When in doubt, blame businesses for closing their doors instead of the crime that has made it unsustainable for them to operate. San Francisco might even do you one better: force the businesses to stay open anyway.
One of the 11 members of San Franciscos Board of Supervisors is floating reviving a vetoed 1984 law that would force grocery stores to stay open against their will. Supervisor Dean Preston calls it a good idea because of the risk of food insecurity that comes with grocery stores closing.
The law in question would require stores to give a whopping six-month notice before closing, would force them to meet with community members (i.e. activists who will shame them for being greedy corporations), and would mandate that they explore opening a replacement store to make up for the one they are closing. In other words, San Francisco would be forcing grocery stores to stay open while running at a loss and putting their own employees in danger due to crime, all because San Francisco just cant stomach locking up the criminals causing these problems in the first place.
Poster Comment:
I read of a city in the Northeast that wanted Asian shopkeepers to remove bullet proof shields in their stores because it made their Black customers feel bad to see that people did not trust young Black men with guns.