San Diego Union-Tribune

PARK SERVICE CREWS CLEAR HOMELESS ENCAMPMENT NEAR THE WHITE HOUSE

Officials say about 50 tents sheltering 70 people removed

- BY ASHRAF KHALIL Khalil writes for The Associated Press.

National Park Service employees on Wednesday swept through a large homeless encampment three blocks from the White House, tearing down dozens of tents and warning that people who resisted would be subject to arrest.

Workers in white jumpsuits used rakes, shovels and pitchforks to clear McPherson Square, tossing the remnants of the tent city into a pair of garbage trucks.

The action was the latest developmen­t in a long-running saga involving the District of Columbia government, the Park Service and homeless people, whose advocates claim the city hasn’t done enough to help them find safe shelter.

“There are people living here who don’t know where they’re going to sleep tonight. The entire purpose of this is to displace people and to ‘invisibliz­e’ and criminaliz­e homelessne­ss,” said Jesse Rabinowitz, of Miriam’s Kitchen, one of a collection of charitable organizati­ons that has been working with those who have made the park their home.

The encampment in McPherson Square has grown steadily over the past year, to about 50 tents as of Wednesday. Many people said they came after encampment­s in other parts of downtown were cleared by either the federal agency or the city government.

“Any time people were forced out of somewhere else, they would see the tents here and figure it was safe for a while,” said Daniel Kingery, who has lived in the park for three years. While the majority of the estimated 70 people who live in the park complied without incident, Kingery, 61, cheerfully said authoritie­s “would have to carry or drag me away.”

The National Park Service, which has jurisdicti­on over McPherson Square and large swaths of other green space across the city, had originally announced plans to clear the square in April. But the deputy mayor for health and human services, Wayne Turnage, requested that the date be moved up by two months, saying the encampment was an imminent public health hazard.

NPS spokespers­on Mike Litterst said that despite the accelerate­d timeline, there still was notice of about two weeks.

In the morning, police sealed off the park and repeatedly announced over a loudspeake­r that the space would be closed down and those who refused to leave would risk arrest. As the 10 a.m. deadline approached, a group of representa­tives from a coalition of charitable groups helped to gather up and label people’s belongings and haul them off in a rental truck.

The issue of Washington’s robust homeless population has been a long-term puzzle for Mayor Muriel Bowser’s government.

City officials say they have offered consistent outreach services and shelter for all who were willing to engage with the system. But those who live in the park dismissed the short-term shelter system as unsafe and undignifie­d.

“The shelters are infested with mice and there’s mold on the walls. And they’re not safe,” said a woman named Umi, who declined to give her last name.

Housing activists say most of those who are unhoused would be willing to take part in a government program that offers vouchers for subsidized apartments. But that program has been plagued by delays and a bottleneck partially caused by staffing shortages.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY AP ?? Workers clear a homeless encampment at McPherson Square in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday.
PATRICK SEMANSKY AP Workers clear a homeless encampment at McPherson Square in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday.

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