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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]OP, you know that there are kids who live in SF, and not just the poor kids who can't afford to live anywhere else. There are some really really wealthy folks who live there with kids. I'm sure they are just fine, and your kids would be too.[/quote] NP. Stick to the touristy areas and "cleaner" neighborhoods (like Pacific Heights and the Marina) and you'll be fine. Stay away from the Tenderloin, South of Market, patches of the Mission, and anywhere within a few blocks of the Civic Center.[/quote] I LIVE in SoMa, and I go to Civic Center all the time. There are a few museums there, and one that does walking tours of the area to show all the cool things in the area. There's one tour guide who is known to locals because he will go a little off-tour and show all the graffiti done by local artists. Oh, and I have a ninth grader (who obviously also lives in SoMa) and she goes all over the city by herself and with friends. If she's out with friends when it's dark, she asks me to send an Uber to bring her home. The part of SoMa to stay away from is 6th Street. Everything else is perfectly safe. And actually, I've walked down 6th on occasion and it's fine - it's just not ... pretty. [b] OP, someone shooting up is not dangerous. Seeing used needles is not dangerous. Seeing homeless people is not dangerous. Us locals will handle any homeless people who get dangerous near you - we know you're way too scared, and we may know the specific homeless person so know whether to yell at them, to talk, to physically move them out of your way. [/b] Lastly, DD and I are a smidge above poor. She goes to public school. Many of her classmates live in big, fancy houses and they regularly travel out of the country for holidays. [/quote] This bold part highlights an attitude that is a big part of California's growing problems.[/quote] For the pp who thinks that used needles is not dangerous, you should read the link posted above. Please think twice before letting your daughter walk on her own on those streets. ““If you do get stuck with these disposed needles you can get HIV, Hepatitis C, Hepatitis B, and a variety of other viral diseases,” said Dr. Lee Riley, an infectious disease expert at University of California, Berkeley. He warned that once fecal matter dries, it can become airborne, releasing potentially dangerous viruses, such as the rotavirus. “If you happen to inhale that, it can also go into your intestine,” he said. The results can prove fatal, especially in children.”[/quote] Why? What would me walking with her prevent? Do you think she’s touching dirty needles? Do you think when there’s poop on the sidewalk she leans down with her mouth open inhaling it? Come on. [/quote] No, but I have a 12-year old daughter and I would not be comfortable with her walking on her own in those kind of areas, amongst homeless people doing drugs. [/quote]
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