor Melgar’s office

The following message is from D7 Supervisor Myrna Melgar’s office.

Dear Sunnyside Neighbors,

We have been receiving numerous phone calls from Sunnyside neighbors about the RVs parked on Circular Avenue. So I would like to address you publicly as a group. 

As soon as we heard the complaint, we reached out to the Homeless Services Department to make contact with the RV dwellers and also the Dept of Public Works to check on the cleanliness of the area. We just learned that they overlooked our email back in early February, but scheduled an outreach visit as of 2/24/22 and would keep us updated. We are awaiting a status report of what both departments experienced. During the pandemic, the SFMTA Board of Directors voted to suspend overnight parking rules in reaction to the hardships that the pandemic caused as people lost their jobs and housing. The shelter system was also stressed due to a need for social distancing and limited options.

Our district has the second highest population of residents living in cars behind District 10.  For perspective there are 140 vehicles near Lake Merced that we need to find permanent solutions for along with RVs also scattered in more residential neighborhoods. Simply pushing the RVs to another neighborhood does not solve the crisis.You may have read about the Vehicle Stabilization Center in Bayview, but that site filled up instantly and still left out many of D10’s RV population. Our office has been desperately trying to establish a similar site in our district that could host RV dwellers and connect them with more permanent services. The logistics of finding unused space large enough and with infrastructure that can support the community has been a difficult one. We must coordinate many different departments each with their own concerns in making it viable. But rest assured our office will not give up.

Living in your vehicle is different from what we classically think of as “homelessness.” Our current homeless service system is not designed to address this growing population. Many of the folks living in vehicles in District 7 are families with children. If your vehicle is your transportation, your shelter, and your child’s home, you aren’t going to want to readily give it up to accept entry into an emergency shelter where you will sleep on the floor with your children. Your RV is your most important asset and is what is keeping you and/or your family from sleeping on the street. Many roads have led people to where they are, and there is no one solution will fit all, but I acknowledge that this is a dilemma which affects us all. 

It is the goal of the D7 office to find permanent housing for RV dwellers, to free up the right-of-way and support the health of the neighborhoods.  Two years ago, the voters of San Francisco approved additional funding to include this population, and we are optimistic that these resources will lead to programming and resources that are specifically targeted and effective. 

Sincerely, 

Myrna Melgar

If you need assistance with anything, please contact our office at melgarstaff@sfgov.org and we will try our very best to assist you.

Slow Hearst Kick-off Event on Aug 28

Meet your neighbors and enjoy Sunnyside’s new Slow Street on Hearst Avenue. Saturday August 28, 2021, from 1 to 5 PM. Between Congo and Foerster streets.

Activities for kids, bikes, food, music and fun! Games with prizes at 2 PM. Big Wheels parade–Meet at Ridgewood at 3 PM.

Slow Hearst Kick-off event on Sat August 28, 2021, 1-5 PM.
Slow Hearst Kick-off event on Sat August 28, 2021, 1-5 PM.

Download the PDF flyer here.

Request a window sign here.

Sponsored by Slow Hearst http://www.slowhearst.org

All Signs Restored on Hearst Avenue

Just hours after the recent criminal destruction of Slow Streets signage on Hearst Avenue, SFMTA began to replace the damaged signs at each of the seven intersections. The work is now complete, and all the signs have been fixed.

Thank you, SFMTA, for the prompt response!

Hearst and Baden. Photo: Sunnyside Neighborhood Association.
Hearst and Gennessee. Photo: Sunnyside Neighborhood Association.
Hearst and Ridgewood. Photo: Sunnyside Neighborhood Association.

Mass Vandalization of Slow Streets Signage in Sunnyside

UPDATE 1:00 PM: SFMTA has quickly replaced the signs at many of the affected intersections.

Last night at about 4:00 AM, in an act of systematic and wanton destruction, an unknown person cut down nearly every SFMTA Slow Streets sign that had been erected on Hearst Avenue over the preceding few days. Apparently using a power tool, 33 of the 36 newly installed signs were cut off at the base. Every one of the seven intersections on Hearst Ave. were impacted: Baden St., Congo St., Detroit, St., Edna St., Foerster St., Gennessee St., and Ridgewood Ave.

SFMTA has already begun to repair the damage done, and residents at the intersections with surveillance cameras are reviewing their record of the incident. The incident has been reported to SFMTA and Ingleside Police Station.

If you have information that can assist in identifying the perpetrator, contact Ingleside Police Station (415) 404-4000 or SFMTA Slow Streets at slowstreets@sfmta.com .

Surveillance video screen capture of the incident, 4:18 AM at Gennessee/Hearst.

Aug 2: SNA Quarterly Meeting

You are invited to Sunnyside Neighborhood Association’s August Quarterly Meeting.

Monday August 2nd, 2021, 6:30 – 8:00 PM via Zoom.

On the agenda: District 7 Supervisor Myrna Melgar is our guest for the meeting; she’ll share the D7 news and then take your questions. The Detroit Steps Project team will give an update. There will also be updates about the Balboa Reservoir Project, and the newly installed Slow Streets program on Hearst Avenue.

Meeting slides here (PDF 4 MB).

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