S.F. program gives homeless people free booze. Here’s why the city says it’s helpful

By St. John Barned-Smith, Maggie Angst
May 10, 2024

960x0.jpg
The exterior of a former Tenderloin hotel where the city now runs a managed alcohol program on Eddy Street in San Francisco on Thursday, May 9, 2024.
Gabrielle Lurie/The Chronicle


For a small slice of San Francisco’s homeless population that struggles with severe alcohol addiction, nurses offer treatment not in a pill, but in a shot of vodka or a glass of beer.

It may sound counterintuitive, experts say, but it helps keep people off the streets and out of emergency rooms, jails — or the morgue.

San Francisco set up a “managed alcohol program” four years ago as a way to care for vulnerable homeless people who drank excessive amounts of alcohol and were among the city’s highest users of emergency services.

Since its creation, the program, which started out with 10 beds, has served 55 clients, according to officials from the Department of Public Health. The now 20-bed program, which costs about $5 million per year, operates out of a former hotel in the heart of the Tenderloin. Nurses dispense regimented doses of vodka and beer to participants at certain times of day based on care plans.

Such programs don’t focus on sobriety, experts say, but rather on improving participants’ overall health while decreasing hospital stays and calls to police.

960x0 (1).jpg
The exterior of a former Tenderloin hotel where the city runs a managed alcohol program on Eddy Street in San Francisco. Nurses at the facility dispense regimented doses of vodka and beer to participants at certain times of day based on care plans.
Gabrielle Lurie/The Chronicle


But the city’s efforts came under scrutiny this week, after the chair of the board of a local nonprofit that pushes abstinence shared posts on social media accusing the city of wasting millions of taxpayer dollars on a program that gives booze to homeless people struggling with alcohol addiction.

Adam Nathan of Salvation Army San Francisco said on X that “providing free drugs to drug addicts doesn't solve their problems. It just stretches them out. Where's the recovery in all of this?”

The social media skirmish was the latest flare-up in an increasingly tense debate about San Francisco’s use of harm reduction, which focuses on cutting negative health effects of alcohol and drug use rather than requiring people to stop using. As homelessness and overdose deaths have continued to plague the city, critics have excoriated San Francisco’s attempts at harm reduction, saying they only enable addiction and despair.

Abstinence-groups such as the Salvation Army have ridiculed the city for spending public funds on initiatives that provide drug users with overdose-reversing drugs, clean needles and foil for methamphetamine and fentanyl consumption.

Even Mayor London Breed in February said that harm reduction was “not reducing the harm” but “making things far worse.” That stance puts her at odds with her own public health department, which staunchly stands by harm reduction as an integral part of the agency’s system of care. Breed recently tried to open abstinence-only housing for formerly homeless people near Chinatown but scrapped the proposal amid neighborhood backlash.

“Are we just going to manage people’s addictions with our taxpayer dollars in perpetuity forever? It seems like that’s basically what we’re saying,” said Tom Wolf, who is in recovery for heroin addiction. “... I think we should be spending that money on detox and recovery.”

But Shannon Smith-Bernardin, a professor at the UCSF School of Nursing who helped create the managed alcohol programs in San Francisco and Alameda County, explained that the goal is to stabilize participants’ alcohol use “so they're not binge drinking or stopping drinking and having seizures and then … start figuring out what's next.”

960x0 (2).jpg
The exterior of a former Tenderloin hotel where the city now runs a managed alcohol program on Eddy Street in San Francisco on Thursday, May 9, 2024.
Gabrielle Lurie/The Chronicle


The program also offers participants medications and therapy to reduce alcohol cravings.

The controversy erupted Tuesday night after Nathan claimed on X that he stumbled upon an “old hotel in SOMA” where kegs were set up to give out “free beer to the homeless.” Nathan continued that it was “set up so people in the program just walk in and grab a beer, and then another one.”

Officials from Salvation Army San Francisco referred questions to Nathan, who told the Chronicle Thursday that he felt the lack of public knowledge about the program reflected the fact that San Francisco’s public health department is worried about how “the program will be perceived by the public and that to me was validated by the reaction to what I tweeted.” His initial post garnered more than 3,000 likes and more than 13,000 people took part in a poll asking whether they supported such a program. More than 80% of X users who responded to the poll indicated they were opposed.

