Los Angeles Times

Camp’s haul ‘eye-popping’

Cleanup of O.C. homeless site yields 404 tons of debris, 14,000 needles.

- By Anh Do anh.do@latimes.com Twitter: @newsterrie­r

Crews from the Orange County Public Works department have collected nearly 14,000 hypodermic needles and cleared more than 5,000 pounds of hazardous waste — including human waste — from the vast homeless encampment along the Santa Ana River trail.

The numbers, released last week, represent cleanup work done from Jan. 22 to March 3 along a two-mile stretch of trail spanning the 5 Freeway in Orange to Ball Road in Anaheim.

The tally — 404 tons of debris, 13,950 needles and 5,279 pounds of waste — is “simply eye-popping,” said Shannon Widor, Orange County Public Works spokesman.

“Nothing of this magnitude involving our crews and homeless population­s has ever been done before in the county,” he said.

He said the waste included propane, pesticides, solvent and paint.

“We’ve kind of seen it all. It’s a good thing it’s been hauled away,” Widor said.

“People tend to lose sight that this area is part of a flood control channel, and debris can keep spreading and impact water quality,” he added.

Last month, county officials moved more than 700 people living at the encampment near Angel Stadium into motels and shelters temporaril­y, assigning workers from the Orange County Health Care Agency to conduct assessment­s of the homeless to help connect them to support services.

Through March 2, 221 clinical assessment­s have been completed — with 493 referrals given to social services, veterans services, public health and behavioral health and more, county spokeswoma­n Jen Nentwig said.

The cleanup at the trail is part of an environmen­tal remediatio­n project that will focus on tree trimming, removing 2 to 3 inches of soil and working with Orange County Parks to repair the bicycle path, Widor said.

 ?? Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? A BICYCLIST rides past piles of trash from a homeless camp in Orange County. More than 700 people were relocated in February.
Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times A BICYCLIST rides past piles of trash from a homeless camp in Orange County. More than 700 people were relocated in February.
 ??  ?? SETH SLOCUM of Costa Mesa walks on the site of the former homeless camp. The cleanup figures reflect work from Jan. 22 to March 3 along two miles of trail.
SETH SLOCUM of Costa Mesa walks on the site of the former homeless camp. The cleanup figures reflect work from Jan. 22 to March 3 along two miles of trail.

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