Learn more about SF's coordinated response efforts
To review the FY 23/24 Annual Report, scroll to the bottom of this page. Please go to Okay To Call for information on San Francisco's Coordinated Street Responses. Click the button below.
Our approach and services
Innovative shelter and housing strategies
Please go to the Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing's (HSH) strategic planning site to learn more about the "Home By The Bay" strategic plan.
Street crisis response teams
Responding to urgent needs and addressing behavioral health, overdoses, and wellness checks.
Healthy streets operation center (HSOC)
HSOC provides a coordinated response to unsheltered persons experiencing homelessness,behavioral health needs,, encampments, street cleanliness and related public safety issues to ensure San Francisco's streets are healthy for everyone. The HSOC encampment resolution process was used to create the nationally recognized best-practices for resolving large homeless encampments in a service-first model.
Planned outreach
Street outreach teams, like HSH's Homeless Outreach Team (HOT) work in San Francisco communities every day, helping people in the moment, building relationships, and connecting people with resources like medical care, behavioral health, case management, shelter and housing.
Rapid responses
In May, 2023, the Department of Emergency Management, in partnership with Urban Alchemy launched the Homelessness Engagement and Response Team (HEART) to a fill a gap in street response services: rapid responses to third-party calls to the public safety non-emergency number at the 911 Call Center and 311 related to requests for response to the needs of people experiencing homelessness. Please click here for more information.
Ambassador coordination
The City works with and is tightening coordination of citywide Ambassador services, facilitates pit stops services, supports 1,000 hours a month in street cleaning, and supports the Tenderloin Initiative to keep neighborhoods safe. Learn more about our Ambassador Programs.
If you are experiencing homelessness
FY 23/24 San Francisco Coordinated Response Teams, Annual Report
The annual report provides a comprehensive outline of SF Coordinated Response Teams history, the status of developing projects as well as indication of both collective and unique services impacts.
About
Just over 4,300 people in San Francisco experience unsheltered homelessness and many face challenges with substance use disorders and mental illness. We still have a lot of work to do to get people the help they need and make our city shine. But we’re putting the pieces in place to make that happen. City departments are focused on:
- Creating more places for people to go;
- Expanding outreach and coordination so people get the services and placements they need; and
- Strengthening data and transparency tracking tools to ensure that our resources are making an impact.