Los Angeles Times

LA mayor calls latest crackdown on street camps a success, but legal issues cloud city's shelter and cleanup plans

LOS ANGELES - To hear Mayor Eric Garcetti tell it, a city crackdown on downtown Los Angeles street encampments went off this month with barely a hitch: one arrest, seven people moved to shelters, 13 placed on the waiting list and the number of people in tents cut by more than half.

Cleanup crews with police escorts swept through homeless camps in the El Pueblo historic district, bagging and tagging possessions for storage and dumping tents, trash, needles and human waste.

Garcetti credited an "outreach-led" operation - social workers were at the camps for weeks before police and sanitation crews moved in - for a smooth rollout of a

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times4 min readAmerican Government
Commentary: Don’t Want Biden Or Trump To Have So Much Power? Maybe The US Needs A Poly-presidency
At the Constitutional Convention in 1787, Pennsylvania delegate James Wilson brought up a seemingly un-American idea. He said the executive branch of America’s government should be headed by a single person: a president. Several constitutional delega
Los Angeles Times2 min read
Ashanti And Nelly Confirm They're Engaged And Having A Baby, Baby, Baby, Baby, Baby
It's true! Ashanti is expecting her first child with longtime love Nelly. The "Baby" singer and the "Hot in Herre" rapper confirmed months of pregnancy rumors Wednesday after much speculation about their growing family. They also confirmed that they'
Los Angeles Times4 min read
Commentary: In Utah, The Capitol Really Is The People’s House
Many state capitol buildings feel unapproachable, tucked away downtown or barricaded behind lanes of noisy traffic. Not so in Salt Lake City. The Utah Capitol sits at the mouth of a verdant canyon, flanked by parks and neighborhoods, perched below th

Related Books & Audiobooks