Monday, May 16, 2022

Boulders: Emeryville Hits on New Way to Clear Out Homeless People

Police Rousts Homeless Camp

$13,000 Spent on Boulder Field

City Hall Refuses to Explain

Accountability and Transparency Vacates Emeryville With the Homeless People

Humane Policies Out, Boulders and Secrecy In



News Analysis

Late in April, Emeryville's police quietly rousted a small group of homeless people camped on a City owned piece of land on 40th Street behind City Hall so it could place $13,000 worth of boulders there.  The uprooted homeless people have not returned, probably because the taxpayer funded boulders are so tightly spaced that a human body cannot recline between them.  We say ‘probably’ because all we've been able to get by way of an explanation from officials at City Hall about this lavishly funded public work is a 'no comment'.  Are the boulders just dumped there, waiting to be assembled in some way?  They're not saying.  Is this field of boulders indicative of a new policy about how the City deals with homeless people?  Again, they're not saying.

Even though the City refuses to say anything about it, the barren, seemingly inconsequential triangular shaped plot of public land along 40th Street at Hollis Street has become emblematic and revelatory of Emeryville’s real policy about homeless people.  The City has long downplayed implications about the lack of homeless encampments within its borders, especially when compared with neighboring cities and they've even gone as far as to claim the lack of encampments here proves the efficacy and humaneness of its homeless policy.  However the April homeless clearance on 40th Street and the accompanying $13,000 boulder field raises questions not easily dismissed by a button lipped City Hall.  

Mohamed Alaoui
Emeryville's Public Works Director

"No comment" he says about the boulder field.
The people don't have a right to know.
Through a State of California enforced public records request, the Tattler was able to find that the police department cleared out the homeless camp on the orders of City Hall.  The clearing out of the undesirable people was the City’s part of a contract with Rubicon Landscaping of Richmond, a company the City regularly uses for its landscaping needs.  For this project, Rubicon billed Emeryville $12,976 for the placement of 21 tons of gravel and 14 pallets of ‘double head’ boulders, the public records request revealed.  Anything beyond that, the City of Emeryville has refused to account for.  The lack of a chain of command paper trail hints the City Council was not likely a direct part in this decision.  Rather, it was probably made administratively by the city manager or the director of the Public Works Department. 

Still, the people have a right to know, especially because they paid for this.  Why are these boulders needed?  Who decided this?  How long will the boulders be on the people's property?  Was any consideration made to how the boulders look?  What happened to the homeless people formerly camped there the public paid to roust?  The City of Emeryville refuses to answer these or any questions about this other than the firm 'no comment' from Public Works Director Mohamed Alaoui. 
 

Welcome to Emeryville: All are Welcome Here
*except homeless people
The stark difference between Oakland and Berkeley versus Emeryville has for years been expressed in the large number of homeless camps just outside the city's boundaries compared with the total lack of camps within Emeryville. Council members and staff until now, have been quick to explain the difference is that Emeryville’s homeless policies are good and effective at gently steering homeless people to government recourses including bed facilities.  The police department here has always denied that homeless people are rousted.  To those who have asked about it, the answer up until now has always been that Emeryville is good and humane, leaving that Berkeley and Oakland, with their homeless encampments, must be bad and inhumane.  However, the April call to roust the homeless people at the 40th Street site and the new field of boulders placed there calls this longstanding explanation into question.

The questions persist.  Why won’t the City be forthcoming about this?  Is this reflective of a new anti-homeless policy or is it the City just got caught this time?  Rubicon Landscaping charged Emeryville a lot of money for this.  Were there other bids to supply the boulders?  Did Rubicon get a sweetheart backroom deal?  Is the City hiding something here?  Where did the money to pay for this come from?  Were federal Covid-19 funds or other such inappropriate funds used to purchase these boulders?  How are these boulders placed on our land representative of Emeryville values?  The answers to these questions about the people's business will not be answered by those doing the people’s business at City Hall.  But the Tattler will keep trying to shed light into this and forcing them to account.


This is how you spent your $13,000.
Just keep paying your taxes and stop asking questions.



'No comment' from
Emeryville City
government earns one
smiling Nora Davis


21 comments:

  1. Clearing out homeless camps is what we SHOULD be doing. Shame on Oakland and Berkeley for not clearing them OUT. They keep drifting into Emeryville because O and B.

    ReplyDelete
  2. To say the City council was not aware and or involved is suspicious !
    WHY do they meet in " close session " with NO public participation
    beside they said they do not meet in person even with mask and'
    distancing and all that jazz its all by Yak Yak with scant if anything
    done in writing conveniently blaming the c.v. 19 and as a result the
    c.v 19 will become a perpetual disease.
    The City paid $ 75 K for P.H. of San Carlos, Ca. for the annihilation
    of our real estate asset at 1264 Ocean Av. and dumped dirt to make
    us homeless instead of having our house on the lot
    The City Council was well aware of that infamy and voted for EXCEPT
    Scott Donahue refusing to go along with that inhumane operation
    to put an 85 yrs old on the street or on the lot on 40 th and Hollis.

