Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Transient camp tucked in Silicon Valley cleared out

- MARTHA MENDOZA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Police and social-service workers on Thursday began clearing away one of the nation’s largest homeless encampment­s, a cluster of flimsy tents and plywood shelters that once housed more than 200 people in the heart of wealthy Silicon Valley.

Al Palaces, a former truck driver who moved in about eight months ago, was among those ordered to leave the camp known as the Jungle, which city officials have been trying to eliminate for years.

“I just grabbed whatever I could because I don’t want to go to jail,” he said, standing next to an overloaded shopping cart stuffed with muddy plastic bags.

On Monday, people living in the camp were given until dawn Thursday to leave or face arrest for trespassin­g. By Thursday morning, about 60 people were left at the muddy, garbage-strewn site.

Nancy Ortega sobbed as she watched tractors load garbage into trash trucks. A passing motorist shouted at those who had just been evicted.

“People drive by and look at us like we’re circus animals,” she said.

Many people had trouble dragging their belongings out of the camp through ankle-deep mud.

“It’s junk to everyone else. But to us, these are our homes,” said Ortega, who said she had been in and out of jail and struggled with addiction and mental illness.

By midmorning, dozens had been moved out after abandoning most of their possession­s, but some of the homeless remained.

Valentine Cortes, who said he was a journeyman constructi­on worker, had no plans to leave his makeshift shelter built into a steep, muddy slope.

“I don’t know why people got all chaotic today,” he said. “We don’t have to go.”

Asked about the warning that anyone who stays could be jailed, he shrugged and said, “Then I guess I’ll be arrested.”

Animals also roamed the square-mile camp, some of them pets and others wild. Rats could be seen running through the muck.

A few dozen protesters gathered at the site holding signs reading “Homeless people matter” and “Stand with The Jungle.”

The encampment stands in stark contrast to the surroundin­g valley, a region that leads the country in job growth, income and venture capital.

Palaces said he liked the Jungle better than the streets because people would bring food but not bother the residents.

“Even a job wouldn’t give me a house” because housing prices are so high, he said.

Officials planned to try to find shelter for the night for those homeless people connected with social services. Anyone not linked with social services still has to leave, San Jose homelessne­ss response manager Ray Bramson said.

Several homeless-assistance groups also stepped in to help. HomeFirst, the largest provider to homeless people in Santa Clara County, has a shelter nearby with 250 beds, including 27 set aside for camp residents. Another 50 beds are open in a nearby cold-weather shelter.

“This feels terrible,” said Jenny Niklaus, the agency’s chief executive officer. “People are up to their calves in the mud dragging their stuff into the street.”

San Jose has spent more than $4 million over the past year and a half to solve problems at the encampment.

In the past month, one camp resident tried to strangle someone with wire. Another was nearly beaten to death with a hammer. And state water regulators have been demanding that polluted Coyote Creek, which cuts through the middle of the camp, be cleaned out, Bramson said.

Personal property confiscate­d Thursday was to be stored for 90 days before being disposed of in March.

The last time officials cleared out the camp was in May 2012, when about 150 people were moved out.

Dismantlin­g the Jungle is a large job. About 30 contractor­s in white hazardous-materials suits and hard hats joined other workers. More than two dozen police officers also were on hand.

It will take several days for trucks and bulldozers to haul out vast amounts of refuse and human waste. Heavy machinery will be used to fill in excavated areas where people had been living undergroun­d.

For some, the sudden abandonmen­t of so many improvised homes was a bonanza.

Dau Nguyen muttered to himself as he picked through a trash heap, pausing to wash some of the items in an aluminum-foil bin.

“I wait for somebody to leave,” Nguyen said, “and then everything is mine.”

 ?? AP/MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ ?? Crews begin cleaning up a homeless encampment known as the Jungle on Thursday in San Jose, Calif.
AP/MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ Crews begin cleaning up a homeless encampment known as the Jungle on Thursday in San Jose, Calif.
 ?? AP/MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ ?? Kelly, a resident of the Jungle who gave only his first name, leaves with his belongings Thursday.
AP/MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ Kelly, a resident of the Jungle who gave only his first name, leaves with his belongings Thursday.

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