Laserfiche WebLink
Flores, Dora <br />From: <br />Tim Johnson <tjohnson@jlkrllp.com> <br />Sent: <br />Monday, March 01, 2021 10:43 PM <br />To: <br />eComment <br />Cc: <br />Lopez, Jessie; Penaloza, David; Sarmiento, Vicente; Phan, Thai; Mendoza, Nelida; <br />Bacerra, Phil; Hernandez, Johnathan <br />Subject: <br />Closed Session Item #1 (El Centro) <br />It is my understanding that the council will be discussing the homeless encampment at El Centro Cultural de Mexico (El <br />Centro), and possibly further fines and legal action against El Centro, in Closed Session agenda item #1. Legal action is a <br />powerful tool- one that I have advocated for previously on various topics. However, it should be a tool of last resort <br />when parties are unable to work together towards a common goal. As a resident of Santa Ana, I urge the city council to <br />seek alternative remedies rather than sue/fine a non-profit in our own city ... a non-profit that seemingly works to help <br />our community. <br />It is my belief that El Centro does not necessarily want or invite the unhoused folks that have taken up camps on their <br />property, but instead they are refusing to kick them off of their property or call our already over burdened police and <br />code enforcement officers. I believe that El Centro is wanting to help those that are residing on their property. I also <br />believe that El Centro wants to provide a COVID safe place non -congregate place for those on their property now. I alsc <br />believe that the City of Santa Ana, its residents and business owners also want to have neighborhoods free of unhoused <br />individuals setting up camps in parking lots, parks, trials, creeks and other areas. Since El Centro and the City both <br />ultimately want the same thing, I encourage us to take steps to help accomplish that goal. <br />I urge you to work with El Centro and other groups such as Wound Walk that are willing and able to do the hard work of <br />evaluating and referring the unhoused to an appropriate solution. Policing and suing El Centro will not solve this issue, <br />but instead it will utilize limited city PD resources, push the unhoused to another location most likely in Santa Ana, and <br />quite possibly create a CEQA issue wherever they may be pushed to because they likely do not have adequate toilet, <br />bathing, trash, and other hygiene facilities available to them- especially during the pandemic. By pushing them to <br />another location, this may require a full environmental impact report under CEQA which I do not believe has been <br />done. Doing an EIR, or not doing one and getting sued, would likely be a cost that the city could use somewhere else <br />actually progressing towards helping this situation. Since there is an expected environmental impact if it is determined <br />to displace the dozens of folks living there, I would expect that the city would do a full environmental impact report just <br />as it would with other projects prior to voting on this. I am not a CEQA expert but it feels like this would have an impact <br />the surrounding area. <br />How about the city work together with El Centro, Wound Walk, and others that want to make the situation better for <br />not only those who are camping there but also the neighbors- both residential and businesses. If the goal is to clean up <br />the area, and our city, just fining a non-profit will not accomplish said goal- it will simply push them to another area and <br />we start this cycle over again with a different target to fine/sue. We have been pushing this problem around for too <br />long and by taking this course of action, we will continue down that road. <br />I would also urge the city to consider utilizing Project Roomkey funding that the state has through September. I believe <br />that the county has indicated that even though they are not further pursuing use of state Project Roomkey funding that <br />they would allow cities to access. I also believe that since we are a city of over 300K residents that we may also be able <br />to apply directly to the state for this funding. Project Roomkey funding would allow our city to provide real short term <br />housing, with a door, to these folks, allow them to receive the evaluations and services they need, while at the same <br />time quite possibly helping a local motel owner out at a time where motel stays may be suffering due to the <br />pandemic. Additionally, this would allow the county housing professionals and other mental health professionals to <br />help them move on to more appropriate levels of housing and care. I would urge the city to explore this option while <br />