SAN
FRANCISCO (AP) — San Francisco is joining other U.S. cities in
authorizing homeless tent encampments in response to the coronavirus
pandemic, a move officials have long resisted but are now reluctantly
embracing to safeguard homeless people.
About
80 tents are now neatly spaced out on a wide street near San Francisco
City Hall as part of a “safe sleeping village” opened last week. The
area between the city’s central library and its Asian Art Museum is
fenced off to outsiders, monitored around the clock and provides meals,
showers, clean water and trash pickup.
In
announcing the encampment, and a second one to open in the famed
Haight-Ashbury neighborhood, San Francisco’s mayor acknowledged that she
didn’t want to approve tents, but having unregulated tents mushroom on
sidewalks was neither safe nor fair.
“So
while in normal times I would say that we should focus on bringing
people inside and not sanctioning tent encampments, we frankly do not
have many other options right now,” she said in a tweet last week.
Nicholas
Woodward, 37, is camping at the safe sleeping site, but he said he
preferred sleeping in his tent before the city stepped in; he finds the
fencing belittling and the rules too controlling. His friend, Nathan
Rice, 32, said he’d much rather have a hotel room than a tent on a
sidewalk, even if the city is providing clean water and food.
“I
hear it on the news, hear it from people here that they’re going to be
getting us hotel rooms,” he said. “That’s what we want, you know, to be
safe inside.”
San
Francisco has moved 1,300 homeless people into hotel rooms and RVs as
part of a statewide program to shelter vulnerable people but the mayor has been criticized
for moving too slowly. She has said she is not inclined to move all the
city’s estimated 8,000 homeless into hotels, despite complaints from
advocates who say overcrowded tents are a public health disaster.
San
Francisco is just the latest city to authorize encampments as shelters
across the country move to thin bed counts so homeless people, who are
particularly susceptible to the virus due to poor health, have more room
to keep apart.
Santa Rosa in Sonoma County welcomed people this week to its first managed encampment with roughly 70 blue tents. Portland, Oregon, has three homeless camps with city-provided sleeping bags and tents, and Maricopa County opened two parking lots to homeless campers in Phoenix.
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San
Francisco officials have historically frowned upon mini tent cities and
routinely rounded up tents on city streets. But with an estimated
150,000 homeless people in California, most of them living out in the
open, it’s impossible to stamp out the highly visible tents along
highways and on crowded urban sidewalks.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
recommends that officials not disturb tent encampments during the
coronavirus pandemic unless people are given individual hotel rooms, as
homeless advocates want to see. Those advocates say providing a safe
space where people can get meals, use a toilet and avoid harassing
passers-by is a reasonable option given the times.
“The
best, best option would be housing. The second-best option would be
hotel rooms, but if you can’t do that and we’re going to have so many
people outside then I think it makes sense ... to make those outside as
safe as can be,” said Dr. Margot Kushel, director of the Center for
Vulnerable Populations at the University of California, San Francisco.
But
Nan Roman, president and CEO of the National Alliance to End
Homelessness, said the federal government is providing an astonishing
amount of money to battle the pandemic and she hopes cities and counties
use it to put people into empty hotels, motels and other unused places.
“It’s
almost like we’re giving ourselves permission that it’s OK that people
will sleep outside, and once we’ve given ourselves that permission, it’s
very difficult to get the initiative together to do otherwise,” she
said.
Still, government-sanctioned tent camps may be here to stay, at least until a coronavirus vaccine is distributed.
At
the urging of San Francisco Supervisor Sandra Lee Fewer, the city’s
parks and real estate departments are compiling an inventory of open
spaces that might be suitable for tent camps. She said sidewalk space is
a coveted commodity for retailers, given coronavirus restrictions, and
the city’s strategy of adding more shelter beds doesn’t make sense with a
contagious virus.
”It is just a new world that we’re living in,” she said, “and it’s going to have to be our new normal.”
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