Pubdate: Mon, 3 May 1999 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 1999 San Francisco Chronicle Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Forum: http://www.sfgate.com/conferences/ Author: John Wildermuth, Chronicle Staff Writer JUNKIES SHOOTING UP IN S.F. PUBLIC TOILETS Private, roomy facilities perfect for heroin users To the dismay of local officials, San Francisco's new street toilets are the unwitting co-stars of a grim new television documentary on heroin use in the city. In ``Black Tar Heroin: The Dark End of the Street,'' which has been playing on HBO, Berkeley filmmaker Steven Okazaki follows a group of strung-out junkies, some of whom use the sleek green pay toilets as a 25-cent shooting gallery. Although the facilities at Sixth and Mission streets and United Nations Plaza were the toilets of choice in Okazaki's film, they are not the only ones drawing attention from police. ``It's sort of an ideal place to do drugs, and we warned about that right from the get-go,'' said officer Sherman Ackerson, a San Francisco police spokesman. ``It's a lighted, locked place and if people are going to do drugs, they do them there.'' One sequence in the bleak film shows two teenage girls sitting on the floor of the 84-square-foot bathroom at Sixth and Mission, cooking their heroin into a liquid over an open flame. When someone outside bangs on the locked door, they yell for him to go away. ``We get 20 minutes here and we're going to use them all!'' one of the girls yells as she readies her syringe. City officials argue that the scene is an anomaly and that by almost any standard, the street toilet program has been a San Francisco success story. From the time the first one was installed in June 1997 by the French-based J.C. Decaux company, tourists, residents, street people and politicians have sung their praises. ``We haven't received any complaints about them,'' said Jake Szeto, who runs the street toilet program for the city's Department of Public Works. ``Right now, we have over 30 written requests to put them in at new sites and none to take them out.'' The 20 automated toilets now on the streets are high-tech wonders, with power doors, self-cleaning commodes and automatic sinks. They are kept clean and in top working order by Decaux technicians, who visit them all at least once a day. ``Our people are out there every morning at 6 a.m., fixing the toilets and eliminating any graffiti,'' said Francois Nion, a company vice president. ``People see our technicians in their uniforms and company trucks and know we're taking care of them.'' About 1.8 million people have used the street toilets since they were first installed. At the busiest sites -- Fisherman's Wharf, U.N. Plaza, Powell at Market and Market at Castro -- more than 100 people a day use a quarter or a free token for as long as 20 minutes of privacy. There are problems, however. Outside Boeddeker Park, at Eddy and Jones streets in the Tenderloin, police play a constant cat-and-mouse game with drug dealers and addicts who use the hulking metal bathroom for business and pleasure. Sergeant Joe Garrity of the Police Department's Tenderloin Task Force chases drug users out of that pay toilet almost every day. ``It's an ongoing problem,'' he said. ``When we made a push to clean up the area in January, we had eight arrests in one day there. Now it's about two or three a week.'' The police get regular complaints from other people on the street who say the drug users are monopolizing the toilets and keeping them from their intended use. ``Handicapped people often can't get in to use the toilets,'' Garrity said. ``We've got a lot of people in the area who use wheelchairs and they have needs.'' The illicit use of the street toilets does not come as a surprise to Decaux officials, who warned early on that the large bathrooms used on San Francisco streets were an invitation to trouble. Instead, they recommended much smaller facilities, the size of the kiosks now used as newsstands. ``It's just a matter of common sense,'' Nion said. ``If two or three or five guys can get in (a locked toilet), it's different from an airline-style toilet for one person. The smaller one is not as inviting for misuse.'' But the smaller facilities could not accommodate wheelchairs, so they weren't legal under the Americans With Disabilities Act. Because the disabled need the additional space, the street toilets were designed to meet those specifications. Crime problems have been limited to only a few of the toilets, most of them in areas that already had plenty of troubles, Nion said. In addition to the toilets at Boeddeker Park and Sixth and Mission, hot spots for drugs, vandalism and other crimes have plagued the facilities at the 16th and Mission BART station and McCauley Park at Ellis and O'Farrell streets. Additional toilets will soon be turning up on city streets. As many as 10 more could be in service over the next 18 months. One of those likely will be at Haight and Cole streets, where residents have changed their tune on the subject of street toilets. ``When we originally moved to put one at Golden Gate Park, at Stanyan and Waller, the residents were adamant that they didn't want one inside the Haight itself,'' Nion said. ``But now that they've seen how well that one works, people are requesting the new one at Haight and Cole.'' No one believes that the police problems at San Francisco's street toilets are going away anytime soon, but no one's blaming the French imports for the city's growing heroin problem, either. ``The social problem is the crime and drug use, rather than the toilets,'' said Department of Public Works official Szeto, who as the point man for the project has to deal with the type of troubles Okazaki's film highlighted. ``We're providing a public service to people,'' he said. ``What we have to decide is whether the service provided outweighs any problems there may be.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck