Business curfews are emerging as regulatory policy instruments to reduce crime in high-risk areas, yet rigorous evaluations remain limited. This study examines San Francisco’s Tenderloin Retail Hours Restriction Pilot, which required select businesses to close from 12:00 a.m. to 5:00 a.m. starting July 2024. Using a customized Bayesian Structural Time Series model, we estimate a 56% reduction (95% credible interval: −72% to −27%) in drug-related incidents during curfew hours over nine months, with no evidence of spatial displacement to nearby areas or temporal displacement within the Tenderloin Public Safety Area. Results hold under Causal-ARIMA sensitivity tests. Findings suggest curfews may reduce opportunities for street-level drug activity, but potential economic costs and questions about long-term sustainability underscore the need for careful policy design.

No sales after midnight: evaluating the impact of a business curfew on drug-related crime in San Francisco’s tenderloin / Nazzari, Mirko; Calaresu, Marco; Triventi, Moris. - In: SECURITY JOURNAL. - ISSN 0955-1662. - 39:1(2025). [10.1057/s41284-025-00517-w]

No sales after midnight: evaluating the impact of a business curfew on drug-related crime in San Francisco’s tenderloin

Nazzari, Mirko;Calaresu, Marco;Triventi, Moris
2025-01-01

Abstract

Business curfews are emerging as regulatory policy instruments to reduce crime in high-risk areas, yet rigorous evaluations remain limited. This study examines San Francisco’s Tenderloin Retail Hours Restriction Pilot, which required select businesses to close from 12:00 a.m. to 5:00 a.m. starting July 2024. Using a customized Bayesian Structural Time Series model, we estimate a 56% reduction (95% credible interval: −72% to −27%) in drug-related incidents during curfew hours over nine months, with no evidence of spatial displacement to nearby areas or temporal displacement within the Tenderloin Public Safety Area. Results hold under Causal-ARIMA sensitivity tests. Findings suggest curfews may reduce opportunities for street-level drug activity, but potential economic costs and questions about long-term sustainability underscore the need for careful policy design.
2025
No sales after midnight: evaluating the impact of a business curfew on drug-related crime in San Francisco’s tenderloin / Nazzari, Mirko; Calaresu, Marco; Triventi, Moris. - In: SECURITY JOURNAL. - ISSN 0955-1662. - 39:1(2025). [10.1057/s41284-025-00517-w]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11388/373369
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