San Francisco Chronicle

Activists protest homeless evictions

- By Damian Dovarganes and Olga R. Rodriguez Damian Dovarganes and Olga R. Rodriguez are Associated Press writers.

LOS ANGELES — Homeless people who had taken over several empty, stateowned houses in Los Angeles were forcefully removed by California Highway Patrol officers hours later amid protests by dozens of community activists.

Members of Reclaim and Rebuild Our Community said in a video message to Gov. Gavin Newsom posted on YouTube on Wednesday that they had taken over several homes purchased by Caltrans for the now defunct 710 Freeway corridor expansion.

Roberto Flores, an organizer with the group, said 20 families who are about to be evicted or are homeless and have been living in cars and encampment­s and are looking for somewhere to shelter in place during the pandemic took over the homes.

On Thursday, only Ganil Hernandez and her family remained in one of the houses. “We’re taking back this home because we need to shelter in place and because housing is a human right,” Hernandez said.

Hernandez said she and her family have been unable to pay the $2,000 rent on their apartment after her partner lost his job. She said their landlord told them they will be evicted in December.

“We cannot afford rent here in Los Angeles. We tried moving out of state but we couldn’t get a place there either. I’m doing what I can for my family,” she said.

Activists who came to support the families confronted the officers and at least three people were detained by officers in full tactical gear as demonstrat­ors urged officers to stop, KNBCTV reported.

The CHP did not respond to a request for comment from the Associated Press.

A large group of CHP officers in at least 50 vehicles arrived in the El Sereno neighborho­od Wednesday night and began forcibly removing people from about two dozen homes, said Ruby Gordillo, who lives in the neighborho­od and is a housing activist with Reclaiming Our Homes.

Gordillo was among a group of mothers who took over a vacant home in the neighborho­od in March, inspired by women who made headlines for a similar action in the Bay Area that highlighte­d the state’s severe housing shortage.

The group of mothers in Oakland took over a vacant house in November 2019. They were evicted in January, but a week later it was announced the women planned to move back to the house after investors agreed to sell the property to a nonprofit organizati­on.

Caltrans officials said in a statement that the Los Angeles homes the group broke into Wednesday are unsafe and uninhabita­ble for occupants.

“As such, Caltrans requested the CHP remove trespasser­s so that the properties can be resecured and boarded up,” they said.

The agency said it has been working with local government­s to lease several of its available properties for use as temporary emergency shelters. It recently signed a lease with the Housing Authority so that 22 vacant Caltransow­ned homes in El Sereno can be used for the city’s transition­al housing program.

Gordillo said those homes are now housing families who are a part of Reclaiming Our Homes.

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