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  • Henry Ha and other outreach team members visit the Richmond District in San Francisco.
    As Attacks on Asian Americans Regain Spotlight, SF Group Seeks to Soothe Community

    San Francisco again faced the specter of anti-Asian hate as two major cases captured public attention this month.  On Friday, Asian American activists and community members rallied at the Hall of Justice against a judge’s decision to grant probation and mental health treatment, rather than issue a harsher sentence, to Daniel Cauich, who in 2021 stabbed Ahn “Peng” Taylor, a Chinese Vietnamese woman in her 90s. That was just weeks after the police department re-opened an investigation into the death of Yanfang Wu, an elderly Chinese immigrant who died after being pushed down on a sidewalk last year.  The cases were reminders of why concerns persist over violence against Asian Americans in San Francisco — and of why the Coalition for Community Safety and Justice still exists.  The coalition, a group of nonprofits serving the Asian American community, formed in 2019 in response to a wave of racially driven attacks.

  • Silhouettes of two people crossing the desert.
    California Program Trains Undocumented Residents to Become Therapists and Serve Those in the Shadows

    On March 20, California Proposition 1 passed by a razor-thin margin and will authorize nearly $6.4 billion to expand the state’s mental health and substance abuse treatment infrastructure. Recognizing that even this significant funding boost cannot cover all scenarios, we bring you this story about a San Francisco organization that is filling a glaring void in the health care system.

  • A poster with a blue background and white and yellow graphics and lettering placed near a sidewalk urges people to "Stay 6 feet apart."
    Reporter’s Notebook: The Epidemic She Didn’t Expect to See

    On March 17, 2020, San Francisco and most Bay Area counties issued the first “stay at home” orders in the country to try to slow the spread of COVID-19.  Four years out, this seems like a good time to look back and reflect on those days. I’ve been working on a “Civic” episode to examine what we’ve learned so far about the COVID pandemic, what we could have done better back in 2020, and what we failed to learn from earlier pandemics, such as HIV/AIDS.