An unhoused resident of the L Street NE encampment in NoMa was struck by a Bobcat front-end loader on Monday during a planned encampment clearing. that the man was unharmed but received additional medical attention as a precaution after the accident.
鈥淲e have the funds set aside to end homelessness for many, many people. Our unhoused neighbors deserved better than what happened today,鈥 said Councilmember Charles Allen (D-Ward 6) via his communications director in an email.
Things escalate as someone was accidentally bulldozed while still in their tent
鈥 Maydeen (@maydeennnn)
DMHHS paused activity at the L and M Streets encampment clearings after the bulldozing. Orange safety cones lined with yellow caution tape now block off remaining tents.
The clearings were part of a plan to close four encampments through the city. An Encampment Pilot Information Sheet, put out by DMHHS, said the aim is to decrease 鈥渉ealth and safety risks鈥 and increase 鈥渕eaningful service connections and stable housing.鈥 But activists said closing the encampments will leave unhoused people without a safe place to stay and will make offering services more difficult as the communities they serve will be dispersed.
DMHHS rescheduled the NoMa encampment closures twice before the clearings began Monday. Initially DMHHS failed to provide the two weeks鈥 notice of the closure the law requires. Activists said their work largely contributed to the second rescheduling.
鈥淥ur petitions got a lot of signatures, and that gave pressure on the city government to delay it,鈥 said Jeffrey Tsoi, an activist and Georgetown University law student who focuses on housing justice issues.
The Encampment Pilot Information Sheet and Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services Wayne Turnage both said the city is working with encampment residents to help them find more permanent housing, but residents described the communication as poor.
鈥淪upposedly they have somewhere for me to live, but I鈥檓 just waiting to try to get placed somewhere,鈥 said Andre Juste, who has lived at the L Street underpass for three years.
Encampment closures across the city, like Franklin Park鈥檚 establishment of a no-tent zone upon the park鈥檚 reopening, leave limited options for unhoused people.
Tsoi and other advocates worry about what the closures mean for unhoused people who refuse to accept the city鈥檚 housing vouchers.
鈥淭he activists helped people move here when other places were cleared out,鈥 Tsoi said of the M and L Street encampments. Now, he is unsure where the residents will go.
DMHHS said it will 鈥渃ontinue to engage with鈥 those who refuse housing support and will 鈥渨ork to address any needs they have鈥 in its Encampment Pilot Informational Sheet.
鈥淚f the world was just, we could trust in the city to do what it says it鈥檚 going to do. But it鈥檚 extremely difficult to trust a municipality that allows people to live on the street,鈥 Executive Director of Ward 6 Mutual Aid Maurice Cook said.
DMHHS officials and Metropolitan Police were present at both encampment clearings. Multiple representatives from each declined to comment.
Cook was skeptical of DMHHS鈥檚 motives for permanently clearing the encampments.
鈥淭he only reason that this is happening is that they have this new constituency that doesn鈥檛 wanna see tents by their new luxury housing. I believe that this is more about the aesthetics,鈥 Cook said.
, the National Community Reinvestment Coalition found in 2018. NCRC is an organization that works to end housing and loan discrimination.
In August 2019, the president of the NoMa Business Improvement District published . The letter read in part, 鈥渋t is essential that something be done to recognize and protect the right of D.C. residents, workers, and visitors to safely use and pass through public space in NoMa.鈥
The letter aroused controversy, but the city took action. The city permanently cleared NoMa鈥檚 K Street encampment in January 2020.
Other advocates expressed concern about the likelihood that former encampment residents would be pushed into shelters as the pandemic wears on. DMHHS has cited public health concerns as a reason for clearing the encampment.
鈥淚f people refuse housing, where are they going to go? Communal settings are the most dangerous, and that鈥檚 what we鈥檙e pushing people into,鈥 Executive Director of the People for Fairness Coalition Reginald Black said. The People for Fairness Coalition was founded and is run by people who have experienced homelessness.
Ultimately, Black said, the clearings are symptomatic of business and government鈥檚 failure to respond to unhoused people when making decisions about their lives.
鈥淵ou can hear the violence in that.鈥
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