Home newsSan Francisco July 4th fireworks marred by fog and toilet shortage

San Francisco July 4th fireworks marred by fog and toilet shortage

by markoflorentino@icloud.com



San Francisco’s much-hyped Fourth of July celebration went straight down the toilet.

The deep-blue city lured an estimated 100,000 people to the waterfront for a historic fireworks display launched from the Golden Gate Bridge, only for the show to be swallowed in thick fog for much of night as transit and sanitation issues added to the chaos.

Thick fog swallowed much of the show and transit descended into chaos. Getty Images
West Coast Road Trips via YouTube

Revelers were left fighting over just 127 toilets, or roughly one bathroom for every 787 people.

The National Park Service said the restroom shortage hit some of the city’s busiest viewing areas, where massive crowds packed the Presidio, Marina and northern waterfront for the first-ever Independence Day fireworks launched from the Golden Gate Bridge, only the third fireworks display in the bridge’s history.

The Golden Gate National Recreation Area had 27 permanent restrooms in those areas and added 60 portable toilets for the holiday.

Many attendees reported sitting in traffic, waiting extended periods for buses or walking long distances home. AFP via Getty Images

The City of San Francisco supplied about 40 more portable toilets at Crissy Field and Fort Mason, according to Joshua Winchell, chief of communications and special park uses for the Golden Gate National Recreation Area.

“These 127 toilets were not nearly enough to support our July 4 visitors,” Winchell told the San Francisco Chronicle. “We will work with the City of San Francisco and our other partners to ensure that enough bathrooms and other resources required for enjoyable park visits will be in place for future large-scale events, such as Fleet Week.”

The Golden Gate National Recreation Area had 27 permanent restrooms in those areas and added 60 portable toilets for the holiday. Christopher Sadowski
West Coast Road Trips via YouTube

The bathroom blunder is the latest black eye for what was billed as a once-in-a-generation patriotic celebration.

While the city spared little in staging a first-of-its-kind Independence Day spectacle, the basic logistics failed to keep pace with the massive turnout.

The bathroom blunder is the latest black eye for SF James Messerschmidt
Fog encases the Golden Gate bridge. Getty Images

Dense fog rolled over the bay just as the fireworks began, leaving many spectators staring at little more than flashes of light and the lower bursts breaking through the mist after waiting hours for the show.

Longtime locals, however, said none of it came as much of a surprise.

Some residents noted that anyone who has lived in San Francisco for more than a year knows Fourth of July fireworks are a “total crapshoot,” adding that 2025 was an unusual exception with clear skies.

They said the Golden Gate Bridge launch was a unique draw, but that anyone familiar with the city also expected the traffic nightmare and simply planned around it.

Getting home proved to be another ordeal.

The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency apologized for widespread delays, saying the transit system struggled to absorb an additional 41,000 riders on America’s 250th birthday.

Many attendees reported sitting in traffic, waiting extended periods for buses or walking long distances home.

Mayor Daniel Lurie blasted the transit breakdowns as “unacceptable” and said the city must fix the problems before Fleet Week, another major waterfront event expected to attract huge crowds in October.

Lurie walks up Market Street greeting people in the annual LGBTQ Pride Parade in San Francisco. Terry Schmitt/UPI/Shutterstock

An angry San Franciscan left a blunt but honest comment on Lurie’s Instagram post about the Fourth of July festivities: “No wonder everywhere smells like pee. There were almost no restrooms for these crowds!”

Another slammed him as the “worst mayor ever.”

Supervisors Stephen Sherrill and Bilal Mahmood have requested reviews of the city’s planning, including transit service, emergency access and whether autonomous vehicles contributed to the gridlock.

The restroom shortage is also expected to come under scrutiny. 

Sherrill, whose district includes the Marina, has called for a hearing before Fleet Week to examine what went wrong and what needs to change before the next major waterfront event.

 A Waymo robotaxi drives in North Beach. Getty Images

Industry planning standards suggest the city fell dramatically short.

For a crowd of 100,000 people, widely used Portable Sanitation Association International guidelines recommend about 1,000 toilets for an event lasting up to four hours without alcohol, roughly 1,300 to 1,500 for longer events and 1,500 to more than 2,000 if alcohol is served.

By that measure, San Francisco was short by at least 873 toilets even under the most conservative recommendation.

For a longer event or one serving alcohol, the shortfall climbs to more than 1,373, leaving attendees with less than 13% of the sanitation infrastructure typically recommended for a crowd that size.





Source link

related posts

Leave a Comment