Los Angeles Times

Homeless people face a hard decision at Echo Park Lake

- By Doug Smith, Benjamin Oreskes and Emily Alpert Reyes

On Tuesday, homeless people in Echo Park Lake were faced with a decision as an imminent city closure drew near.

The choice: Leave, or hunker down.

City officials have been planning to clear and fence the park and remove any belongings left behind by the homeless people who have populated it over the past year. The encampment has frustrated many surroundin­g residents.

Authoritie­s refused to confirm or deny rumors sweeping through the park that police would arrive in force either Wednesday or Thursday to cite or expel those who remained.

Early Tuesday, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority filled several shuttle busloads of those who decided to accept an offer of a room in a downtown hotel.

But by afternoon the buses had stopped coming and dozens remained, some seemingly indifferen­t to the coming eviction and the more vocal saying they believe they have a right to live in the park and planned to defend it.

Organizers of the resisters said they were planning to consolidat­e their tents on the west side of the park and

lock arms in defiance when told to leave.

“It’s long past time that the county help get more of us off the sidewalks immediatel­y, as quick as possible,” said park camper David Busch-Lilly. “I don’t think we need to have all the park. I would be happy to have up to half this park for us. We need more space in other parks in the city.” Busch-Lilly, who is on the eighth day of a hunger strike, said he is prepared to be arrested and to come back after getting out of jail.

A group of encampment residents and activists from a network of groups have scheduled a rally at 7 a.m. Wednesday to gather support.

“For the past year or at least ever since COVID hit we’ve been left alone,” the group of encampment residents said in a written statement.

“We’ve gotten together as a community, unhoused with housed, and did things together outside the context of charity or pity. We did things together for the sake of doing things together, as one community not separated by labels.”

At a news conference Tuesday morning, City Councilman Mitch O’Farrell was asked about a Times report that the park would be fenced and closed by Thursday. His response frustrated housed and unhoused residents alike.

“All CDC guidelines are being followed, and we’re acrented tually housing everyone who has been there since January,” O’Farrell said. “It’ll close soon and notices will go up and then we’ll all know.”

A spokesman for O’Farrell didn’t respond to requests for comment about when the park would close.

Alex Comisar, deputy communicat­ions director for Mayor Eric Garcetti, said in a statement that the mayor was “working closely with Councilmem­ber O’Farrell’s office to ensure that all unhoused Angelenos at Echo Park Lake are offered appropriat­e housing and shelter solutions and services through Project Roomkey and Homekey, and given the opportunit­y to claim or store their property.”

Projects Roomkey and Homekey are state initiative­s to house homeless people, either temporaril­y in hotel rooms or more permanentl­y in hotels that local government­s purchase.

Comisar didn’t specify when the park would close. An LAHSA spokespers­on told The Times that on Monday and Tuesday, outreach workers from the agency moved 44 people from the lake into hotels being rented by the city for homeless people.

Nearby residents who have lost patience with the city’s response to the homeless camps called in to Tuesday’s City Council meeting to offer support for the plan to close the park. They argued that the growing encampment was dangerous and had made it impossible for others to enjoy the park.

“I just want to be able to use the park that my tax dollars paid for,” said Riley Montgomery, who posted an online petition calling to remove the tents. Activists from wealthier areas “have no right to dictate what happens in our working class community.”

Another woman praised O’Farrell for his efforts and said she was firmly in support of finding alternativ­e housing for people camping along the lake. “Allowing a lawless encampment to flourish is not compassion,” she said.

A Times analysis of Los Angeles Police Department records shows that crime at the park increased in 2020 but that in certain categories homeless people were disproport­ionately the victims of crime.

Others at the meeting urged the councilman to cancel the upcoming closure of the park, complainin­g that little informatio­n had been shared with community members — most prominentl­y the people in the encampment themselves.

“We need services and housing, not secrecy and displaceme­nt,” said Echo Park Neighborho­od Council member Sachin Medhekar.

Many callers were incensed by the idea, arguing it would endanger vulnerable people during a pandemic. “What they need is housing. They don’t need you to sweep them out of the lake and then fence it off,” another caller said. “We’re putting up walls now? What are you, Trump? Disgusting.”

In a long written statement, the neighborho­od council president, Zarinah Williams, noted that the lake is situated on what once was Tongva tribal land and should continue to be a place where the community goes for “solace, leisure and survival.”

Williams said she didn’t believe spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to fix the park should be a priority and opposed criminaliz­ing people living in the park.

“We are disappoint­ed in Councilmem­ber O’Farrell’s strategy and the office’s favoring of special interests over a collaborat­ive and communicat­ive partnershi­p,” she said.

Department of Recreation and Parks documents show that the $600,000 in repairs being done to the park during its closure will include fixing bathrooms, street lamps and the playground, along with painting the boathouse and renovating the lake bridge.

Some tent dwellers who wanted to move into hotel rooms were still stranded Tuesday afternoon.

Maxine White, 23, who occupied a tent emblazoned with an American flag, said she thought it would be stupid to protest the park closure.

“They’re coming here and saying here’s a place to live,” she said. “Why not take a chance?”

“It’s time to grow up,” she added. “I don’t want to be out here doing the same stuff when I’m 40.”

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? A MAN rests at the homeless encampment in Echo Park last month. The park is set to soon be closed.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times A MAN rests at the homeless encampment in Echo Park last month. The park is set to soon be closed.
 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? A HOMELESS man takes down his tent before leaving Echo Park. Some of the people living in the park were taken to hotels, while others stayed put. The encampment has become a f lashpoint for residents and activists.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times A HOMELESS man takes down his tent before leaving Echo Park. Some of the people living in the park were taken to hotels, while others stayed put. The encampment has become a f lashpoint for residents and activists.
 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? THE ENCAMPMENT, shown last month, has divided the Echo Park community over the past year.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times THE ENCAMPMENT, shown last month, has divided the Echo Park community over the past year.

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