Danger and Crime in Tucson Headlines; Two Steps Forward, Three Steps Back

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TWO STEPS FORWARD, THREE STEPS BACK. TUCSON NEEDS ACCOUNTABILITY, NOT EXCUSES
By Tucson Crime Free Coalition
On June 17, Mayor Regina Romero and Tucson City Council voted to ban camping in parks and washes. After years of growing frustration from families, small business owners, and neighborhoods, this long overdue decision finally acknowledged what Tucsonans have been saying. Our public spaces must be safe, clean, and accessible to everyone.
The vote was five to one, with only Council Member Kevin Dahl opposed and Council Member Lane Santa Cruz absent. Dahl’s vote unfortunately supported the continuation of dangerous encampments and declining conditions in our parks and washes. His stance should concern voters, especially with his reelection on the horizon.
This was a step in the right direction. But since the vote, Tucson has been reminded that action without follow through only deepens the crisis.
On July 3, Tucson Fire was called to perform a swift water rescue in the Santa Cruz River near Prince Road. Two people and one dog were pulled from fast moving floodwaters. Thankfully, no one was injured. But this incident could have ended in tragedy. Washes were never meant to be living spaces, and the longer we allow people to stay in flood zones, the more lives we risk.
Meanwhile, new crimes near parks and public spaces continue to make headlines:
- A fatal carjacking involving a previously deported man
- A stabbing near an eastside park
- A hatchet attack at a bus stop
- A man beaten to death in a park
This is the reality our communities face daily. And still, city leaders continue to minimize the crisis.
Mayor Romero recently claimed that the 2025 Point in Time count proved her Housing First strategy is working by highlighting a reported drop in unsheltered homelessness. We call that claim disingenuous and gaslighting. The Point in Time count is a one-night volunteer effort that regularly undercounts the most vulnerable. Local nonprofits report significantly higher figures than what the city publishes. Residents can see with their own eyes that homelessness is not declining. It is shifting, spreading, and becoming more dangerous.
Tucson Crime Free Coalition participated in the Point in Time count. We respect the volunteers, but we know the count is flawed and should never be used to declare success.
Treatment Beds First
Tucson sits at the main entry point for the narcotics superhighway into the US from Mexico. As narcotics travel further into the US, the law of economics dictates that the cost of those drugs increase. Simply put, the cost of fentanyl among other drugs is simply lower in Tucson than most other parts of the U.S. Low-cost narcotics, an abundance of empty land and vacant and neglected buildings, an understaffed police department, a free bus system that spreads crime and chaos like a cancer throughout the City and adjoining communities, lack of political will to enforce common sense policies, a prosecutor who remains a public defender to her core and has abdicated the responsibilities of her office, a disengaged population trapped in a low-wage economy, combine to create the situation that Tucson faces today.
Tucson is overwhelmingly populated by addicts stuck in the cycle of addiction. Simply look at the abandoned RVs and other vehicles tucked into or neighborhoods and look at the license plates. Addicts and those down on their luck are attracted to Tucson for cheap drugs and virtually nonexistent enforcement of law. Our bus stops and parks have become open air drug markets.
Tucson’s elected leaders continue to misidentify the root causes of this drug/crime crisis and focus on ideology over pragmatism. A prime example of is the City continuing to pour resources into its Housing First strategy, but the results speak for themselves. Tucson cannot build or house its way out of this problem.
This model, which prioritizes housing without requiring sobriety, treatment, or participation in services, may work for some. But for many, it enables continued substance use, crime, and disconnection from accountability. It does not address the underlying causes of homelessness like addiction, mental illness, or refusal to engage.
And refusal to engage is now the central issue. The biggest barrier to progress is not a lack of beds or housing. It is the growing number of individuals who are repeatedly offered support services, treatment, or shelter and who refuse every time.