Public health officials countered that the claims made in Nathan’s posts misrepresented the program and misled the public.

Alcohol is dispensed by a nurse and unhoused people who aren’t in the program may not walk into the facility to get free alcohol, according to a statement from the public health department. The program is run out of a former Tenderloin tourist hotel that has a bar, but the on-site taps are “inoperable and unused,” the statement continued.

Nathan also criticized the use of millions of city dollars to fund the program.

The Salvation Army has itself been accused of wasting taxpayer money. BART paid the nonprofit $350,000 for a program to tackle surging homelessness on trains, but only one person received services, according to a scathing report from the transit agency's inspector general.

But San Francisco public health officials found that the city saved $1.7 million over six months from the managed alcohol program in reduced calls to emergency services, including emergency room visits and other hospital stays. In the six months after clients entered the managed alcohol program, public health officials said visits to the city’s sobering center dropped 92%, emergency room visits dropped more than 70%, and EMS calls and hospital visits were both cut in half.

Previously, the city reported that just five residents who struggled with alcohol use disorder had cost more than $4 million in ambulance transports over a five year period, with as many as 2,000 ambulance transports over that time.

The San Francisco Fire Department said in a statement that the managed alcohol program has “has proven to be an incredibly impactful intervention” at reducing emergency service use for a “small but highly vulnerable population.”

The city's public health department is working to get some of the program costs reimbursed through MediCal, according to a spokesperson.

San Francisco public health officials launched the managed alcohol program during the early days of the pandemic, as the city worked quickly to get homeless residents — more than half of whom struggle with a drug or alcohol addiction — into hotel and motel rooms.
Public health officials were concerned that the isolation and quarantine mandates would prevent access to alcohol — leading to potential withdrawal. Detoxing from alcohol is particularly dangerous and can cause hallucinations and seizures that turn fatal.
“We were trying to figure out how to keep people who are homeless alive during COVID,” recalled Smith-Bernardin, “but also work with them around their medical needs.”.
In an October presentation, public health staff pointed to one story of a 38-year-old man suffering from addiction and psychotic disorder. He reportedly had more than 36 ER visits over nine months with high blood alcohol content. In the nine months after joining the program, that number fell to just six ER visits.
Program officials said that nurses assess patients and typically dispense the equivalent of 1-2 drinks 3-4 times per day — doling out either 1.7 ounces of vodka or liquor, 5 ounces of wine, or 12 ounces of beer.

In addition to offering medication and therapy, the program provides cultural outings and life skills classes, according to the public health department’s presentation.

The department of public health said that some participants have been discharged from the program for a higher level of care, other housing or a recovery program. Officials said several participants died after voluntarily leaving the program as a result of their end stage alcoholism.

While such programs are rare in the United States, they are more common in other countries, including Canada, Portugal and the U.K. And experts say such programs provide stability and support to homeless people who cycle from the streets to emergency rooms and jail.

In Canada, where managed alcohol programs have operated for more than a decade, more than 40 programs are currently in place, according to the University of Victoria’s Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research.

A 2022 study of Canada’s managed alcohol programs found that participation reduced the risk of death and resulted in fewer hospital stays for individuals with unstable housing and severe alcohol addiction.

“It’s a better way to spend our money than someone being in a jail or hospital where they are not getting care for their health needs,” said Dr. Bernie Pauly, a leading medical researcher who has pioneered much of Canada’s programs.

Source (Archive)
 
Every American has the God-given right to die of liver failure, and the homeless are no exception.
Liver failure is how functional alcoholics die. When you're a drunk to the point of homelessness, it's your heart, brain, or pancreas that'll give up on you, and it'll happen quick.
 
So they're giving up and letting them continue to kill themselves with alcoholism?

I know it's not something you can go cold turkey off of, but jesus fuck.
I'm kind of OK with it. I've known a lot of drunks, and they were all selfish self-centered narcissistic assholes.
 
