San Francisco Mayor London Breed's successor, Daniel Lurie, has finally shown some much-needed sanity by shutting down the city's $5 million "Managed Alcohol Program," which gave booze to homeless drinkers. The misguided initiative aimed to keep them from going into withdrawal by getting them drunk in the first place.
The plan was flawed from the start, as it essentially gave homeless people more of what kept them on the streets in the first place – alcohol. It's not exactly a recipe for success when you're pouring money down the drain to enable addiction instead of helping people get sober.
The program only served 55 individuals at an average bar tab of nearly half a million dollars each, leaving many wondering how much taxpayer cash was being squandered on this dubious initiative. Lurie's decision is a welcome respite from the city's trend of overindulging its addiction problem with poorly thought-out programs.
The debate around providing services to homeless addicts remains contentious, with some arguing that needle exchange programs can protect against disease but also enable addiction. San Francisco has taken this approach too far under Lurie's predecessor, London Breed, who allowed open-air "safe use" areas where users could get high with city supervision.
There's a point of balance to be reached here – the city shouldn't be enabling addiction, and taxpayers shouldn't be footing the bill. Lurie's decision to axe MAP marks a step in the right direction, signaling that common sense has finally prevailed.
While there's still much work to be done for San Francisco's budget woes and other pressing issues, Lurie's willingness to take a moderate stance on federal government disagreements has yielded better outcomes so far. His decision on MAP demonstrates a crucial quality: the ability to show simple, sound judgment in policy-making – something sorely lacking from local leaders of late.
The plan was flawed from the start, as it essentially gave homeless people more of what kept them on the streets in the first place – alcohol. It's not exactly a recipe for success when you're pouring money down the drain to enable addiction instead of helping people get sober.
The program only served 55 individuals at an average bar tab of nearly half a million dollars each, leaving many wondering how much taxpayer cash was being squandered on this dubious initiative. Lurie's decision is a welcome respite from the city's trend of overindulging its addiction problem with poorly thought-out programs.
The debate around providing services to homeless addicts remains contentious, with some arguing that needle exchange programs can protect against disease but also enable addiction. San Francisco has taken this approach too far under Lurie's predecessor, London Breed, who allowed open-air "safe use" areas where users could get high with city supervision.
There's a point of balance to be reached here – the city shouldn't be enabling addiction, and taxpayers shouldn't be footing the bill. Lurie's decision to axe MAP marks a step in the right direction, signaling that common sense has finally prevailed.
While there's still much work to be done for San Francisco's budget woes and other pressing issues, Lurie's willingness to take a moderate stance on federal government disagreements has yielded better outcomes so far. His decision on MAP demonstrates a crucial quality: the ability to show simple, sound judgment in policy-making – something sorely lacking from local leaders of late.