A day after Sacramento County DA files lawsuit, city sweeps homeless encampment

There was heartbreak, pain and frustration on all sides Wednesday after Sacramento Police removed about two dozen people living in an encampment near Broadway in upper Land Park.

The sweep happened just one day after Sacramento District Attorney, Thien Ho, filed a lawsuit blasting the City of Sacramento for its “descent into decay” for the city’s handling of sprawling homeless encampments.

Following the sweep, the District Attorney’s office said in a statement, “we are supportive of enforcement and compliance actions that are responsive to the public safety concerns of the community.”

The city’s action, however, was not a direct response to the lawsuit.

The Bee has been talking to residents of the encampment for weeks after a major fire on Aug, 24 — the 14th to hit the former California Shellfish Company — choked the neighborhood with smoke while the people living in the adjacent encampment watched flames and the firefighting effort from their tents.

Determining that the building was unsafe, the city ordered it demolished, leaving behind a pile of rubble..

The Bee learned that the city had planned for Wednesday to be the day to evict residents from the encampment that included makeshift tents, a camper with a washing machine powered by a generator and an outdoor shower. Residents tapped into a hose at the nearby Alder Grove public housing project for water.

The encampment has existed for at least a year and a half.

“The City’s Department of Community Response has performed extensive outreach at this site over the past six weeks,,” said city spokesperson Tim Swanson, “visiting it nearly a dozen times to engage with people and offer services.”

Swanson said everyone had been offered a spot at a city-sanctioned homeless campsite at nearby Miller Park that includes portable restrooms and a security fence.

“No offer has been accepted at this time, “ Swanson said Wednesday afternoon.

As police and tow trucks arrived in the morning, members of the encampment mourned what they said had become a community populated by a majority of women who looked out for each other.

Gracie Parsley, who was waiting to have her trailer towed by a friend, said she had no plans to go to Miller Park. Parsley, who worked for nine years as a workers compensation specialist at an insurance company before a disability issue caused her to become homeless, spent a year at Miller Park previously. She said she grew frustrated waiting for housing that never came.

As a friend tries to tow her trailer, Gracie Parsley and her dog Diamond race to make sure her inoperable car isn’t being towed amid a homeless encampment sweep on 1st Avenue by the city of Sacramento on Wednesday.
As a friend tries to tow her trailer, Gracie Parsley and her dog Diamond race to make sure her inoperable car isn’t being towed amid a homeless encampment sweep on 1st Avenue by the city of Sacramento on Wednesday.

Wearing a black jumpsuit and a purple bandana, Parsley said, “the city gets all this money to deal with homelessness. How are they spending it?”

Ted Bullock, a Navy Veteran, came to help a friend move, despite being hobbled by a hip replacement. “People don’t understand how decent most of these people are. Now they have to reestablish themselves again.”

But other residents of the neighborhood, while expressing compassion for the homeless, said that the spate of fires, prostitution and drug use by some in the encampment was blighting an already challenged neighborhood. Many said it was time for the encampment to go.

A local business owner told The Bee that the encampment has had a devastating impact.

“I literally contacted the city over a hundred times just begging for someone to pay attention,” Lee Archie said.

Archie said he had invested in the South Land Park neighborhood 15 years-ago, buying two buildings across the street from the former shellfish building. “We’ve done everything we can to build this area up, There is so much potential here.”

Archie said the fires and unsanitary encampment upset his tenants. In the last several months, two businesses, Nucleus Pump Services and A1 Towing, gave notice.

Lee Archie, who owns commercial property across the street from where a homeless encampment was swept on 1st Avenue in Sacramento on Wednesday, said that businesses had left the area because of the encampment. He worried that the trailers and cars would just move from the vacant lot to the street because they didn’t have anywhere else to go. “There must be a better way,” he said.

“That represents dozens of jobs just gone,” said Archie, who supports the DA’s lawsuit.

Archie added, “of course I care about the homeless. We have fed them through our church, through our ministry. We have done all that is possible to try to help. But this is not the proper way. We are not helping them this way.”

The fire that led to the shellfish building being torn down in August was not the first fire to severely damage the building. A fire in early June at was set by arson, according to Captain Justin Sylvia, spokesperson for the Sacramento Fire Department.

Sylvia confirmed to The Bee that Dennis Stagg, who has “been known to experience homelessness” was arrested on Aug. 28 and charged with intentionally setting the June fire. Sylvia said that the fire happened while a group of workers were in the building performing asbestos abatement work necessitated by exposed asbestos from previous fires.

That news did not thrill Derek Welch, a resident of The Mill, a middle-class development a block from the former shellfish building.

The city says that asbestos was abated at the shellfish building prior to the most recent fire.

Sacramento city building inspector Jason Martinoni carries a fence away Wednesday during a homeless encampment sweep on 1st Avenue in Sacramento. The women who live in the trailer said they felt safe there with their dogs, and worried about where they would relocate. City officials proposed the tent-only Miller Park Safe Ground site.
Sacramento city building inspector Jason Martinoni carries a fence away Wednesday during a homeless encampment sweep on 1st Avenue in Sacramento. The women who live in the trailer said they felt safe there with their dogs, and worried about where they would relocate. City officials proposed the tent-only Miller Park Safe Ground site.

“But what about during the previous fires? Welch asked. “The aftermath, who knows, we may not get the full repercussions for another 20 years.”

As the sweep wound down, Archie was upset when several camping trailers were towed from the vacant lot to the street near his buildings.

“This is no way to solve the problem,” Archie said.

The city plans a neighborhood meeting on Monday to talk about addressing homelessness and community needs in the Upper Land Park neighborhood, according to several neighborhood residents.

Archie plans to attend. So, too, does writer Sasha Abramsky, another resident of The Mill..

“I want to learn how the city plans to humanely address homelessness ,” Abramsky said, “and to secure the neighborhood.”