Fresno Homeless Attacked and Insulted by City Workers
Fresno Homeless Attacked and Insulted by City Workers
By Mike Rhodes
"The homeless people that live here are the luckiest homeless in Fresno." Surprised by the statement, I asked undercover Fresno Police Officer Ray Wallace what he meant. "They have maid service. We come out and clean up for them about every other week." The cleaning party today was particularly vigorous.
The letter handed out by the Fresno Police Department, giving notice of the "clean up" said they would "start at 8:00am." I arrived at 7:50 AM and the destruction of property was already well under way. One homeless woman told me that everything she owned had been destroyed because she was a few minutes too late to save it. "I had paper work in there that can’t be replaced," she said.
Once the "clean up" crew had made its way all of the way down the Caltrans property on E street (on the West side of E near Ventura) they swung around and headed down the East side of E street. This caught the homeless community completely off guard. Until today the City Sanitation Department would go down the Caltrans strip of land with a bulldozer, sweep it clean, and then leave. The homeless, every other time this had happened, simply moved their possessions to the other side of the street. After the clean up crew was gone, the homeless would move back to the East side of the street and re-build their encampment. But, today the Fresno Sanitation Department, backed up by a larger than usual Fresno Police Department contingent, made a U turn and pulled onto the East side of E street. Stunned homeless people watched as all the possessions they had removed from Caltrans property were loaded into the dump truck.
The shopping carts and piles of possessions stacked up on the sidewalk, on the East side of E street were thought to be safe because no notice had been given that there would be a change in procedures. Many of the homeless had removed their possessions as instructed and then left to eat, work, or do whatever they would normally do on a Thursday morning. As officer Wallace directed the clean up crew to throw away anything not in the possession of someone, the homeless people still in the area mobilized to save whatever they could.
One clean up crew supervisor was overheard saying "I wish I had a nickel for every cart we destroy." Dallas Blanchard, from Food Not Bombs, tried to prevent the workers from throwing the homeless peoples possessions away. He was forced from his position directly in back of the garbage truck. Liza Apper from the St. Benedict Catholic Worker stood in front of some shopping carts. She was repeatedly told to move but refused. Apper was able to save a couple of grocery carts full of items.
But that did not stop the police and the clean up crew. They simply moved a few feet beyond Apper and threw entire carts into the dump truck. Several people tried to pull their possessions back to the West side of the street (Caltrans land) and as they arrived were told the Garbage truck would be back to throw their things away. With no safe place to go, some of the homeless just stood by their carts to protect them. The police and clean up crew did not forcefully remove people to destroy their possessions.
Henry, an African American homeless man who lives on E street told me that officer Wallace had prevented him from removing his tent. "I was trying to untie my tent from the fence and this guy came up behind me and told me to leave. He was not in uniform and did not identify himself as a policeman." Henry continues, "this guy (Wallace) hit my hands as I tried to untie my tent." Henry said he was physically forced to leave his tent, which was then picked up by a bulldozer and put into a garbage truck. Henry is a diabetic. "My medicine was in that tent, everything I owned was in that tent and they just destroyed it." Henry said the incident happened in April 2006. Another homeless person, Dee, told me she witnessed the incident. Wallace denies the assault took place.
After targeting both sides of E street, the FPD and the Sanitation Department headed for Santa Clara street. Santa Clara runs into E and is in front of the Poverello House. Many of the homeless people who use the services at the Poverello House (food, clothing, and some medical services) leave their carts on Santa Clara. There were about 20 carts there when the garbage truck arrived. None of the owners were with their carts. The truck backed up and workers started throwing one cart after another in, crushing them. As the word of the destruction spread the owners came running out of the Poverello House yelling and telling the city workers to stop. Those homeless people who made it there in time and stood in front of their cart were able to save their possessions from destruction.
I requested a comment from the Fresno Police Department about the incidents above, but at the time our deadline, they did not respond.
