THC gets $70 million dollars per year

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The Boyd Hotel on Jones Street in San Francisco is A seven story hazardous walk up prison for its elderly and disabled tenants because elevator doors wont close. The Tenderloin Housing Clinic runs the Boyd for the City and County of San Francisco is very aware of this. THC commands an operational budget of $70 million dollars per year.  Revenue flows directly through The City and County of San Francisco. 

The gap between a $70 million municipal budget and a non-functioning elevator door highlights a deep, systemic failure in local housing oversight. While the Tenderloin Housing Clinic and the City coordinate the flow of millions in public funds, the day-to-day reality on Jones Street remains one of compounding physical isolation. For elderly and disabled residents, a broken elevator isn’t a temporary inconvenience—it is a complete denial of basic accessibility and safety, leaving them stranded in the gap between bureaucratic funding and actual livable conditions.

At the moment Guillermo J. Rojas Is the Manager of the Boyd Hotel and is pretty munch worthless as a property manager.

Guillermo J. Rojas Is the Manager of the Boyd Hotel

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THC and its backdoor move into the SF real estate market. 

In the grand, fog-swept theater of San Francisco’s political economy, the passage of Proposition C represented a seismic shift from the Macro—a high-altitude tax on corporate giants—to the Micro—the street-level acquisition of decaying hotels by powerful nonprofit entities. While framed as a humanitarian crusade, the reality in 2026 is a sophisticated financial maneuver. At the heart of this sits the Tenderloin Housing Clinic (THC), an organization that has mastered the Master Lease—a system where a nonprofit leases an entire building from a private landlord—turning social policy into a lucrative real estate backdoor. Continue reading