LOS ANGELES (CNS) - The Venice Family Clinic, which has been offering free health care services to the community for more than 50 years, blasted the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department today, saying the agency is calling for the “forced displacement and criminalization of unhoused people'' on the boardwalk.
“This week, the L.A. County Sheriff and others unfamiliar with Venice and its unhoused residents held press events on the Venice Boardwalk calling for the forced displacement and criminalization of unhoused people in order to ‘clean up' the Boardwalk,'' the clinic said in a statement Friday afternoon. “Time and time again, this approach has proven to fail in Los Angeles, and cause harm to people already dealing with crisis, trauma and the extreme lack of affordable housing across our region and especially on the Westside.''
The Venice Family Clinic added that the homelessness crisis has been caused by “decades of disinvestment in affordable housing and other critical resources, systemic racism in land-use policies, housing, employment and mass incarceration policies, and growing income and wealth inequality.''
It called for kindness towards the homeless, local outreach, access to medicine and an investment in permanent housing solutions.
“Our collective community will work to provide emergency services, secure, preserve, and build more housing, and stand in solidarity to protect the rights of unhoused folks, and hope that anyone interested in helping alleviate homelessness in Venice and beyond joins the effort from a human-centered, social justice framework,'' the clinic said.
Councilman Mike Bonin, who represents the neighborhood in the Los Angeles City Council, also criticized the sheriff's department's efforts to meet with homeless people around Ocean Front Walk in Venice -- outside the sheriff's jurisdiction -- and clear an encampment, calling the deputies' presence “disruptive and counterproductive.''
Bonin on Thursday tweeted that Sheriff Alex Villanueva “should leave outreach & housing to the professionals. It's harmful to strut in & interfere with the work of service providers who are trying to house people, quietly, diligently and in good faith.''
Villanueva, who described the department's work in Venice as a “humanitarian mission,'' told reporters on Monday that deputies will talk to people residing in an encampment at the beach to determine what they are doing to move from being homeless to having a place to stay. He said the homelessness crisis within Los Angeles city limits prompted him to take action. He also accused Bonin and Mayor Eric Garcetti of hampering the Los Angeles Police Department in its ability to do its job with regard to encampments.
“I'm not going to blame LAPD whatsoever,'' Villanueva said. “I think they can definitely do the job. They're more than capable, have good leadership. However, if they're hamstrung by politicians that don't want them to do their job, well, then they're left in a very, very bad situation.''
He visited the Venice encampment this week “to view the failures of local politicians in regard to the homeless crisis,'' he said, adding that the agency's Homeless Outreach Services Team would be dispatched to the beach Tuesday “assessing Venice in order to triage the crisis and develop an action plan to compassionately offer services while employing common sense in the regulation of public space within Los Angeles County.''
He told reporters he would like to see the Venice Beach encampment cleared by the Fourth of July holiday.
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