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Indybay Feature

Gateway Plaza Camp Providing Service to Our Community

by Steve Pleich (spleich [at] gmail.com)
Homeless Heroes Doing What Local Government Has Not
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For those who complained most vocally about the more than $90,000 per month that was being spent on the late, unlamented River Street Camp, the spontaneous camp that has sprung up on a small parcel of land behind Gateway Plaza should be a dramatic and eye opening lesson on both a social and an economic level.

On a social level, the men and women who brought this camp to life are carving out a place for themselves in a community that has all but abandoned any meaningful attempt to provide shelter for our homeless residents. Whatever cooperation that previously existed between the city and county in terms of the creation of emergency shelter or a day services center has clearly stalled as we breathlessly await new policies regarding the homeless which are hopefully forthcoming from our new, more socially progressive city council. The fact that both the city and county are presently exposed to legal liability as the result of a binding federal court decision that requires those entities to create adequate shelter equal to the number of unsheltered residents of our community seems not to have prompted either urgent nor timely action.

On an economic level, the Gateway campers have assumed the responsibility for providing emergency shelter that has, arguably, been abdicated by local government and have done so at a fraction of the cost of the moribund River Street Camp. To be fair, the city has provided porta potties, hand washing stations and garbage bins, which are being regularly serviced, and most recently providing much needed ground cover in the form of moisture absorbent wood chips. But by any monetary reckoning, cost of these services and support is de minimis when compared to the monthly expense of the previously sanctioned camp. And yet the hue and cry about the camp continues unabated. The only change is that now those criticisms resonate in the social, rather than the economic, voice.

I am reminded, as we all should be, that our country’s history is replete with examples of a displaced or ostracized group of people who created for themselves a community in which they could survive, and perhaps even thrive. And the Gateway Plaza campers, not unlike those groups shunned by the mainstream, have found a place to pursue their survival, and have done so without calling upon the citizens or the public fisc to pay the freight. That, in itself, is noteworthy and laudable in a time when so little concern, and far too few dollars, are being devoted to providing a hand up, rather than a hand out.

I could end this opinion piece by imploring the community to give the camp chance or by reminding our civic leaders of their stewardship responsibilities or by simply pointing out, as many have, that fully 70% of all unsheltered people, and many in the camp, were Santa Cruz residents before they become homeless. But in that regard I would just be preaching to the choir. So, I will offer a broader thought. It is not simply historical coincidence nor mere hyperbole that the most iconic and welcoming symbol of our country, the Statue of Liberty, speaks as if directly to our community. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door!" Perhaps we can lift up our hearts as well.
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by Robert Norse
I've heard the survival campers voice pressing concerns for
(a) more space--i.e. other campgrounds,as this one is becoming increasingly cramped;
(b) more space between the tents at the additional campgrounds--while the day environment at the current camp is good, nighttime is hard for sleeping because of the closeness of the tents with folks crammed up against each other;
(c) more portapotties and more frequent cleanings;
(d) more respect for the privacy of campers from visiting police and rangers (i.e. a policy such as was reportedly followed by rangers in the fall of 2017 at the San Lorenzo Campground: don't invade a tent without probable cause);
(e) better drainage system to deal with the coming rains;
(f) more tarps, tents, and blankets to replace those made unsable with the rains; and
(f) laundry access/vouchers and/or dry clothes donations--clothes frequently can't dry out after rains and have become moldy.

Other suggestions by HUFF and other service providers:
(a) more formal acknowledgment and representation on "homeless" committees (that have no unhoused members and who deal out hundreds of thousands of dollars in supposed "services";
(b) pro-active police action to address taunts, abuse, and assaults done by passing vehicldes,
(c) a mobile shower facility within walking distance;
(d) additional support for the nearby storage facility to include some kind of bike storage;
(e) direct access to the River St. and Hiway 1 Junction to allow foot access to the (very limited) Homeless Lack of Services Center [HLOSC] across the street;
(f) restoration of meal services at the nearby HLOSC abandoned in 2015 in spite of its multi-million dollar budget and reopening of that service to the homeless community past the fenced/locked gates of that "campus".

Steve Pleich sits on the Board of Directors or has done of the ACLU, MHCAN He maintains close ties with the SCPD and Deputies, the Association of Faith Communities, and the UN Association. He provides occasional services at the founder of the Homeless Person's Legal Assistance Project. He has run for City Council and Board of Supervisors. His earlier work advocating for needle exchange and more recently (if I'm not mistaken) for injection and inhalation centers has been important.

Individuals who achieve positions of power need to use them to not only advocate abstractly for numerous changes or support occasional charity events. They must hold accountable public officials and particularly those in powerful positions for life for institutional abuses. They must practice transparency and accessibility in their positions and demand the same of those whose agencies they buddy up with. And they must demand immediate specific reforms as well as working for more fundamental changes if they are to be taken seriously.

What specific proposals, Steve, do you support regarding survival campers in Santa Cruz at the present moment? What use will you make of your positions of power to initiate those proposals?
by Jack Tracey
As Commander of the Bill Motto Post For Peace (VFW5888) and a member of the Board Of Trustees of the Veterans Memorial Building, I am glad to see this effort succeeding. The desperate need for this and other solutions to end homelessness for Veterans and others requires courage and creativity!
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