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Join Assemblymember Phil Ting's Reset San Francisco!

Public Safety

We are fortunate that San Francisco is on pace to record the lowest number of homicides since 1954, and violent crimes are on a decline. But we all agree – we still have a long way to go to make every San Francisco neighborhood safe. There are still San Francisco neighborhoods and transit lines where crime is unacceptably high.With 95% of homicide victims under the age of 25 or high school dropouts, how can we make our schools better and safer so young people stay in school and out of trouble? How can we use new technology without losing our privacy rights? How can we put more police on the streets without putting more politics into public safety? Hard questions. But resetting San Francisco public safety means finding the best answers.

SF Spending on Police Yielding Improvements in City’s Safety
12 years ago

SF Spending on Police Yielding Improvements in City’s Safety

By  •  Public Safety

According to research by California Common Sense, over the last 10 years San Francisco city government spending on the police department has increased by nearly a fifth, and the results …
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San Francisco Has the Second Worst Drivers In the State
12 years ago

San Francisco Has the Second Worst Drivers In the State

Here’s one from the file marked, “You Already Knew This, but Now You Have a Study to Prove It.”

According to the seventh annual Allstate America’s Best Drivers Report, San Francisco has the second worst drivers in California. Los Angeles, the home of non-stop traffic and crazy freeway interchanges, ranked safer than us! The Allstate report ranked the 200 largest cities in the United States in terms of frequency of car collisions to determine which cities have the safest drivers. For the second year in a row, Fort Collins, CO took top honors as America’s Safest Driving City. Drivers in Fort Collins are 28.6 percent less likely to be in a car accident than the national average.

San Francisco Drivers Are Improving

San Francisco drivers are 57.3% more likely to be in an accident than the national average and have accidents about once every 6 years – placing us #185 for safe drivers. Yet, according to the most recent SFMTA data, in 2009 there were 2,877 reported non-fatal collisions in San Francisco, the lowest number in the past 10 years. So maybe there is hope that we won’t stay the second worst for long. You can read SFTMA’s full report on traffic accidents in San Francisco here. If you want to avoid a collision in San Francisco, you’d be wise to stay away from the highest collision intersection – Market and Octavia.

San Francisco Streets Could be Safer By Design

In the past two decades, San Francisco has made progress in reducing the number of collisions. In 1990 San Francisco had 5,804 collisions and 64 fatal collisions. In 2009 those totals had declined to 2,877 collisions and 30 fatal collisions. But certainly more can be done to help make sure our streets are not dangerous by design. By analyzing which intersections are most apt for accidents, we can use this data to invest in better signals, bike lanes, crossing guards and signs to make San Francisco streets safer.

What do you think about our safe driving rating? Does this encourage you to take Muni more often?
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911 to Soon Accept Texts, Videos, Photos
13 years ago

911 to Soon Accept Texts, Videos, Photos

By  •  Public Safety

What Social Media Means for Public Safety

Social media has radically influenced how we learn about today’s current events. When disaster or a major event occurs, digital platforms and social …
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Phone App Detects When You are Driving – And Reads Your Messages
13 years ago

Phone App Detects When You are Driving – And Reads Your Messages

Since California implemented its hands-free cell phone law in 2009, traffic deaths decreased an average of 12% a year. Nonetheless, when Bay Area law enforcement agencies and the California Highway …
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Earthquake Coming? There is an App for that.
13 years ago

Earthquake Coming? There is an App for that.

Apple offers smartphone app for Japan on its iOS5

On Tuesday, two large earthquakes hit the United States. A 5.8 earthquake rattled the East Coast, while San Francisco endured a …
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Censorship Is Not a Public Safety Strategy
13 years ago

Censorship Is Not a Public Safety Strategy

BART Shuts Off Cell Phone Service to Prevent Protest

The news from BART keeps getting worse and worse. We learned this morning that not only did BART turn off cell …
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