By Julie Johnson, Sacremento Bee
The day after Sacramento’s temporary homeless shelter closed for the
season at Cal Expo, more than 250 homeless people and advocates marched to
promote their latest idea for providing beds for Sacramento’s growing
homeless population.
What organizers call “Safe Ground” sites would be legal campgrounds where
homeless people can live without fear of being arrested for crimes
associated with homelessness.
City officials, including Mayor Kevin Johnson, have said they want to
learn more about the idea.
“The mayor’s inclined to support ‘Safe Ground,’” said spokesman Joaquin
McPeek. “But at the end of the day we need to make sure that it makes
sense and we do the proper research.”
Johnson said Wednesday in an e-mail that, ” ‘Safe Ground’ needs to be
further researched to see if it will work as a temporary solution to
Sacramento’s overall goals regarding homelessness.”
Wednesday’s march began at Loaves & Fishes, where the participants,
including homeless men hardened by years of outdoor exposure, families,
shelter volunteers and one miniature horse, set out along Richards
Boulevard. Cars honked their support, people chanted “What do we want?
Safe Ground!” and others sang 1960s-era protest songs.
Michael Harris celebrated his 50th birthday at the march. Harris has been
sleeping outside in various locations in Sacramento for about two months.
“I try to liken it to camping, but it’s my everyday life,” he said.
Harris said a legal campground would be a relief from the stress of
finding a place to sleep every night.
“It makes you feel so much better if you know you have a place to lay
down,” he said. “You can think better, make decisions, maybe plan for a
move.”
Sister Libby Fernandez, Loaves & Fishes executive director, said after a
tent city north of downtown was dismantled, clients told her they wanted a
city-sanctioned outdoor space for them to live. That spurred her and other
advocates to push for a safe and legal plan for them.
Wednesday’s rally was timed to the closure of a seasonal shelter at Cal
Expo, which left more than 200 people to seek other shelter.
“I was staying at Cal Expo,” said Gabriel Evans. “I have no idea where
I’ll stay tonight.”
Evans, 29, said a legal campground would be safer than living on the
streets. Evans still has tattoos from his time as a Norteño gang member.
He said he’s now targeted by his former allies and enemies alike.
Sacramento Police Officer Mark Zoulas, one of two officers dedicated to
working with the homeless, said he’s in favor of a legal campground, but
has reservations.
His concern, he said, is about friction between campers and nearby residents.
Rodney Frazier held his 17-month-old son, Demarius, on his shoulders as
Wednesday’s marchers gathered at a vacant lot on Richards Boulevard – like
the kind of unused lot advocates say could become a legal campground.
A single father, Frazier is looking for safe and permanent housing for
himself and his son. He supports the idea of a legal campground, but says
it wouldn’t be appropriate for children.
A few miles from the rally, state Superintendent of Public Instruction
Jack O’Connell held a media conference to address a rise in homeless
students across California.
O’Connell announced that California received $13.8 million in federal
stimulus money to assist homeless children.
“These students, through no fault of their own, don’t have that basic
central home environment,” O’Connell said at the Transitional Housing
Program for Families on 32nd and V streets.
Several area districts qualify to apply for the one-time funding.
Sacramento City Unified is eligible for $42,950; San Juan Unified for
$60,050; Twin Rivers Unified for $116,930; and the Sacramento County
Office of Education for $296,500.
Homelessness in Sacramento schools rose from 5,120 in 2007-2008 to 6,111
in 2008-2009, according to data released Wednesday by the Sacramento
County Office of Education.
Filed under: Anti-poverty, Homelessness, activism, international, sacramento, tent city