    Patrick Carpiaux

    ReplyDelete
  3. I guess I'd just like to ask Anonymous where they think the homeless should go?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anywhere but here..They bring crime and they are filthy. Not welcome whatever you and Brian says.

      Delete
    2. Brilliant. Some people say that very same thing about Californians coming to their states.

      Delete
    3. I guess it's hard not to be dirty without a home. Perhaps Anonymous would like to help them rather than put them down.

      Delete
  4. Brilliant idea at a decent cost too! Just a thought, but maybe the author should investigate how many calls for service the police have on a daily basis that can be linked to the homeless. Or how many times Falck ambulances have to respond and what those ambulance rides cost for every homeless person placed on a 5150 W&I hold that they run to John George Psychiatric Pavilion. Or how many thefts are committed by the homeless and what that costs retailers and consumers. Or how many times homeless are offered help but refuse because, you know…there are rules that accompany said help. I think the answers might surprise you. But I doubt the author cares much about the real issues facing Emeryville and this state…let’s instead focus how much the city spent on rocks and where they put them.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's a lot of resources, isn't it? Maybe they should just make being poor a crime and be done with it. Then the City wouldn't have to engage in all the soul-sucking subterfuge. The lack of accountability is toxic to democracy. The Tattler: we hate Emeryville and California.

      Delete
    2. What do you propose be done to solve homelessness? Most of those people are not even from Emeryville, let alone California. They are attracted to CA for many reasons. If this state stopped doing things to attract and enable homeless to flourish, maybe it wouldn’t be as prevalent. Have you opened up your home to these people?

      Delete
    3. If your refrigerator is broken, you either get it fixed or you get a new one. Same with your economic system. If it’s broken (not supplying people with housing), we should either fix it or we get a new one. Laisse-fair capitalism isn’t up to the task anymore.
      Late capitalism’s growing ranks of its losers, the poor, are attracted to California because the weather is good and because the local governments (mostly, Emeryville excepted) here don’t mistreat them. Your solution, for us to mistreat them like the red states do, is revealing of a very dark and misanthropic view of humanity that most of us don’t share (thankfully). Try as hard as capitalism might to dislodge it wholesale, most people here still have held on to their humanity.
      Oh, and government has a role in creating civilization. I'll leave the space program and helping homelessness that capitalism forgot, to them.

      Delete
    4. Perhaps the California government should round up all "undesirables" and dump them in nearby states. Not just the homeless, but anyone who doesn't meet certain "acceptable" criteria.

      Delete
    5. The is a really ugly “solution” to the problem. The tone of the comments here do not reflect solutions. I’d say why not tax the crypto companies more (for their violent levels of carbon footprint) and get extra money towards homeless solutions.

      Delete
    6. There are two ways to fix the homeless problem: one, a bandaid that retains the capitalistic economic system and one that jettisons capitalism altogether. The capitalist way is to adopt the system as exists in Scandinavia that demonstrably works fairly well. That way leads to low rates of homelessness and high rates of happiness.
      The better solution is to get rid of the capitalist system and replace it with a different way of organizing work production that enables democracy in the workplace, as in the Mondragonian model as practiced in the Basque region of Spain.

      The Scandinavian economic model largely uses taxes to make the society more equitable along the lines when America (to a lesser extent) also did that after WWII up until the 1970s. The idea driving taxation metrics back then was called the ‘ability to pay’, meaning those with the greater ability to pay, paid a greater amount. It seems pretty obvious and simple but it would involve pretty much getting rid of the entire Republican Party and its acolytes. The Mondragonian model even more so.

      Delete
    7. Communism is the solution to homelessness? Pathetic. How did that go in Venezuela? Capitalism is the best and ultimate economic solution for improving EVERYBODY and all you can talk about is communism. It's f'n pathetic.

      Delete
    8. Trickle down, eh? We're still waiting for that. Meanwhile, who said anything about state ownership of the means of production (in your binary worldview)?

      Delete
    9. One simple solution would be for a group of billionaires who understand that you can't take it with you to set up a $
      distribution cooperative to be administered by young idealistic people who don't want to sell their skills to corporatocracy.

      Delete
    10. Or we could just simply force every billionaire to pay, just like how our grandparents and great grandparents knew to do, back before we let trickle down or more recent neo-fascist Republicans control the narrative.

      Delete
  5. Eisenhower understood that and he wasn't afraid to call out the military-industrial complex.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Homeless people always bring out those who would tax us more. Churches and volunteer organizations can take good care of homeless people. Everything is not for the government to solve.

    ReplyDelete
  7. For the City to create such ugliness for such an ignoble purpose. A heart of darkness. I've many times been proud to be an Emervillian, but seldom been so ashamed of it.

    Mayor Bauters and the Council please weigh in on this. You've done such a good job, we need your help.

    Brian, thank you for your coverage! -

    ReplyDelete