The Mercury News

Airport homeless camp could become dog park

Also planned: Disc golf course, garden — but more than 100 unhoused residents must be moved first

- By Marisa Kendall mkendall@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN JOSE >> City leaders want to transform one of the Bay Area's largest homeless encampment­s into a dog park, disc golf course and public garden, but first they have to tackle the daunting task of moving more than 100 unhoused residents out.

The sprawling camp of tents, makeshift dwellings and vehicles on 40 vacant acres near San Jose's airport must be cleared by June 30, per an order by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion. To prevent unhoused people from coming back once the space is cleared, and open the land up for public use, city staffers have proposed a plan that would include a 5.5-acre dog park, a 15.8-acre area for disc golf and wildflower meadows that later could be turned into community gardens and urban farms.

But with a shortage of housing options available, city staffers say it's unlikely they will meet the June 30 deadline to clear everyone from the area. That realizatio­n has left officials scrambling to find more beds.

“All of our ambitions with this park are certainly worthy, but the most critical aspect is dealing with the human need that is there on display in the park,” Mayor Sam Liccardo said during a City Council discussion Tuesday.

Council members voted unanimousl­y to pursue the proposed revamp of the encampment site and authorized staffers to get community feedback and seek funding. In April, the City Council will consider whether to ask the FAA for an extension of its deadline.

Council members also voted to move forward with a plan to prevent vehicles from driving on the Guadalupe River Trail, which is supposed to be reserved for pedestrian­s and cyclists only. As the city has been trying to shut down the airport encampment, some people have relocated to the nearby trail, which staffers say has led to an increase in the dangerous misuse of the trail by vehicles. To prevent that, city staffers proposed installing traffic bollards at eight trail entrances, including Taylor Street, West Hedding Street, Coleman Avenue and Seymour Street. Fences also would be installed.

The encampment near Mineta San Jose Internatio­nal Airport grew to as many as 300 people during the COVID-19 pandemic, prompting the FAA to order the airport to clear the camp or risk losing millions of dollars in federal funding. The site originally was bought by the city with federal funds to serve as a buffer between the airport and the community in case of a plane crash and cannot be used as housing.

To prevent people from returning as the camp is cleared, city staffers initially recommende­d

installing an 8-foot-tall, $1.5million fence around the 40-acre lot. But Liccardo and multiple council members opposed that idea, arguing during an October council meeting that fences can be cut through. They directed city staffers to come up with a plan to revitalize the space.

The proposal staffers came up with — including the vehicle prevention program — would cost an estimated $3.75 million in one-time funds, plus an additional $1.75 million in ongoing funding. So far, the city has $2.63 million set aside for the project.

Before the revitaliza­tion begins, the city is working on clearing the camp one section at a time. It has yet to remove campers from a final 18 acres between West Hedding and Asbury streets, and Spring Street to the Guadalupe River Trail. About 100 people still live in the camp, according to San Jose Housing Director Jacky Morales-Ferrand. The city and nonprofit HomeFirst so far have moved 54 people into better environmen­ts, including 22 who were placed in long-term housing and 27 placed in temporary homes.

But “while we are not giving up,” the city doesn't have enough resources to house everyone in the camp, Morales-Ferrand said.

“To effectivel­y house the people living in Guadalupe Gardens, we need new resources and programs,” she said.

Some of those already are in the works, such as a temporary housing site expected to be complete by this fall, which will house up to 76 people off West Taylor Street. The city also is hoping for more funding from the state's Homekey program, which helps turn hotels and other buildings into homeless housing. And Morales-Ferrand is in talks with the county to prioritize people in the airport camp for housing placements.

But 66 households live in RVs and other vehicles at the camp and are reluctant to accept temporary housing if it means leaving their vehicles. For them, MoralesFer­rand wants to set up a safe parking site. But the city is struggling to find a location.

Multiple activists joined Tuesday's virtual council meeting to urge the city not to evict camp residents until there is enough housing for all.

“It's very unlikely there will be enough adequate housing in time for the June 30 deadline, and I'm very concerned that people will be forced out at that point with nowhere to go,” said Becky Moskowitz of the Law Foundation of Silicon Valley.

Others pressed the council to move quickly to disband the encampment. Local resident Alex Shoor, who regularly walks along the Guadalupe River Trail, said removing vehicles from the area is a priority.

“It is a danger to everyone,” he said.

 ?? FILE: DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Cleanup crews for the city of San Jose remove items and trash from outside of some tents and RVs in the homeless encampment located along Coleman Avenue in San Jose on June 28, 2021.
FILE: DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Cleanup crews for the city of San Jose remove items and trash from outside of some tents and RVs in the homeless encampment located along Coleman Avenue in San Jose on June 28, 2021.

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