Los Angeles Times

Shooing isn’t serving

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Re “Shuttled from curb to curb,” March 18

A United Nations observer recently condemned the deplorable conditions in which the homeless residents of Los Angeles live.

These people, despite being city residents, have no potable water supply, no trash pickup, no bathroom facilities, no areas to charge cellphones critical to communicat­ion, few options for healthcare and fewer options (apparently) for police protection. Now those who take shelter in recreation­al vehicles are being forced to move around the city.

Planning only for “housing” for the next decade with inadequate attention to the current critical needs of those who “sleep out” or “live on the street” is blatant neglect of the elderly, the impoverish­ed, the disabled, the ill, war veterans, children and mothers. JoEllen Murata Chatsworth

These RV dwellers have the right idea — carry your home with you — yet they get booted from their parking spots time and again by kick-the-can-down-theroad politician­s.

Isn’t it obvious that land can be found for any number of RV parks that would provide utilities, community rooms, laundry facilities and cooking areas? Please don’t put these people into industrial areas and effectivel­y out of sight. Instead, there can be rules for them about keeping areas neat and secure.

We have an abundance of design, planning and social service schools that need real-world projects for their students. If we want to provide a better environmen­t for homeless residents, there are many opportunit­ies to create them and probably reduce crime. Take advantage of the energy of activists to make a better world. Glenn Wolf

Cathedral City

Re “No welcome mat for the homeless in parts of O.C.,” March 21

Huntington Beach renter Mark Smith is quoted as saying: “Finally, the county is taking action — doling out this kind of money. But they must understand that they can use this money to go buy land elsewhere, maybe the Inland Empire, to relocate the homeless. We just can’t lower our housing values with this population nearby.”

As a Inland Empire homeowner of 16 years, I can say that we have our own homelessne­ss situation to deal with. Perhaps Mr. Smith wouldn’t mind if we shipped all our homeless people to Orange County because “we just can’t lower our housing values with this population nearby.”

Orange County ought to deal with its own problems and not ship them elsewhere just because they impinge on the residents’ precious lifestyle. John Zavesky

Riverside

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? VINCENT NEILL stands outside one of his RVs in an industrial area of Chatsworth last week.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times VINCENT NEILL stands outside one of his RVs in an industrial area of Chatsworth last week.

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