Breed led what her office labeled as a "table discussion" with community leaders, treatment and recovery advocates.
[Ads /]
Prop F would require people struggling with addiction to be enrolled in treatment in order to continue to receive cash assistance from the city.
"What I am hearing, time and time again, is San Francisco, this compassionate city, makes it too easy for people to be out there on the streets, using drugs, and we make it too hard, for people to get into treatment," Breed said.
MORE: SF March ballot measures will tackle revitalizing downtown, public safety, drug crisis
Breed says Prop F will change that.
The "No on Proposition F Campaign" says the measure will only make the problem worse, claiming evidence shows that forcing people into treatment doesn't work.
Prop F appears to have a lot of support from residents.
[Ads /]
But will that be enough support to pass?
MORE: Supreme Court will decide whether local anti-homeless laws are 'cruel and unusual'
San Francisco also appears to be backing off its lawsuit about the legality of homeless encampment sweeps. This is based on the Grants Pass case that the Supreme Court recently announced it would hear.
What does this mean for the city for now?
ABC7 Insider Phil Matier discusses these issues in the player above.