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No Way L.A.

DOWNTOWN CAN’T FOLLOW PATH TO SKID ROW

After a decade of looking for encouraging news about Sacramento’s homeless crisis, I’ve found some: Compared to downtown Los Angeles, Sacramento has no homeless crisis.

I visit downtown L.A. every couple of months and have watched its vibrancy sink into an abyss of misery, poverty, crime and wasted lives. Tents, doorway sleepers and garbage are everywhere. Recovery will take years. If L.A.’s anguish makes Sacramento look hopeful, it also carries a warning. As Mayor Darrell Steinberg says, “Los Angeles is a cautionary tale.”

Before the pandemic, about 4,600 homeless people lived in L.A.’s dystopian wasteland east of Main Street between Third and Seventh streets. The slum covers 50 blocks and almost 3 square miles. Welcome to Skid Row.

For 50 years, Skid Row was a containment zone. Flop houses, rescue missions and soup kitchens served derelicts, felons, lunatics and drug addicts. Tourists and offi ce workers steered clear. Police considered it a cesspool of violence and vice. An invisible wall surrounded Skid Row. The pandemic breeched the wall and shattered it.

As offi ces closed for COVID and social-justice protests disintegrated into looting, parts of downtown L.A. near Skid Row—thriving

RG RG

By R.E. Graswich City Beat

neighborhoods—were obliterated. Restaurants, bars, hotels, bakeries, sandwich shops, clothing stores, gyms, record shops, fl orists, nail salons, coffee roasters, hairdressers and art galleries boarded up and left.

At least 145 downtown L.A. businesses closed. Now their sidewalks are fi lled with tents and people in cardboard boxes. The historic Skid Row boundaries of Main Street and Third Street are gone. Homeless camps blossom on all corners.

By comparison, Sacramento’s homeless crisis is fragmented and small. The city’s Skid Row fl ows away from Downtown toward North 12th Street and the River District. Dingy single-room occupancy hotels that served transients and ex-cons are reborn as low-income housing. Sanctioned campsites feature toilets and showers.

Sacramento follows a new strategy, designed by Steinberg to thin out homelessness, spread the problem around and make it less obvious. Under Steinberg’s plan, each council district—there are eight—will support some type of services for unsheltered people. The Great Homeless Dispersal is underway. It’s the mayor’s most clever move in a crisis that has defi ned his two terms.

The dispersal comes weeks after a federal judge in L.A. ordered authorities to fi nd shelter for Skid Row’s entire population. Judge David Carter sided with downtown L.A. business owners and residents who said offi cials abdicated their duty to clean up the mess. The judge wants L.A. to stop wasting tax dollars on

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Alan Leatherby, Owner, Leatherby’s Family Creamery at 2333 Arden Way Joel Hockman, CCO, Pucci’s Pharmacy at 3257 Folsom Boulevard Maria E. Munoz, owner of East Patio Mexicano on 5100 Folsom Boulevard

LOCAL PLEDGE CAMPAIGN KEEPS GROWING

Mary Ngo, Owner, The Sandwich Spot at 2108 11th Avenue Cheri Malkasian, Owner, The Summer Porch at 3254 J Street

Photos Courtesy of Cecily Hastings, Lauren Stenvick and Sally Giancanelli

We are happy to report that the PLEDGE 100% LOCAL campaign continues to grow and pick up new supporters. We invite other businesses and groups to join the effort. You can participate as simply as posting our signs at your business or by donating to fund signs and other resources. Visit insidesacramento.com/100local. For more information, contact cecily@insidepublications.com.

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