The Mercury News

Homeless sweeps continuing despite virus moratorium

Activists fear displacing residents in pandemic will spread COVID-19

- By Marisa Kendall mkendall@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Homeless residents living in tents along Cupertino’s Wolfe Road thought they were safe. Following federal health guidelines adopted around the Bay Area, city officials promised not to force them to move until the coronaviru­s pandemic abated.

But this month, with county and statewide shelter-in-place rules still in effect, Cupertino officials changed their minds. They plan to dismantle the camps in the next few weeks.

And they’re not the only ones. Many Bay Area cities, including San Jose, Oakland and San Francisco, pledged not to remove or “sweep” homeless camps for the duration of the pandemic, to limit the spread of the virus. But despite those assurances, some sweeps have been reported in all three cities as officials look at camps they say have become too dangerous for homeless residents.

Now activists worry those displaced residents face a greater risk of contractin­g the virus.

“Sweeping people at all during the pandemic shows a complete lack of humanity toward the people, and a complete ignorance of the CDC recommenda­tions regarding unhoused people and the virus,” said Shaunn Cartwright, an advocate and volunteer outreach worker based in Santa Clara County.

If housing is not available, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention encourages cities to leave encampment­s where

they are, as clearing them can cause people to disperse throughout the community, break connection­s with their service providers and potentiall­y spread the virus.

But city officials cite health concerns in their decisions to remove certain encampment­s they’ve deemed hazardous. And they say they offer services to residents displaced by encampment closures.

Activists worry that’s not enough. Even with new shelters, interim housing sites and hotel rooms set aside for homeless residents during the pandemic, those options can’t accommodat­e everyone.

In San Jose, Caltrans received special approval from Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office and the state’s Office of Emergency Services to remove an encampment at Story Road and U.S. 101 this week, according to city spokesman Jeff Scott. The camp presents a safety concern because it’s less than 5 feet from traffic traveling more than 45 mph, Scott wrote in an email, adding the city will offer “support services” to anyone displaced.

The encampment­s in Cupertino present a similar concern.

The camps — three small clusters of tents along busy Wolfe Road at the on- and off-ramps to Interstate 280 — are just feet from cars whizzing past. Last month, a man who city spokesman Brian Babcock described as a visitor to the encampment­s was killed in a hitand-run crash.

“I just hope that people know that what I’m trying to do is difficult and that we’re trying to do it with as much compassion for everybody as possible,” said City Manager Deborah Feng. “We’re doing our best in these trying times.”

There’s another factor at play: Some of the tents sit at the edge of the Vallco constructi­on site, and workers need access to the area so they can start setting up utilities for the multibilli­ondollar project, according to the city. The developmen­t will replace the defunct Vallco Shopping Mall with 2,402 apartments, 400,000 square feet of retail and 1.8 million square feet of office space.

In Oakland, activists have reported several encampment­s being swept during the shelter-in-place, including one on B Street in East Oakland.

“While things have definitely diminished, they’re still actually happening,” said Dayton Andrews, an organizer with the United Front Against Displaceme­nt.

Last month, signs appeared at an encampment at 38th Street and Manila Avenue ordering residents to vacate, Andrews said. In the end, after sending residents into a panic, city workers ended up doing a trash cleanup, consolidat­ing the camp from two blocks to one, and moving it to the other side of the street.

“In the time of social distancing, people were crammed closer and closer together,” Andrews said.

A representa­tive for the city did not answer emailed questions about encampment closures.

In Cupertino, Santa Clara County is working with the city to offer temporary shelter — or housing, if possible — to residents in the Wolfe Road camps, according to Deputy County Executive Ky Le. Specific details have not been finalized. There are no homeless shelters or transition­al housing programs in Cupertino.

But with affordable and transition­al housing scarce throughout the county, Josh Selo, executive director of West Valley Community Services, worries about where displaced residents will go.

“I’m hopeful that the work that the city and the county are doing will lead to a safe, housed option for these folks, so we’re not just pushing the problem somewhere else in the county,” he said.

The city also is working with Caltrans, as the majority of the tents are on Caltrans land. A removal date is tentativel­y set for Sept. 21.

That date is looming over Wolfe Road encampment residents like 39-year-old Yesenia Torres, who has been homeless about eight months. She worked driving shuttle buses for Google until she lost her license recently because her epileptic seizures made it unsafe for her to drive.

If someone offers Torres housing when they dismantle her camp, she’ll jump at the chance. But she’s not convinced that will happen.

She says the uncertaint­y of where she’ll live next month is making her medical condition worse. She worries she’ll start experienci­ng stress-induced blackouts.

“It’s not a good feeling at all,” Torres said.

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