Pacific Heights people call 311 on a homeless person.
Conor Harty feels the city is not doing enough to help the plight of the homeless. So he calls the police on them.
Daniel Singer, CEO of Panda, who is deeply concerned that his neighborhood will suffer the same fate as Hayes Valley, if homeless people are allowed to exist near him

While showing off his Snapchat camera glasses.
Natasha Pryor, of TPG Capital, whose logo is the Philadelphia People of Color Inclusive Flag for Pride month, feels bad for homeless people, but sees allowing one to exist near her as a slippery slope.
There are over ten 311 reports about a single tent, ranging from "trash cleanup," to "social distance violation," to "criminal activity."
The most photographed tent in San Francisco. Here, people are deeply concerned about its impact on Muni, red curbs, and sidewalk access (which you can see is fine).
FWIW, the city is closing these 311 tickets, saying it has modified its policy toward tents during the pandemic.

So someone tried to put in a ticket saying this tent is abandoned, and not an encampment, but simply unattended trash needing to be removed.
To be fair, there are some kind people. But the most common reaction to one is the "I am laughing at you and mocking you" emoji on Nextdoor.
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