Lodi News-Sentinel

Sierra Club asks Sac County to move homeless, citing American River fires

- Patrick Riley

SACRAMENTO — The Sierra Club’s Sacramento chapter is asking city and county officials to move hundreds of homeless residents along the American River Parkway into shelters and safe ground spaces, citing an increase in wildfires it says are often tied to homeless camps.

In a report and letter sent to city and county leaders Thursday, the environmen­tal group points to an analysis it put together using public records from fire department­s covering the parkway. With 156 fires last year, the parkway saw three times as many fires as in 2019, the report states.

Among the chief reasons for the increase, according to the group: A surge in homeless camps along the river.

“Most fires occur on the Sacramento section of the parkway and the increase in fires coincides with the stop of enforcemen­t of the anti-camping ordinance,” the report states, referring to a county rule that used to allow officials to issue citations for unlawful camping. That ordinance, and others like it, were found to be unconstitu­tional as a result of a 2018 federal court decision.

While climate change, rising temperatur­es and a prolonged drought also fuel the wildfire risk, blazes along the parkway “often start in or near the camps, where cigarettes, campfires, and stoves provide ignition,” according to the nine-page report. The majority of fires in recent years — more than 90% — have occurred on the north side of the river, “where a large number of the camps are.”

From 2016 through 2021 the agencies responsibl­e for fire protection along the parkway responded to 536 fires, according to the Sierra Club’s analysis.

The environmen­tal impacts of the fires on plants and animals haven’t been documented, the report says, but — citing a draft version of a county natural resources plan for the parkway — the area “provides a critical link between the Sierra Nevada and the Central Valley for migratory species such as mountain lions and mule deer.” It’s also a home to birds, rodents and reptiles.

The fires present a “major public safety risk,” the group said, blaming city and county officials for failing to provide adequate shelter for homeless residents, “leaving the American River Parkway to become a de facto homeless shelter for an estimated 750 people.”

Many homeless residents camp along the lower parkway because police have swept them from other locations, homeless advocates have said. They make fires to prepare food and survive in the winter and during cold nights.

Advocates have for years tried to get the county and city to provide fire safety measures for homeless people along the parkway, like special fire pits where they can safely cook, said Bob Erlenbusch, executive director of the Sacramento Regional Coalition to End Homelessne­ss.

“They haven’t done that,” he said. “They only have themselves to blame for not being proactive.”

County officials, meanwhile, are pointing to recent increases in funding for homelessne­ss efforts along the parkway and to prevent fires in the area.

Because the letter and report were sent late Thursday afternoon, the county on Friday declined to comment on it specifical­ly, but county Spokeswoma­n Kim Nava pointed to the “extensive work” officials are doing along the parkway this year, including $940,000 allocated annually for a parkway specific service team, beginning this fiscal year.

County Supervisor Don Nottoli said Friday he didn’t have a chance yet to review the report in full but acknowledg­ed the work that went into putting it together. “We know the fire threat is real,” he said.

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