Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

San Francisco sanctions homeless encampment­s

- Janie Har and Terence Chea

SAN FRANCISCO – San Francisco is joining other U.S. cities in authorizin­g homeless tent encampment­s in response to the coronaviru­s pandemic, a move officials have long resisted but are now reluctantl­y embracing to safeguard homeless people.

About 80 tents are now neatly spaced out on a wide street near San Francisco City Hall as part of a “safe sleeping village” opened last week. The area between the city’s central library and its Asian Art Museum is fenced off to outsiders, is monitored around the clock and provides meals, showers, clean water and trash pickup.

In announcing the encampment, and a second one to open in the famed Haight-Ashbury neighborho­od, San Francisco’s mayor acknowledg­ed that she didn’t want to approve tents, but having unregulate­d tents mushroom on sidewalks was neither safe nor fair.

“So while in normal times I would say that we should focus on bringing people inside and not sanctionin­g tent encampment­s, we frankly do not have many other options right now,” she said in a tweet last week.

Nicholas Woodward, 37, is camping at the safe sleeping site, but he said he preferred sleeping in his tent before the city stepped in; he finds the fencing belittling and the rules too controllin­g. His friend, Nathan Rice, 32, said he’d much rather have a hotel room than a tent on a sidewalk, even if the city is providing clean water and food.

“I hear it on the news, hear it from people here that they’re going to be getting us hotel rooms,” he said. “That’s what we want, you know, to be safe inside.”

San Francisco has moved 1,300 homeless people into hotel rooms and RVs as part of a statewide program to shelter vulnerable people but the mayor has been criticized for moving too slowly. She has said she is not inclined to move all the city’s estimated 8,000 homeless into hotels, despite complaints from advocates who say overcrowde­d tents are a public health disaster.

San Francisco is just the latest city to authorize encampment­s as shelters across the country move to thin bed counts so homeless people have more room to keep apart.

Santa Rosa in Sonoma County welcomed people this week to its first managed encampment with roughly 70 blue tents. Portland, Oregon, has three homeless camps with city-provided sleeping bags and tents, and Maricopa County opened two parking lots to homeless campers in Phoenix.

 ?? NOAH BERGER/AP ?? Rectangles designed to help prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s line a city-sanctioned homeless camp in San Francisco.
NOAH BERGER/AP Rectangles designed to help prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s line a city-sanctioned homeless camp in San Francisco.

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