Newsom asks: What do you need?
In door-to-door visits, S.F. workers extend helping hand to crime-weary residentsRachel Gordon, Chronicle Staff Writer
Friday, June 11, 2004
San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom knocked on a door at the Sunnydale public housing project Thursday morning and found a surprised Osvel Bethea, a 16-year-old who lives there with his sister.
Newsom asked him what he plans to do this summer, and was met with little more than a shrug and a brief comment about wanting to work. The mayor handed Bethea a flyer with information about summer jobs for youth and implored the teenager to follow up.
"You're in trouble if you don't. I know where you live,'' Newsom joked.
The mayor's unsolicited visit was just one of thousands that a cadre of city workers and volunteers plan to make this summer as part of a new door-to- door campaign devised by Newsom's staff to confront the entrenched despondency in San Francisco's poorest neighborhoods hit hardest by a rising tide of violence.
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