Community Corner

Homeless Camp Sweeps Run Counter To CDC Guidelines. Denver Officials Stand By Their Decisions.

City undertakes multi-day, multi-agency process of removing encampment that's home for up to 150 people.

(Colorado Newsline)

By Moe Clark
Nov.2, 2020

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Protesters gathered outside a temporary fence during a clearing of a homeless encampment on Nov. 30, 2020. (Moe Clark/Colorado Newsline)

When 29-year-old Garen Zamba arrived at his tent in Five Points on Monday around 7 a.m., a temporary chain-link fence had been erected around the perimeter of the large homeless encampment where he lived. When he asked police officers if he could access his belongings, they told him he needed to wait. โ€œWe wonโ€™t forget about you, buddy,โ€ one police officer said through the fence, as large cranes stood ready to scoop belongings into massive city dump trucks.

Hours before the sun came up on Monday, police officers and sanitation workers had begun clearing the encampment, which accommodated between 100 and 150 people and curved along the South Platte River at Arkins Court and 29th Street. Denver public health officials said it will take several days to dismantle the encampment.

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โ€œThey force us to leave here, but they donโ€™t tell us where we can go,โ€ said Zamba, a Denver resident of 12 years. โ€œI have nowhere to go. Iโ€™m homeless, but Iโ€™m a human being. It shouldnโ€™t be this way. I should have a place to stay.โ€

The Centers for Disease Control and Preventionโ€™s coronavirus guidelines recommend that if individual housing options are not available, people living unsheltered should be allowed to remain where they are. โ€œClearing encampments can cause people to disperse throughout the community and break connections with service providers,โ€ the guidelines say. โ€œThis increases the potential for infectious disease spread.โ€

A man gathers his belongings early in the morning on Nov. 30, 2020, as city officials begin to clear a large homeless encampment in Denverโ€™s Five Points neighborhood. (Moe Clark/Colorado Newsline)

But despite federal recommendations, sweeps in Denver have continued throughout the pandemic. Danica Lee, director of Denverโ€™s Public Health Investigations Division, said the guidelines provided by the CDC are โ€œhigh levelโ€ and fail to address other health hazards present within encampments โ€” conditions she believes justifies the sweeps.

Lee said the encampment at 29th and Arkins Court was cleared due to an accumulation of trash, the existence of flammable materials, the presence of rats, improperly discarded syringes and reports of human feces in the adjacent river. The CDC guidelines suggest that instead of clearing encampments, entities should work to improve sanitation by providing access to portable toilets and hand-washing facilities for camps of more than 10 people.

In early October, the advocacy organization Denver Homeless Out Loud filed a class-action lawsuit in federal court challenging the cityโ€™s homeless sweeps, saying that the actions violate a previous settlement agreement and are contrary to CDC guidance. The lawsuit is pending.

โ€œThis is not a single dimensional effort where the city or (the Denver Department of Public Health and Environment) is just saying that weโ€™re not going to adhere to CDC guidance,โ€ Lee said. โ€œThis is a much more nuanced situation.โ€

Protesters met with pepper bullets, mace

Kaley LaQuea, a member of the Denver Democratic Socialists of America, came to the sweep on Monday hoping to help people pack up and transport their belongings. But for most of the morning, law enforcement officers were only allowing two people inside the fence at a time. To gain access, volunteers had to name a resident who had specifically requested their help.

โ€œWeโ€™re here to help. And there are more than enough individuals who are unhoused here who need help moving,โ€ LaQuea said, as she stood outside the fence. โ€œIt was just an excuse to make things harder. They shouldnโ€™t have to move in the first place. They werenโ€™t hurting anybody. This is Mayor (Michael) Hancock green-lighting more COVID spread and refusing to fund and prioritize what city residents need, which is affordable housing and health care.โ€

Dozens of housing advocates gathered early Monday to protest the cityโ€™s decision to displace residents in the middle of a pandemic without providing alternative places for people to go. Mutual aid groups brought food and supplies and offered rides to people having to vacate the area. Around 7 a.m., police officers determined the protest was unlawful and began pushing activists back and deploying pepper balls and spray to get people to comply with police orders.

Lee said ultimately, itโ€™s unsafe for people to be living outdoors, and that more people experiencing homelessness have died from weather exposure than the coronavirus. She added that resources and programs need to be in place so that people arenโ€™t being displaced with no other options.

Denver Police officers used pepper spray to disperse protesters during a homeless sweep in Denverโ€™s Five Points neighborhood on Nov. 30, 2020. (Moe Clark/Colorado Newsline)

โ€œEverybody deserves a roof over their head,โ€ Lee said. โ€œAnd while the need for that exceeds the resources that the city has currently, it is still very important that DDPHE fulfills our responsibilities to be stewards for public health and the environment.โ€

Lee said she did not know where people were being directed to go during the sweep on Monday. โ€œThatโ€™s more an outreach question,โ€ she said.

