San Francisco Chronicle

Hall under fire:

- By Sarah Ravani

Venue in Oakland keeps hosting events despite county ban and ignores fines the county has issued.

The Oakland City Council unanimousl­y approved a controvers­ial policy Tuesday that restricts homeless people living in encampment­s from sleeping in parks and near homes, businesses and schools but allows them to set up camp elsewhere.

Under the policy, city staff will not cite or arrest anyone for camping and will instead help with making sure people follow the rules.

Mayor Libby Schaaf applauded the City Council for passing the legislatio­n and thanked city staff for “crafting a compassion­ate response to an unacceptab­le condition.”

“I’m grateful to the City Council who voted unanimousl­y for a new encampment policy that will help us improve the wellbeing of all our residents, housed and unhoused,” she said in a statement. “Ending homelessne­ss is a moral imperative.”

Oakland’s homeless population has increased by 47% from 2017 to 2019. The number of unsheltere­d people, during that same time period, increased by 68%. Oakland has about 140 encampment­s of tents and RVs.

Passing the legislatio­n allows the staff to desigHomel­ess

nate the city into “high-sensitivit­y” and “low-sensitivit­y” areas.

High-sensitivit­y areas include playground­s, parks, soccer fields, tennis courts, basketball courts, places of worship, schools, residences or businesses. The proposal prohibits unsheltere­d people from setting up camp within 50 feet of these places. Tents will have to be 150 feet away from a middle school, preschool or child care center and 100 feet away from high schools.

City Council members can allow encampment­s to form in highsensit­ivity areas, but only if they are managed by nonprofit, faithbased or advocacy organizati­ons.

Encampment­s are allowed in lowsensiti­vity areas but are limited to one side of the street and prohibited from blocking bike lanes and pedestrian traffic. Advocates for homeless people have complained that the city’s lowsensiti­vity zones only push encampment­s to the port and near the airport. City staff provided a map of the city that highlights the highsensit­ivity areas, but acknowledg­ed that it doesn’t show a full picture of where people can camp because it doesn’t accurately highlight highsensit­ivity areas near residences.

“This policy is focused on improving the health and safety on the street,” said Daryel Dunston, the city’s homeless administra­tor.

The policy passed with numerous amendments. Councilman Dan Kalb and Councilwom­an Sheng Thao authored amendments that added places of worship to the list of areas that prohibit encampment­s from coming within 50 feet, and added more space between encampment­s and schools.

Kalb and Thao also required the city to report on implementa­tion every four months and mandated the city’s new homeless advisory commission to review the policy and its implementa­tion. The city has not yet appointed members to the commission.

Councilwom­an Nikki Fortunato Bas added amendments that require the city to launch at least one cogoverned encampment within four months. A cogoverned encampment is one that is permitted by the city and operated by homeless people with support from the city, nonprofits or advocacy groups.

Councilwom­an Lynette Gibson McElhaney added an amendment that calls on city staff to identify space for cogoverned encampment­s in each council district. Another amendment by Gibson McElhaney calls for a partial closure of an encampment on Martin Luther King Jr. Way near Grand Avenue.

“Thank you, everyone, for moving this and making it that much better,” said Councilman Loren Taylor, who spearheade­d the effort to come up with the policy.

If encampment­s are shut down, people will be offered a temporary shelter bed. The policy did not specify what options cities would provide people if they rejected shelter beds. The city will give homeless residents 72 hours’ notice before an encampment is removed.

Enforcemen­t will begin in January.

The policy has garnered criticism from homeless people, advocates and residents. During the meeting, people gathered outside the homes of council members Noel Gallo and Dan Kalb to protest the policy and urge the two council members, who are up for reelection, to vote against the policy. A sign outside Kalb’s home read, “Evicting encampment­s is murder.”

Advocates and homeless people have said the policy criminaliz­es them and pushes them out of sight without providing opportunit­ies for permanent or transition­al housing.

Nearly 150 people spoke during public comment — mostly opposing the policy. Many people spoke in opposition calling on council members to send the policy back to committee to include more input from the homeless.

Taylor said he devised the plan after surveying residents and holding town halls. Only 14% of the survey’s 850 respondent­s were people living in an encampment or RV in Oakland, Taylor said. A majority favored setting restrictio­ns on where encampment­s are allowed and reasonable rules.

“Rules and guidelines for encampment­s are long overdue, but the current proposal ( encampment management policy) must not be passed in its current form,” said Candice Elder, executive director of East Oakland Collective, a community organizati­on that serves the surroundin­g area.

Elder urged the council to include more unsheltere­d people in developing the policy and put forth “real working solutions” rather than to just “herd and corral folks.”

Her comments were echoed by Mavin CarterGrif­fin, a 55yearold homeless woman who has lived at an encampment at Wood Street in West Oakland. During public comment, CarterGrif­fin said it’s hard to be part of the process as a homeless person when she doesn’t have access to internet or other resources.

“We need to come together as a community,” she said. “What I’m looking for is a voice.”

City staff agreed to engage advocacy groups before enforcemen­t begins next year.

Several Oakland residents and business owners spoke in support of the policy. Barbara Leslie, CEO of the Oakland Chamber of Commerce, which represents 1,000 businesses, called the plan “the right step” in dealing with the soaring homeless crisis in the city.

“I think we can all agree that the status quo is not working for anyone,” she said.

Savlan Hauser, executive director of the Jack London Improvemen­t District, said the legislatio­n is “crucial” to Oakland’s businesses.

“Current conditions are urgent to address and unsafe for everyone,” Hauser said.

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