That is why Tucson should follow the example of San Jose, California. In July, the democrat led San Jose City Council passed a new "responsibility to shelter" ordinance. Under this policy, if an unhoused person refuses three offers of shelter or services, they can be arrested for trespassing. The ordinance also includes expectations that tents will not be pitched near schools, playgrounds, or block public rights of way. San Jose is not turning its back on the unhoused. It is simply saying that continued refusal of help is no longer acceptable.
We urge the City of Tucson to adopt a similar approach. Jail should never be the first option. But it can serve as a tool to intervene, stabilize, and connect people to services. We cannot keep enabling people to live indefinitely on the streets in a state of untreated substance use disorder. That is not compassion. It is neglect.
The city continues to claim there are not enough shelter beds, yet organizations like Gospel Rescue Mission have open beds today. What sets them apart? Treatment. Basic rules, substance abuse programs, curfews, and accountability. These are not barriers but rather treatment for addiction. They are pathways to stability. When the city ignores this, it sends a message that chaos is acceptable, and that recovery is optional.
It is time for Tucson to recognize that Housing First, as currently practiced, is failing to meet the scale and complexity of what we face. We must combine a treatment first approach with structure and compassion with consequence.
Here is what Tucson Crime Free Coalition has achieved by staying focused and pushing forward
· Helped pass Proposition 312 to hold the city accountable for its purposeful failure to enforce its own laws;
· Supported the defeat of Proposition 414 which would have made the crisis worse and raised sales tax without accountability;
· Brought a long talked about concept, the Pima County Jail Transition Center to fruition. It’s remarkable that prior to TCFC, inmates released from the Pima County Jail were simply released into the streets without resources or access to support infrastructure. This effort, has saved over one million taxpayer dollars in its first year, led to a major decline in recidivism for individuals who accept services provided by the Transition Center, and provides a key pillar of services infrastructure to the community as the Transition Center is available to anyone in need of services;
· Helped push for state level reform to improve existing behavioral health law including Title 36;
· Advocated for no panhandling signs in the county;
· We have mobilized thousands to attend meetings, write letters, and speak up;
· Through meetings, awareness campaigns and tens of thousands of conversations, we have educated the public on the devastating impact of fentanyl and street level drug activity;
· These collective efforts have increased the public pressure on our elected leaders to the point where they are voting for common-sense policies that they previously either rejected or stonewalled. It was just this past March that the City Council initially voted against the ordinance to ban campaign in washes. This groundswell of support is leading to more change. The City of Tucson’s bans on soliciting in traffic medians and camping in washes and parks are OUR victories towards common sense solutions, accountability, and acknowledgement that Tucson, we have a problem! We, with your support, will use tools like Proposition 312, to force the City to start enforcing its own laws!
This is a moment for action. It is not enough to pass a ban. Leaders must enforce it. It is not enough to release a statistic. Residents can see the truth with their own eyes. And it is not enough to ask voters for trust. Leaders must earn it.
We are nearly nine thousand members (and 4 steering leaders) strong. We are nonpartisan and 100% unpaid. And we are not going away.
If you care about Tucson’s future, now is the time to get involved
Watch the news clips linked on our website
Talk to your neighbors
Sign up for our newsletter
Ask candidates where they stand
Demand honest answers
Donate to TCFC through our website!!! Your funds are treated like our funds, and we desperately need those funds to advance our mission for a better Tucson.
Together, we can restore safety, accountability, and common sense to Tucson.
Tucson Crime Free Coalition
“Housing first” equals dumping them IN our homes. The elderly/disabled/poor. They are dumped where we are forced to live due to back when sec 8 wasn’t paying their bills. We had to move to the ‘05 area and we live in terror even though building is “secured”. They find a way in, and those that got “housing first” are destroying and treating the property like it’s one of their camps. Still using. Shitting in the washer, smoking in the halls , threatening and harassing hospice pts, elderly, disabled. They do not care. We got one elderly and disabled woman looking at being possibly arrested for defending herself after being threatened to be cut up. We can’t defend ourselves, but half the time cops don’t even show up, so we have learned to each find a method of defense we can physically handle. But then get arrested for having it in our lap while we sit in a wheelchair after calling the police because they are threatening to cut our heads off. I have been attacked numerous times. No police show. Car completely trashed and vandalized 14 times. YES ! 14 times. They seek out those they think can’t protect themselves. To this day police even with video footage has yet to arrest anyone, even when they knew the person and where they lived. Until they can act like human beings instead of rabid animals. They don’t need to be living with law abiding citizens. Especially vulnerable ones. I can’t even tell you the half of what they do or it would take up the whole comment section. But WE NEED HELP. This can’t go on.
