From Ballotpedia | Proposition R: San Francisco Neighborhood Crime Unit Creation |
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| The basics |
| Election date: |
| November 8, 2016 |
| Status: |
| Topic: |
| Local law enforcement |
| Related articles |
| Local law enforcement on the ballot November 8, 2016 ballot measures in California San Francisco County, California ballot measures |
| See also |
| San Francisco, California |
A measure to create a Neighborhood Crime Unit was on the ballot for San Francisco voters in San Francisco County, California, on November 8, 2016. It was defeated.
| A yes vote was a vote in favor of requiring the city police department to create a unit consisting of 3 percent of all sworn police offices dedicated to preventing crimes harmful to neighborhood safety and quality of life, provided there are a minimum of 1,971 sworn police officers. |
| A no vote was a vote against this proposition, thereby leaving efforts against neighborhood crime as an equally shared responsibility among all police officers with no dedicated task force. |
| Proposition R | ||||
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| Result | Votes | Percentage | ||
| 201,059 | 54.82% | |||
| Yes | 165,723 | 45.18% | ||
The following question appeared on the ballot:[1]
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Shall the City create a Neighborhood Crime Unit to prevent and investigate crimes that affect neighborhood safety and quality of life when the City has at least 1,971 full-duty uniformed police officers?[2] |
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The following summary of Proposition R was provided by San Francisco's Ballot Simplification Committee:[1]
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The following fiscal impact statement about Proposition R was provided by the San Francisco Controller:[1]
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The full text of the measure is available here.
The following individuals signed the official argument in favor of the measure:[1]
The following official argument was submitted in favor of the measure:[1]
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Proposition R will make San Francisco safer. San Francisco’s neighborhoods have seen significant increases in crimes like burglaries and car break-ins that make people feel unsafe. For example, the Civil Grand Jury found that in 2015 car break-ins had reached a record high of 24,800 recorded incidents. According to the Police Department, bike theft incidents have increased by almost 300% since 2011. While the City is taking many steps to combat this crime, including hiring over 300 more police officers in the next year alone, we need to better organize our efforts to stop neighborhood crime. Proposition R requires the City to: • Create the Neighborhood Crime Unit • Significantly increase the number of beat cops and bike patrols assigned to our neighborhoods • Provide a dedicated presence of beat cops whose sole mission is to proactively prevent neighborhood crime, and to respond directly to it when it occurs We have to push back against the petty crime that’s plaguing San Francisco’s residential neighborhoods and commercial corridors. Police officers walking beats in our neighborhoods can prevent and investigate these crimes. Police officers working daily with our communities can develop relationships, build trust, and serve as a deterrent to crime. Only with stepped-up police enforcement can we stem the tide of car break-ins and muggings that are all too common these days. Vote Yes on Proposition R.[2] |
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The following individuals signed the official argument against the measure:[1]
The following official argument was submitted in opposition to the measure:[1]
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Proposition R only adds more bureaucracy—not any more foot patrol officers. Instead it takes 60 officers away from neighborhood stations to staff a new centralized unit. These officers will be dispatched to non-emergency 311 calls, sent to numerous recurring meetings, and required to coordinate with at least seven City departments. When would these 60 overworked officers have time to walk foot patrols if they spend all their time in meetings? The City's Accelerated Police Hiring Plan has stopped the decline in our police force, and we are finally on pace to reach the charter-mandated staffing level of 1,971 officers. Do we really want to divert uniformed police officers to respond to non-emergency 311 calls and spend hours in countless meetings? This measure was put on the ballot without the consent of the Police Commission. It sets no standards for community policing or how to reform the department that still has much work to do to build relationships with our diverse communities–relationships that are central to neighborhood safety. Mandating police officers to respond to homelessness is counterproductive. San Francisco's primary response to homelessness is already enforcement, and this response is failing. Last year, SFPD gave out 14,000 citations simply for resting in public. Those citations saddle homeless people with debt and threaten their eligibility for housing. A law enforcement-based response to homelessness creates barriers, not solutions. Neighborhood crime is a complex challenge that we can't address by micromanaging police officers through a vanity ballot measure. Let's work together on a nuanced and multi-disciplinary approach that gets police out of their patrol cars and conference rooms and onto the streets.[2] |
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San Francisco's city code allows four or more members of the San Francisco board of supervisors to sponsor a measure and put it before voters by signing the proposed ordinance and submitting it to the San Francisco department of elections. The following supervisors signed the ordinance proposed by Proposition R and submitted it on June 21, 2016:[1]
The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms San Francisco Neighborhood Crime Unite Proposition R. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.
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