Los Angeles Times

‘Day of reckoning’ for Anaheim’s homeless

Officials begin clearing hundreds from encampment

- By Anh Do and Benjamin Oreskes

Ray Huey bounced around from North Carolina to Washington state, Oregon, Idaho and Nevada before landing at the homeless camp on the side of the Santa Ana River in Anaheim.

In Anaheim, he found an unlikely collection of homeless people, including many couples. For years, this growing camp has become not just a place to sleep but a community for hundreds, complete with makeshift dwellings and a scattering of dogs.

But on Monday, Orange County officials began clearing out the encampment, the final stage in a monthslong effort to remove camps along the river that had become a much-debated symbol of the affluent county’s spiraling homeless problem.

“I just love this country, so it’s hard to pick one place to stay,” Huey said. “I guess I have to respect what they’re doing — but no, I haven’t made up my mind where to go next.”

And that is the central problem facing those who live by the river and thousands of other homeless people in Orange County. While housing prices and rents skyrocket, the county has a chronic shortage of

beds for those with nowhere to live.

The river camps had become a stopgap measure, and officials acknowledg­e they don’t know where many of those being evicted will end up.

For every two homeless people in the county, there is just one shelter program space, according to an estimate by Eve Garrow, an analyst and advocate for the American Civil Liberties Union. About 4,800 homeless people live in the county. Officials have responded to the rising homeless population by adding 525 beds in the last year or so, with 100 more coming in 2018. But that’s far from keeping up with demand.

Of Orange County’s 34 cities, 33 have ordinances that make it a crime to sleep or rest in public places, according to a report from the ACLU. Homeless advocates say these laws are part of the reason so many people have been forced to descend on the river in the first place.

“There’s nowhere in Orange County where it’s legal to be homeless,” said Mohammed Aly of the Orange County Poverty Alleviatio­n Coalition.

Many expect some of those who leave the camps will end up in other public spaces. Anaheim officials said they will try to be welcoming but noted the city does not allow overnight camping.

“We’re prepared to see people come to different spots around our city. Anyone’s welcomed to our parks, our libraries and around town … but we will couple outreach services with enforcemen­t,” said Mike Lyster, a city spokesman.

Starting this week, Lyster said, officials added extra security to city parks as backup for rangers and police, while a homeless outreach team staffed with police officers trained to work with the street population was also available. He said the hope is that homeless people will take advantage of those services available to them.

“We know it’s important to keep in touch with this population as it can take 12 to 15 times of talking to people before things will click — and before they will start accepting services,” Lyster said.

Anaheim has been struggling with an influx of homeless people. Last year, it generated national headlines by agreeing to remove some bus benches after complaints from merchants about homeless people sleeping on them.

Day One of the county’s mass homeless project started out as a soft sell.

Early Monday morning, workers from the county’s Health Care Agency and the Sheriff ’s Department strolled up and down the dusty path, quietly observing as residents awoke to a constant stream of visitors from social services groups and the media.

“We’re looking for progress. We’re asking for volunteers. But there will be a time when people will have to leave — and if they don’t leave — they will be subject to arrests,” said Orange County Undersheri­ff Don Barnes.

The cleanup was prompted by complaints from nearby residents about filth and crime. Since September, Barnes said, authoritie­s have arrested more than 500 people along the river for a variety of violations.

Orange County Supervisor Todd Spitzer called Monday “a day of reckoning ” for the homeless population.

“They must go elsewhere because citizens who live near the river trail area also have every right to be respected. They must be able to feel safe … and this is not the right place to set up to stay,” he said.

But Kenneth Batiste, who heads the Orange County chapter of the nonprofit Housing Is a Human Right, said removing the homeless without a place for them to go does not solve the problem.

“We just want people to have a fair chance,” Batiste said. “I’ve been here when officials try to intimidate these folks by issuing citations, but we need to understand that people are not trash. They deserve care, and they need our compassion.”

On Monday, a tiny terrier named Dolly tried to guard the blue tent belonging to her “mother,” Jodi Samhat, 34.

The pair clung to each other as Samhat said she was unsure where to go next, noting that shelters are out of the question because they don’t accept dogs.

Two weeks ago, county workers began visiting the encampment to alert people that they would need to move starting.

Since then, “I’ve cried. I’ve thought and thought and tried to make plans, but nothing could work. Where do you end up when every door is shut?” Samhat asked.

Her friend Laura Kasten, 50, faces the same dilemma. Officials offered pet owners such as herself and her husband, John Kasten, temporary boarding for their dogs. But they refused to turn over Sebastian, a wirehaired terrier and dachshund mix.

“We both have separation anxiety,” said Laura Kasten, who grew up in Fullerton. “He means the world to us, and we will take care of him. It’s clear no one wants us to be able to stay at the riverbed. They’re very prejudiced. The way they talk to us and tell us to get out, it’s like we’re dirt.”

One place some of the homeless evicted from the river will probably go is the Santa Ana Civic Center, another gathering spot for those without shelter.

“Some of them will be coming here, for sure,” said Bill Wilson, a homeless man who lives in the Civic Center Plaza. “It’s not like there are a lot of choices. You just make do, because that’s all we can do.”

 ?? Maria Alejandra Cardona Los Angeles Times ?? SHER STUCKMAN, center, speaks to sheriff ’s deputies clearing an encampment in Anaheim, along the Santa Ana River. Stuckman says she is on a waiting list for housing, but she wants to stay near the river.
Maria Alejandra Cardona Los Angeles Times SHER STUCKMAN, center, speaks to sheriff ’s deputies clearing an encampment in Anaheim, along the Santa Ana River. Stuckman says she is on a waiting list for housing, but she wants to stay near the river.
 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? A MAN on his bike balances two stuffed bags. The county provided the plastic bags to people living in the river camp, part of an effort to clean up the area.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times A MAN on his bike balances two stuffed bags. The county provided the plastic bags to people living in the river camp, part of an effort to clean up the area.
 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­S BY MARIA ALEJANDRA CARDONA Los Angeles Times ?? SHARON, who gave only her first name, begins taking down the camp she has lived in for the last 16 years along the Santa Ana River. Many expect some of those who leave the camps to end up in other public spaces.
PHOTOGRAPH­S BY MARIA ALEJANDRA CARDONA Los Angeles Times SHARON, who gave only her first name, begins taking down the camp she has lived in for the last 16 years along the Santa Ana River. Many expect some of those who leave the camps to end up in other public spaces.
 ??  ?? CREWS collect trash left by homeless people in the camp. Monday’s cleanup was prompted by complaints from nearby residents about filth and crime.
CREWS collect trash left by homeless people in the camp. Monday’s cleanup was prompted by complaints from nearby residents about filth and crime.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States