Outreach efforts at encampment led to limited results

Derek Woodbury, communication director for Denverโ€™s Department of Housing Stability, said that an outreach team โ€” in collaboration with the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless, the St. Francis Center and Urban Peak โ€” had been out at the Five Points encampment in the weeks prior to the sweep to connect people with services.

In addition to 25 medical and 10 behavioral health referrals, Woodbury said one person was directed to a shelter, one received a motel room and a pregnant woman received permanent housing as a result of the outreach. Woodbury did not know what homeless shelters people were being directed to after being removed from the 29th and Arkins Court encampment.

A few volunteers help people gather belonging during a homeless sweep in Denver on Nov. 30, 2020, as police officers push protesters farther down the road. (Moe Clark/Colorado Newsline)

Woodbury said people might have been connected to housing during the sweep by the Denver Police Departmentโ€™s Homeless Outreach Team, but Denver police did not respond to an interview request on Tuesday. During the sweep, numerous police officers said they were not permitted to speak to members of the media.

A spokeswoman for the Metro Denver Homeless Initiative, the cityโ€™s designated continuum of care organization, declined an interview request on Tuesday, saying that the organization does not comment on any city strategy in addressing homelessness. The organization coordinates services and housing for people experiencing homelessess in the seven-county metropolitan region surrounding Denver.

In an email on Tuesday, Woodbury said that the Denver Coliseum, the temporary menโ€™s shelter that has 300 beds, has been full, or nearly full, in recent days. He said overflow capacity for 200 guests is offered at the Denver Rescue Missionโ€™s Holly Street shelter and the Coliseum offers an additional overflow area with mats that can accommodate up to 50 additional guests.

There are currently 1,286 shelter beds and 1,025 motel rooms available in the Denver Metro shelter system. As of Sunday night, 2,034 beds/rooms were filled, according to Woodbury. In an email, he said that he does not have details available on the number of motel rooms that have been made available to people within large encampments and that eligibility is determined on a case-by-case basis.

Wary of poor conditions, overcrowding, coronavirus at shelters

Christopher Harris, who is currently staying at the Salvation Armyโ€™s Crossroads Center homeless shelter adjacent to the encampment in Five Points, said just because there is shelter space available doesnโ€™t mean people feel safe going there during the pandemic.

โ€œIโ€™m high risk already, and theyโ€™re not doing anything about it inside here,โ€ said Harris, who is 58 years old and has been homeless for a little over a year. โ€œThey make announcements to wear a mask, but the guys are not wearing masks. Itโ€™s like about 60-70% white guys in there, and Donald Trumpโ€™s stupidity is running rampant.โ€

He said the Crossroads shelter has a current bed bug infestation. โ€œIโ€™ve got bed bug bites all over. On my arms, my neck, my legs โ€ฆ everywhere,โ€ he said. โ€œI have to sleep in my clothes, my socks up, gloves on, everything. I use my backpack as a pillow.โ€

A sign hangs on a temporary fence that was erected early Monday morning by law enforcement to surround a large homeless encampment in Denver, on Nov. 30, 2020. (Moe Clark/Colorado Newsline)

The Salvation Army did not respond to a media request, but a DDPHE spokeswoman said the health department has received a complaint and is conducting an inspection of the facility on Wednesday.

Harris, who is recovering from having his appendix removed, recently became a grandfather. โ€œThatโ€™s the only reason why Iโ€™ve stayed here at this awful place,โ€ he added. โ€œSo I can try to get an apartment. So my grandbaby can come visit me and I can heal myself.โ€

Heโ€™s been staying at the shelter, which houses between 150 and 200 people, he estimates, for two weeks. Harris tried to go back to the Coliseum but was told it was at capacity. โ€œItโ€™s much cleaner over there. Theyโ€™re doing social distancing and are being aware of whatโ€™s going on,โ€ Harris said. โ€œOver here, they donโ€™t give a f***. Itโ€™s disgusting.โ€

Harris said the treatment heโ€™s experienced as a Black man at the Salvation Army homeless shelter has been egregious. โ€œThey threatened to throw us out all the time, especially if youโ€™re Black,โ€ he said. โ€œI got kicked out into the cold one night for asking a question.โ€

A group of volunteers stand outside a temporary fence on Nov. 30, 2020, with food and supplies for people being displaced from the encampment at 20th and Arkins Court in Denver. (Moe Clark/Colorado Newsline)

Black people account for a large percentage of the metro areaโ€™s homeless population. Between July 1, 2019, and June 30, 2020, approximately 21,765 individuals in the Denver metro area had experienced homelessness, according to the Metro Denver Homeless Initiative. Twenty-six percent of them were Black, when only 5.3% of the general population is Black.

โ€œIโ€™ve been through a lot already and Iโ€™ve seen a lot,โ€ Harris said. โ€œIโ€™ve never seen the United States like this. This type of turmoil โ€ฆ people growling at you when you walk by on the street because youโ€™re Black. Thatโ€™s some bulls***. And so is that,โ€ he said, pointing to the clearing of the nearby encampment. โ€œItโ€™s the same kind of bulls***.โ€


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