For more information and background, see:
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/06/21/18281739.php
http://www.indybay.org/news/2006/05/1825301.php
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/05/12/18228251.php
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/02/04/16695221.php
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Its high time the citizens of Fresno stopped accepting faux representation from self interested
sellouts, real estate brokers, surveillance minded threat making terrorists and those who would oversee criminal law enforcement with ill intent towards the citizens. We are so far past the days of justice and decency I doubt there will ever be a trail of bread crumbs that can get us back where we should be as a community. THROW THE BUMS OUT! The FBI aint coming back to prosecute these right wing lawbreakers, we have to do it ourselves.
Fresno crews descend on downtown area to tidy up a haven for homeless.
By Louis Galvan / The Fresno Bee
(Updated Friday, June 23, 2006, 5:44 AM)
Rosemary Ballesteros watched from her front porch Thursday morning as city sanitation crews scooped up piles of trash from about a dozen homeless encampments across the street from her home just west of downtown Fresno.
"I'm glad something is being done, because it's really bad out there," she said. "You can't even sit outside in the evening because the smell is so bad it makes you sick."
Ballesteros, 56, lives at Santa Clara and E streets just south of Ventura Avenue, across the street from a vacant strip of property that for years has acted like a magnet for homeless people.
"I understand they probably don't have a place to live and I don't mind if they stay there, if only they cleaned up after themselves," Ballesteros said.
"They don't have any restrooms so they do their thing out there in the open — they just pull down their pants and don't care who is watching. And it seems like all of them have dogs, so we don't just get their smell, but also their dogs' stink."
Ballesteros, who has two elementary school-age grandchildren living with her, said she knew the area — only a block away from the Poverello House and the Fresno Rescue Mission — was frequented by the homeless before she moved there about 21/2 years ago.
"But I didn't think it was going to be this bad," she said.
Fresno police Capt. Greg Garner said Thursday's cleanup operation, which was conducted by the city's Community Sanitation Department, covered the area roughly bounded by G, E and Santa Clara streets and Ventura Avenue, and also an area on G Street underneath Highway 41. The land is owned by the California Department of Transportation.
He said the homeless were notified several days before the operation to remove their belongings or risk them being hauled away as trash.
Caltrans officials were notified of the cleanup, but were not involved in Thursday's operation, said Caltrans spokesman Jose Camarena.
Thursday's cleanup started at 8 a.m. and was finished in less than an hour.
"
About two dozen homeless people had abandoned their makeshift campsites and had their belongings stacked on shopping carts when the cleanup crew arrived.
A few of the homeless, however, such as Vincent Wilson, 39, had their property thrown away when they left it unattended for a few minutes.
"I had a tent, which I just bought yesterday," Wilson said. "I paid $25 for it; now it's gone."
Wilson said he also lost a good pair of jeans and other clothing.
Al Dansby, 69, standing under a shade tree on Santa Clara, said he didn't mind the cleanup operation.
"It's a good thing what they're doing," he said. "I try to clean up after me, but a lot of people who live out here just come in for a few days and leave behind a pile of garbage."
Garner said he hoped the operation would encourage the homeless residents to seek help to find alternative shelter.
But Dansby and his friends said they would just wait until the cleanup crew finished so that they could reclaim their campsites.
The reporter can be reached at lgalvan [at] fresnobee.com or (559) 441-6139.
Here is how current Fresno Officials deal with the homeless.
In these carts could have been their only legal documents, their only pictures of their family,
Their only posessions. It really reflects on the Central Valley residents of how they treat others. Yes, some of these people use/sell drugs.. But do they all?
Remember, Fresno has very few resources to deal with mental illness, and even less resources for with those who are chronically mentally ill and those who are mentally retarded or head injuries. I wonder how many are vets ??
Fresno is run by Neo-con concervatives who don't want any money put into Human Resouces.. And keeping starting pay at 5.15/hr. But they have enough resources to buy 12 Police helicopters, 1 special jet, and now cameras on overone hundreds of street corners.
By the way, years ago they butchered the Park and Recreation budget so much that it new is under the Police dept.
Here is a new group that would like to keep people from being homeless.
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/07/14/18287855.php
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