Los Angeles Times

Anti-camping law is f inalized

Law billed as humane way to clear public spaces, but how it will be enforced is hazy.

- By David Zahniser and Benjamin Oreskes

L.A. City Council passes measure billed as a way to humanely clear public spaces.

The Los Angeles City Council gave final approval on Wednesday to an ordinance outlawing camping around parks, libraries and other facilities, over objections from critics who said it would punish people for living on the streets.

The measure, approved on a 13-2 vote, had been billed as a more humane way to clear the city’s sidewalks, alleys and open spaces, with outreach teams offering shelter and services before any enforcemen­t takes place.

The ordinance now heads to Mayor Eric Garcetti, who plans to sign it. Whether the law will be heavily enforced, and how long it will take for the city to make substantiv­e progress, is far from clear.

The ordinance prohibits sitting, sleeping or storing items on public property near libraries, parks, daycare centers, schools and other locations.

But it also states that enforcemen­t in such places

cannot occur until the City Council has reviewed a location and voted to give the goahead.

That language raises the prospect that the council will have to vote encampment by encampment to enforce large portions of its anti-camping law, critics say.

Council members have promised that any enforcemen­t would be accompanie­d by the arrival of “street engagement teams” — social workers, mental health specialist­s and others who would offer the unhoused shelter and services.

The city’s policy analysts have proposed assigning the work to 17 outreach teams from the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority. Those teams would head out to an area before the City Council votes to prohibit camping in a particular location, according to a report released Wednesday.

Once an area is cleared, outreach workers would return over a period of three months to see if homeless people return.

If they have, additional outreach would be conducted to “promote voluntary compliance.”

Under that outreach process, it could take up to four months to relocate people and clear an encampment, City Administra­tive Officer Matt Szabo said in his report.

Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas, who helped the draft the ordinance, called that timeline realistic, saying even that extended period of time would be greeted as good news by people who have spent years on the streets.

“None of this is going to happen overnight,” he said. “The good news is that it is going to happen.”

Homeless advocates have neverthele­ss voiced alarm over the proposal, saying there is not enough shelter space to serve the city’s unhoused population, which exceeded 41,000 during the city’s last official count.

Councilman Mike Bonin, who voted against the anticampin­g law, said the city needs a right to housing, not a mandate that forces people into shelters.

“People want housing,” he said. “They do not want warehousin­g. They don’t want shelter. They want housing.”

Councilwom­an Nithya Raman, who represents neighborho­ods stretching from Sherman Oaks to Silver Lake, cast the other opposing vote.

The debate over the city’s approach to homelessne­ss comes as council members are increasing­ly focused on next year’s election. Some are running for reelection, while others are seeking higher office.

At the same time, business leaders and neighborho­od groups have become increasing­ly vocal in their demand for a reduction in encampment­s.

Mark Brady, who manages the Barnsdall Square Shopping Plaza in Hollywood, told council members that he drew a link between the homeless encampment that runs along the sidewalk on Vermont Avenue and attacks that have occurred on the shopping center’s employees.

“Customers have expressed to me and to the managers of the stores that they do not feel safe going to the stores,” he said. “These small businesses are being killed. They’re hanging on by dear life.”

Councilman Joe Buscaino, who is running for mayor, said the ordinance would ensure that sidewalks are passable, driveways are clear and doorways are accessible. But he also argued that the city should have gone further.

“We must still pass a law that says you cannot camp on the sidewalk if you have been offered housing,” he said in a statement.

The council’s differing perspectiv­es have caused some to fear that enforcemen­t will vary sharply from district to district, depending on a council member’s views.

Still, 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.

Under the ordinance, those who violate those rules could receive citations.

Renay Rodriguez, a Chatsworth bankruptcy lawyer who provides pro bono services to homeless people, told council members the ordinance would only make it more difficult for homeless people to get back on their feet.

“You are going to end up levying fines against the very people who have the least ability to pay,” she said. “You are going to kick them, and you’re going to make sure you put your knee on their neck.“

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