In January 2022 we moved into a new construction, low income building here in Tucson that was made possible by a grant from President Trump’s administration. Brand new spacious apartments, brand new full-size appliances, & each unit equipped with a washer & dryer, even though we don’t have to pay for water. These apartments afforded our income bracket unheard-of “luxury”. Naturally, a bunch of druggies moved into the building. One man began having meth parties every night in his unit, attended by all the other druggies here. Only he, though, was asked to leave. Some charity found him other housing but he refused, stating that he was not about to live by anyone else’s rules. Instead he bought a tent & moved out into one of the washes with all the other druggies. I was glad to see TCFC talk about this willful refusal to clean up their lives, even when offered incredible amounts of help. All the druggies here are the same way, they are angry anyone expects them to follow any rules at all & furious when anyone interferes with their use or dealing of drugs. We need laws to be enforced & if the person doesn’t want to obey them, either live in a jail cell or leave the state. Another suggestion that would get immediate, sane action from the mayor & city council would be to demand that TPD round up all these homeless druggies & dump them on our city leaders lawns. Maybe if these elitists had to actually live with what they force the rest of us to live with, they would enact & enforce effective laws to eliminate the problems they instead create.
Public Officials endangering Public Safety- could be the title of the statute which makes these public officials personally liable for their actions. Personal liability is the only thing that will change this situation.
1 Everything you see is being done INTENTIONALLY. This is not ignorance or stupidity. It is all calculated to turn Tucson into a place that will sustain a voting block of dependent people, part of a plan to turn AZ blue. It is the only explanation.
2 San Jose: A hundred years of trying these different policies has resulted in us being in the situation we are in.
The only way to solve this is to arrest and jail the FIRST time. That’s why these are crimes. If you have kids, did you ever sense they were testing you? Won’t you be doing the same thing you think the public defender county attorney is doing—not prosecuting? If these people know they will get 2 or 3 free passes, what behavior do you expect? And, in reality, don’t we have that now,i.e., police not arresting? Don’t they have some special squad that goes out and “talks” to these people. Sorry, Sheriff Joe’s idea of a tent city sounds better all the time. If the tree is growing crooked, you stake it and straighten it our right away. You don’t wait for it to grow tall, fall over, fail, and take a house or a person with it when it falls.
3 What prompted this changed “vote” is the threat of personal liability. People will wake up when they realize that when the courts say the “City” can be liable, they mean you and I, not the m&cc. That’s you and I:our tax money. We are paying for this. Anyone running for office now should concede that if they act in such a way, vote, etc., that endangers the public safety, they should be personally liable. Otherwise, you are going to get what you already have.
You want a change: Personal liability and enforce the laws on the books from day one. This is really the only “enlightened” approach to solve this problem.
TCFC hits it on the nail again!! Time for Tucson to wake up!
It is very obvious that in our neighborhood is not being reported in the news media. There was a second attack at the bus stop on Sabino Canyon tank of liberty Road previously a safe neighborhood. If they don’t report this crime in public media, how would people know what’s going on? I am going to be in touch with Paul Cunningham as soon as possible the panhandler are coming back to the medians at Sabino Canyon and Tanque Verde and also Kobe and Grant it is illegal. It needs to be enforced. Udall it’s no longer a safe place for families and people exercising outdoors. These are our tax dollars we are being ignored as citizens. We have a right to be safe in the city park. There are homeless encampment all over the south side of Utah park and they need to go.
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