Los Angeles Times

Echo Park Lake response at issue

Politician­s seek cost for LAPD deployment and why homeless people were barred access

- By Emily Alpert Reyes Times staff writer Kevin Rector contribute­d to this report.

Politician­s want to know how much LAPD spent and why the homeless were barred access.

Los Angeles City Council members Mike Bonin and Nithya Raman want to know how much it cost to send in police last week as the city fenced off Echo Park and barred people from a homeless encampment along its scenic lake.

Bonin and Raman are pressing for answers from the Los Angeles Police Department on how much the Echo Park deployment cost — including officer pay, overtime costs, equipment and helicopter expenses — how it affected police patrols in other neighborho­ods and why it was needed, as well as informatio­n on arrests, detentions and uses of force.

“There is tremendous public concern and consternat­ion regarding this deployment,” the council members wrote.

The two council members did not introduce their request as a formal motion that would go up for a council vote. Instead, the request was issued as a letter to LAPD Chief Michel Moore. Bonin is also introducin­g a formal motion along with Councilman Kevin de León asking the LAPD to report back on the detention of journalist­s during the Echo Park protests.

That motion, which also cited earlier incidents in which a KPCC reporter was arrested by L.A. County sheriff’s deputies and the LAPD sought to charge an L.A. Taco reporter, also asks the department to detail its procedures for issuing and recognizin­g press credential­s and to explain how it ensures reporters can freely cover demonstrat­ions, citing complaints about reporters being ushered to a “press pen” far from the Echo Park protests they were trying to cover.

The public push for answers about the Echo Park operation is unusual because L.A. council members typically shy from weighing in on matters in other council districts.

Bonin and Raman had already voiced their dismay with the effort to close Echo Park Lake, which brought hundreds of police officers to the neighborho­od as crews hustled to fence off the park by night. Outreach workers urged homeless people remaining in the park to accept offers for hotel rooms or other shelter before an impending deadline to leave.

Protesters were later arrested and journalist­s were detained. Officers were recorded on video using weapons in ways that appeared to violate department policies.

Last week, Raman said she was “powerfully saddened” by what she had witnessed. Bonin said it was “wrong and counter-productive” to deploy scores of officers in riot gear to the park.

Most people “have agreed police should not be used as a response to homelessne­ss,” Bonin said in a statement. “A deployment of armed officers exacerbate­s tensions, forcing stand-offs and creating confrontat­ions.”

De León also weighed in last week, saying the LAPD needed to revisit how it deals with journalist­s.

Moore has defended the department’s handling of the protests, saying demonstrat­ors were ordered to disperse only after officers faced violence and, on the second night, strobe lights were used to temporaril­y blind them.

Moore said that although the department had initially hoped to send out a “very minimal workforce,” officers were sent out in larger numbers amid posts on social media calling for protesters to “overrun the officers’ position and occupy the park, or destroy any fence, or prevent the fence from being installed.”

Councilman Mitch O’Farrell, who represents the Echo Park area, argued that the encampment was dangerous and the park needed to be temporaril­y closed for repairs. He rejected the idea that outreach efforts to homeless people had been “violent or police-led.”

“I’m disappoint­ed that some local elected officials, valuing politics over finding real housing solutions in their own districts, have sought to mischaract­erize our successful work to house people,” O’Farrell said in a recent statement. “They have also wrongly conflated our efforts to house individual­s with our larger conversati­ons about police reform.”

As of March 26, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority said that more than 180 people from Echo Park Lake had been placed into some kind of shelter or housing — the majority of them in hotel rooms through Project Roomkey. O’Farrell has cited higher numbers; LAHSA had yet to provide an updated total as of Wednesday afternoon.

However, homeless activists emphasized that the Project Roomkey rooms are only temporary and argued that the city had misused that resource — intended for the most vulnerable homeless people during the COVID-19 pandemic — for political reasons.

Despite the outreach effort, some former residents said they ended up on the streets or lost almost all of their belongings. At a news conference Tuesday on the steps of City Hall, Jessica Mendez pointed to a single bag.

“That purse is what I walked out with,” said Mendez, known in the encampment as the Queen of Echo Park. “That’s it.”

Jed Parriott, an organizer with the activist group Street Watch L.A., argued that “the police were definitely involved in outreach” at Echo Park by telling people they would eventually have to leave or face arrest. He denied that his group or others had made any threats that would justify the police presence.

The divide at City Hall reflects an even starker one in Echo Park and across the city. Some Echo Park residents applauded the move to fence off the park, arguing that the growing encampment had prevented the broader public from enjoying the iconic green space. Thousands had signed a petition to “save our lake.”

“As a mother and resident of Echo Park, I can attest to the fact that the park ceased to be a public space in early 2020. At that point, the area became a private space that was permanentl­y occupied and unfortunat­ely an incredibly dangerous and unstable environmen­t,” said one woman who phoned into the council meeting Wednesday.

Others railed against the decision.

An online petition has called for O’Farrell to resign; the homeless outreach and advocacy group Ktown for All joined those calls, saying the councilman had misled the public.

A group of university professors also sent a letter denouncing the Echo Park closure as a “forced eviction” and arguing that it flouted federal guidelines for ensuring COVID-19 safety.

‘A deployment of armed officers exacerbate­s tensions, forcing stand-offs and creating confrontat­ions.’

— MIKE BONIN, member of Los Angeles City Council

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? A HOMELESS MAN lays out a bedroll in front of officers near Echo Park Lake on the night of March 24. Two council members seek answers from the LAPD on costs for the Echo Park deployment — including officer pay, overtime costs, equipment and helicopter expenses.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times A HOMELESS MAN lays out a bedroll in front of officers near Echo Park Lake on the night of March 24. Two council members seek answers from the LAPD on costs for the Echo Park deployment — including officer pay, overtime costs, equipment and helicopter expenses.

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