Los Angeles Times

3 O.C. cities seek to help ‘vulnerable’

Officials propose new shelter locations at a hearing over Santa Ana River Trail homeless camp lawsuit

- By Anh Do

Officials from three Orange County cities — Anaheim, Huntington Beach and Santa Ana — have proposed new shelter sites to help solve the area’s growing homeless crisis.

City representa­tives made their offers at a hearing this week before U.S. District Judge David O. Carter, who is presiding over a lawsuit filed by advocates for the homeless who wanted to halt the removal of an illegal encampment along the Santa Ana River Trail.

Carter allowed the evictions to begin Jan. 22, but said that they must be done “humanely” and with a measure “of compassion.” He also pushed cities to work together to come up with housing solutions for the river trail population, describing them as “vulnerable,” often with “nowhere to go.”

The river residents were moved temporaril­y to motels, but vouchers for the rooms have since expired.

Since then, Carter has gathered

delegation­s from the county’s 34 cities, including mayors and police chiefs, at court conference­s where they can update their progress in helping ease the homeless situation. At this week’s meeting, Carter warned officials not to release details on potential shelter locations.

Courtroom observers weren’t surprised that Santa Ana and Anaheim presented proposals because those cities have carried the heaviest workloads in serving the county’s homeless. Their idea, along with Huntington Beach’s, would add 700 beds total for housing the homeless.

“He wants to give people time to properly vet these locations and we appreciate that,” said Jorge Garcia, assistant to the city manager in Santa Ana. “Yes, Santa Ana has been overburden­ed with huge amounts of the homeless. But regardless of what the other cities do, we’re not going to shy away from these people…. Ultimately, we hope to operate shelters in a way that’s dignified. We understand that some individual­s may have mental illness or PTSD that doesn’t allow them to be in tight, closed spaces.”

Two locations in Santa Ana are under considerat­ion for “low barrier or no barrier” shelters, according to Garcia, citing operations where “any person with any background could be accepted” — in contrast to referral-based systems.

Anaheim officials are reviewing three sites, two of which would house up to 125 beds total and a third that belongs to a private property owner who has offered to convert his space for 200 beds by year’s end, Mayor Pro Tem Jose Moreno said.

“None of the locations are near a school or a park,” he said, adding that Carter “wants people to have a place where they can be assessed. And he’s seeking cooperatio­n. For example, Anaheim can partner with Orange or Buena Park because everyone realizes that it’s a regional problem.”

He added: “The judge told us that he doesn’t want people to be stranded. He knows there is NIMBYism, but he’s asking cities to show political will and courage at a time when constituen­ts want segregated spaces.”

In March, the Board of Supervisor­s asked its staff to research building temporary shelters on countyowne­d land in Huntington Beach, Irvine and Laguna Niguel — a move it quickly scrapped due to protests by residents and threats of lawsuits from city officials.

Supervisor Andrew Do on Wednesday suggested building 2,700 units of permanent housing over seven years.

 ?? Photograph­s by Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? TWO homeless people and their dogs at Santa Ana’s Plaza of the Flags in March. Camps there and along the Santa Ana River were subsequent­ly cleared, and cities are struggling to find new shelter for occupants.
Photograph­s by Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times TWO homeless people and their dogs at Santa Ana’s Plaza of the Flags in March. Camps there and along the Santa Ana River were subsequent­ly cleared, and cities are struggling to find new shelter for occupants.
 ??  ?? PROTESTS like this one in March outside a Board of Supervisor­s meeting helped doom temporary-shelter possibilit­ies on county land.
PROTESTS like this one in March outside a Board of Supervisor­s meeting helped doom temporary-shelter possibilit­ies on county land.
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? MONICA CORMAN was living in Santa Ana’s Plaza of the Flags in March. The plaza was cleared the following month. Shelters proposed by Santa Ana and two other cities could add 700 beds to help O.C.’s homeless.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times MONICA CORMAN was living in Santa Ana’s Plaza of the Flags in March. The plaza was cleared the following month. Shelters proposed by Santa Ana and two other cities could add 700 beds to help O.C.’s homeless.

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