Managed alcohol programs work if and only if they monitor alcohol use and have their members brew the hooch themselves. Members aren't going on benders with outside alcohol, have a specific alcohol ration and need to keep their collective shit together enough to adhere to a brewing schedule.
 
When your Banana Republic starts decriminalizing drugs nationwide and making it easier for people to drown themselves in booze and weed and fentanyl 24/7 - the first question you should be asking is - Why Now? Let's say the Rothschild Ponzi Economy collapses in on itself. Would it benefit the Yahvist State to have the population be languid, dumb, drunk, couch-locked, mind-fucked, and unquestioning? Or would they rather the people be aware, armed up, and prepping to kill their corrupt politicians? Something big is coming, and it stems from the FED's fiat factories.
People have been saying it for years but I don't see the global economy collapsing.
 
Since its creation, the program, which started out with 10 beds, has served 55 clients, according to officials from the Department of Public Health. The now 20-bed program, which costs about $5 million per year, operates out of a former hotel in the heart of the Tenderloin.
But San Francisco public health officials found that the city saved $1.7 million over six months from the managed alcohol program in reduced calls to emergency services, including emergency room visits and other hospital stays.
  • shitty bar
  • seats 20
  • served 55 customers in total over at least 2 years
  • costs $5M/year
  • will "save" $3.4M/year
 
Why does it cost five million dollars a year to run a tiny bar? Alcoholics aside, how could a tiny bar in that same location hope to turn a profit? Let's pretend it's somehow full from 8am through to 4am the next day, and it's like that all week all year round, and every seat pays the same per hour. That's 365x20x20, and then you... so that's $34.25 per seat per hour to break even on $5million in the most optimal conditions imaginable.
 
I love how for liberals the solution to every societal ill is to now enable it.

Bro, just legalize drugs. All the problems associated with it will just magically disappear.
 
It seems like at a certain point the city of San Francisco would be better off just shipping these people elsewhere and paying for them to be wasteoids in wherever the fuck that is.

Housing 20 people for 5 million a year kinda makes my stomach hurt.

There has to be something cheaper, more effective, and more long term.
 
Why does it cost five million dollars a year to run a tiny bar? Alcoholics aside, how could a tiny bar in that same location hope to turn a profit? Let's pretend it's somehow full from 8am through to 4am the next day, and it's like that all week all year round, and every seat pays the same per hour. That's 365x20x20, and then you... so that's $34.25 per seat per hour to break even on $5million in the most optimal conditions imaginable.
I can answer this question.

Money laundering.
 
In rescue for non humans, this would called, correctly, “slow kill”. It is cruel, and it is absolutely unusual. Euthanize them you fucking commie cowards. This is a far more inhumane option. Give them fentanyl. Give them barbiturates. Not fucking booze.
 
Liver failure is how functional alcoholics die. When you're a drunk to the point of homelessness, it's your heart, brain, or pancreas that'll give up on you, and it'll happen quick.
It's like they tried to 1:1 convert a methadone program into an alcohol program, without checking if that would work from a physiological standpoint.

Alcoholism will kill you, unless something else gets there first. It doesn't matter where the booze comes from.
 
California is a giant death cult at this point.
 
I believe in harm reduction for people. Expecting complete sobriety as a rule is ridiculous. An addict really has to want to quit. It requires daily discipline to not got out and get plastered. Its like dieting in ways. Daily addicts need to make a decision to not give into an incredible urge. A lot of addicts don't have that kind of discipline, and i think the best thing you can do then is to minimize the damage. If they're taking up resources because they're zooted and you can minimize the allocation of those resources, i believe its a good idea.
 
Bootlegging is back in style BAYBEE! No more sneaking out to a still in the middle of the woods, now you just gotta go to faggotville and claim your free hooch! Bonus, you get to rob the faggot ass taxpayers of San Franshitsco.
Would SF even stop you if you were to set up a still on the street? Probably only if you started selling booze from it.
 
Could some more historically literate kiwis please tell me if there have been even one recoded instance of a homeless person having any difficulty acquiring booze. It seems to me that a better program would be to give body lice to NIMBYs.
 
Wstecz
Top Na dole