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The Epoch Times
The Epoch Times
17 Apr 2023


NextImg:San Diego Homeless Encampment Ban Advances to City Council

A committee of the San Diego City Council voted 3–1 April 13 to advance an ordinance banning homeless encampments if shelter beds are available.

After the vote by the city’s Land Use and Housing Committee, the issue will now advance to the nine-member city council.

The ordinance would also ban encampments within two blocks of elementary schools, shelters, in any open space or waterway, near any transit hub, and in several parks, regardless of shelter availability.

City Councilman Stephen Witburn brought the issue before the committee and told them homelessness is the number one problem San Diegans want to be addressed.

“San Diegans want very much to help people experiencing homelessness get back on their feet,” Whitburn told the committee. “But San Diegans also want people experiencing homelessness to accept shelter when a suitable bed is offered to them.”

According to Whitburn, there have been recent incidents of people in San Diego encampments being stabbed, set on fire, and dying from hepatitis and sickened by Shigella, a dangerous bacteria. Additionally, in March of last year, a car jumped a curb and plowed into a homeless encampment in San Diego, killing three people and injuring six.

“These encampments are unsafe,” Whitburn said.

The city has also reported that common items found in encampments include weapons, rotting food, drugs, needles, jars of urine, and human waste.

According to a March count by the non-profit Downtown San Diego Partnership, there were 1,718 homeless people in the city—down from 1,939 recorded in January.

If passed, the city would post written notices near encampments, giving dwellers up to 48 hours to remove belongings they would like to keep, before conducting a clean-up of the site.

The committee approved Whitburn’s proposal with the request that it include all city parks; there be an enforcement plan and another that identifies permissible sleeping sites, and a legal analysis conducted by the City Attorney before the city council’s consideration.