Los Angeles Times

Homeless law could boost council members’ power

One critic says the ordinance could lead to districts becoming ‘mini fiefdoms.’

- By David Zahniser, Benjamin Oreskes and Doug Smith

A controvers­ial new anticampin­g law in Los Angeles has been billed as a tool that will allow the city to clean up some long-standing homeless encampment­s while also ensuring that the people who live in them find shelter.

Even if that proves to be true, the law could also produce a less-discussed outcome: granting even more power to the City Council to decide which parts of the city receive focused attention on homelessne­ss and which do not.

The ordinance, set for a second and final vote on Wednesday, prohibits sitting, sleeping or storing property on public property near libraries, parks, daycare centers, schools, freeway overpasses, recently opened homeless shelters and other locations. Yet it also states that enforcemen­t in any of those locations cannot take place until the City Council has reviewed the location and given the goahead.

That strategy could force council members to cast separate enforcemen­t votes block by block or encampment by encampment, according to Elizabeth Mitchell, an attorney with the L.A. Alliance for Human Rights, which is suing the city over its handling of homeless

ness. Each of the council’s 15 districts, she said, would become “mini fiefdoms.”

“It’s likely going to be up to each council member to decide how they’re going to enforce this,” she added.

The council cast its first vote on the ordinance last month, saying enforcemen­t would be accompanie­d by the presence of “street engagement teams” — social workers, outreach workers and others who would offer the homeless shelter and services.

Homeless advocates have neverthele­ss voiced alarm, saying there is not enough shelter space available and that the ordinance would criminaliz­e those living on the streets.

There are “many tools that they already have in their toolbox to accomplish this goal” of keeping sidewalks passable, said Pete White, executive director of the skid row-based Los Angeles Community Action Network. “It’s more of a political statement than anything else. This is the council saying, ‘We can be strong.’ It creates a litmus test for the next mayoral candidate and campaign.”

Mitchell predicted that the council’s more progressiv­e flank — Mike Bonin and Nithya Raman, among others — will be hesitant to utilize the law, while its more conservati­ve members — Joe Buscaino and John Lee — will use it comprehens­ively, resulting in “very inconsiste­nt enforcemen­t.”

Buscaino has already signaled that he will take an expansive approach, securing council approval to make areas with “sensitive uses” — such as parks and schools — off limits.

“The councilman is going to put up signs at every school, at every library, at every day-care center,” said Buscaino spokesman Branimir Kvartuc. “We’re going to print up a million signs.”

Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas, who coauthored the anti-camping ordinance, said it should be wielded in a much more limited way.

The ordinance, he said, was intended to give council members the discretion to identify a particular location in their district, assess the type of homeless outreach performed there and then “take action as deemed appropriat­e.”

“By no means was this intended to allow a wholesale prohibitio­n of the homeless from residing near all sensitive areas,” he said in a statement. “And I will not be supportive of a process that facilitate­s this.”

Ridley-Thomas has described the ordinance as humane, saying any violation would be treated as an infraction and result in, at worst, fines. Those arguments have not quelled protests by homeless advocates and dozens of community groups.

On Monday, a team of UCLA health researcher­s posted a map online showing locations that could be covered by the ordinance.

Chelsea Shover, assistant professor-in-residence at UCLA’s David Geffen School of Medicine, said she and her students found that if every location identified in the ordinance were off limits, there would be few areas left where people could sleep or camp, particular­ly in downtown and parts of South Los Angeles.

Even that picture is incomplete, Shover said, because her team was unable to find sources for some of the locations, such as freeway underpasse­s and building entrances.

Shover said the city should produce a complete map before the ordinance goes to a vote.

“I don’t know how you can think about voting on it without a map,” she said.

Raman, who voted against the ordinance last month, said she too is trying to determine how it might be carried out — and has not decided whether she would use it to outlaw camping in any portion of her district.

Raman warned that the ordinance will prevent the adoption of a coordinate­d, citywide approach to tackling homelessne­ss.

“This takes us back to what we’ve been doing in Los Angeles for a very long time, which is 15 council members responding to homelessne­ss in 15 different ways, in a really ad hoc manner,” she said.

Not every location listed in the ordinance would require a council vote. Under the ordinance, city crews would still be permitted to enforce provisions barring people from sitting, sleeping or storing property within two feet of a fire hydrant, five feet of a doorway or 10 feet of a driveway.

The city would also have the power to ensure that sidewalks have enough space for wheelchair­s, as required under the Americans With Disabiliti­es Act.

Councilman Paul Krekorian, another coauthor of the ordinance, said he has no intention of using it to “sweep every person off of the streets.”

In some parts of his San Fernando Valley district, he said, people living in encampment­s are “not causing problems for anyone.

“But I also have places that are the sources of countless complaints, countless responses by the Fire Department, that are consistent­ly and completely blocking public access, particular­ly for the disabled and the elderly and young children and parents,” he said. “Those are the areas I’m going to focus my attention on.”

The council’s proposal is part of an ongoing shift in how the city prioritize­s services for homeless residents. For years, offers of housing and shelter have been distribute­d according to need, with those resources being directed first to the most vulnerable.

While homeless service providers still see that as their mission, the city has been moving toward a more location-based approach, focusing on “trouble spots,” such as Echo Park and the Venice boardwalk. In those locations, the city has offered services and shelter, then prohibited people from pitching tents.

That approach does not necessaril­y guarantee that homeless people will make their way into shelters.

Linda Guzman, who has been homeless in Venice for more than a year, said outreach workers have spoken with her regularly but never came through with an offer of housing.

For weeks, she said, officers showed up at all hours — including the middle of the night — to tell her she couldn’t stay on the boardwalk.

Last week, Guzman moved her tent to nearby Pacific Avenue, alongside some friends.

“I feel like it’s like whacka-mole,” the 43-year-old said. “The cops and others move you to one place. They tell you to go there, but then they don’t want you there.”

Councilman Bob Blumenfiel­d said he hopes a location-based approach will show the public the impact of the work taking place on the ground — and might spur them to support other efforts to help homeless people.

The proposed ordinance won’t cause homelessne­ss to go away, he said, but it will provide council members with a greater level of control.

“It will be a step in a direction where we can have a little bit more agency over what’s happening in the district,” he said.

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? LAPD OFFICERS look over a homeless encampment in Venice earlier this month. The City Council is set to vote Wednesday on an anti-camping ordinance.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times LAPD OFFICERS look over a homeless encampment in Venice earlier this month. The City Council is set to vote Wednesday on an anti-camping ordinance.
 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? A SANITATION CREW and LAPD officers speak with a homeless woman earlier this month as they work to clear an encampment at Venice Beach.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times A SANITATION CREW and LAPD officers speak with a homeless woman earlier this month as they work to clear an encampment at Venice Beach.

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