Los Angeles Times

Focus shifts to San Diego River

City officials increase efforts to clean up homeless camps amid hepatitis outbreak.

- JOSHUA EMERSON SMITH joshua.smith @sduniontri­bune.com Smith writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — City officials have recently turned their attention to the homeless encampment­s along the San Diego River in combating the ongoing hepatitis A outbreak that has killed 20 people and afflicted 536.

Health officials have said the contagious liver disease is being passed from person to person through fecal contaminat­ion, and that homeless people and illicit drug users have been those primarily affected.

After a law enforcemen­t crackdown in September on those living on the streets in the East Village, San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer’s office announced efforts to clean up debris from homeless encampment­s along the river.

City officials said two cleanup efforts have taken place around Qualcomm Stadium, with more to come. The Police Department’s homeless outreach teams have also focused on the river, offering hepatitis vaccinatio­ns and access to shelters.

“Our crews will continue to make progress cleaning the city’s portion of the San Diego riverbed,” said Mario Sierra, director of the Environmen­tal Services Department. “Many areas are challengin­g because of topography, vegetation and access, but we must do what we can to ensure the river is as free from debris and trash as possible.”

Last week, Mike McCraken, 62, gathered up his possession­s, preparing to move his 4-month-old encampment. He was among those who recently received notices to vacate.

He said a park ranger had posted the notice, giving him and his friends 72 hours to move or have their belongs confiscate­d.

“You move, and then they’ll come and tag your tent again,” he said. “I asked [a police officer] for advice about where I should go since I’m homeless and stuff, and he said, ‘Out of sight, out of mind.’ ”

Another man living on the river who identified himself as “Rabbit” said that people have flocked to the area because of the homeless crackdown in downtown San Diego.

“We’re getting overpopula­ted down here,” he said. But the 27-year-old added that evicting people won’t solve the larger problem.

“It makes no sense trying to move everyone around,” he said. “All it does is stir the pot.”

The San Diego River Park Foundation found that camps along the river nearly doubled in the last year.

The small nonprofit, which is dedicated to restoring the river, counted 116 encampment­s in October, up from 61 in the same month in 2016. This year’s total was by far the highest since the group started keeping records nearly a decade ago.

“Right now, there’s just a Band-Aid on the situation,” said Tiffany Swiderski, a staff member with the foundation. “It takes more of a coordinate­d effort and more of a partnershi­p between us and the city and the land managers and all the different stakeholde­rs in the area. You can’t just do one thing and walk away from it.”

Swiderski and others with the foundation, including a handful of volunteers, recently conducted their regular assessment of trash along the river.

Walking along a series of trails behind the YMCA in Mission Valley, foundation employee Benjamin Downing used GPS to document the precise location of trash and encampment­s.

“Ultimately, we’re hoping to have a system of trails that span from the mountains to the ocean,” he said of the foundation’s longterm vision. “As we start to develop this system of trails and open spaces, it will encourage people to use them and the presence of people will mitigate some of the problems.”

A homeless woman pulling a cart walked past Downing and the group. The trolley rumbled overhead on elevated tracks. Needles and bottles of oxycodone were scattered on the ground, as were old clothes, coolers, plastic jars and boxes of dog biscuits.

In response to the hepatitis outbreak, the foundation has scaled back its larger cleanup efforts, but it still conducts weekly abatement activities with staff and a core group of vaccinated volunteers.

Downing will share his data with the Metropolit­an Transit System, which owns this section of land and routinely conducts its own debris-clearing operations. The foundation has a cooperativ­e agreement with the agency allowing its members to operate in the area.

San Diego City Council members Lorie Zapf and David Alvarez on Monday plan to propose using the former San Diego Chargers training facility on Murphy Canyon Road as temporary housing for the homeless people along the river. In addition to other environmen­tal and safety issues, there is concern about the rising river and flooding of homeless encampment­s with the rainy season approachin­g.

Despite the challenges, the river park foundation has made a significan­t difference on sections of the river, Swiderski said.

“A long time ago, Mission Valley Preserve was awful,” she said. “So much trash, just the stuff of legends. Then over time through a coordinate­d effort of working on enforcemen­t and cleaning the area up, Mission Valley Preserve overall is looking great now.”

Minutes later, she ducked through a tunnel of bushes to find Daniel Potet, 69, sleeping on a dirty blanket under a beach umbrella. His small dog barked at her approach, and the homeless man, frazzled, slowly pulled on his pants.

It’s a common encounter for foundation staff, who say they do their best to make friends with the homeless living on the river.

Potet said he found the spot about a week ago after being chased by police out of another camp near the river.

“I travel up and down the river.”

 ?? Photograph­s by John Gibbins San Diego Union-Tribune ?? DANNY RUIZ, who has lived along the San Diego River for seven years, packs up his belongings after being given 72 hours’ notice to move.
Photograph­s by John Gibbins San Diego Union-Tribune DANNY RUIZ, who has lived along the San Diego River for seven years, packs up his belongings after being given 72 hours’ notice to move.
 ??  ?? TIFFANY SWIDERSKI, a staff member with the San Diego River Park Foundation, and volunteer Dave Loveland conduct an assessment of trash along the river.
TIFFANY SWIDERSKI, a staff member with the San Diego River Park Foundation, and volunteer Dave Loveland conduct an assessment of trash along the river.

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