Thirty-five hundred miles southeast of San Francisco, a dirt road in Honduras shared by pickup trucks and oxcarts cuts through abandoned farmland.On the outskirts of a small village, a jewel-toned mural appears like a mirage:the Bay Bridge,sparkling at night, stretching across a 10-foot-high wall.In a nearby town square, a child in a Steph Curry T-shirt climbs a tree. A few blocks away, a taxi whizzes by, a SF Giants sticker affixed to its bumper. More extravagant emblems of San Francisco appear unexpectedly and often.Handsome new homes rise behind customized iron gates emblazoned with San Francisco 49ers or Golden State Warriors logos. This is the Siria Valley, a cluster of rural villages in central Honduras. The valley is the hometown of a high concentration of people who, fleeing poverty and one of the world’s highest murder rates, migrate to San Francisco, where some of them sell drugs. In the early 2000’s a Nevada gold mining company came in. Their project, the San Martin mine, contaminated the valley sickening residents, killing livestock and accelerating villagers to seek employment elsewhere. Most Hondurans reaching the Bay Area find legal work. They often hold jobs in restaurants, cleaning homes or gardening. But more than 200 Honduran migrants have been charged with drug dealing in San Francisco since 2022.A longtime Honduran dealer estimated that 1,000 migrants from Honduras are dealing drugs at any given time, with most of them from the Siria Valley, which has a population of 20,000. This community, which spans across two countries makes dangerous decisions as the search for wealth has unintended consequences: death on both sides. While some dealers said they struggled make a living, others said they can make $350,000 a year or more if they help run a local operation. Some of that money is sent back to the villages, where it is fueling a real estate boom. While Honduran migrants dominate the street dealing, the narcotics they sell come from Mexico and are controlled by cartels. Since the pandemic, overdose deaths skyrocketed, taking more than 2,500 lives in three years and street dealers have become more brazen than ever. They peddle drugs at all hours of the day, often in large groups, in some of the most centralized areas of the city.Now one of the most progressive cities in the nation is fracturing over concerns that it has become too permissive.What to do about the Honduran dealers is a key political issue as a major citywide election approaches in 2024.

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