Shocking photos blow apart the narrative being pushed by the councilwoman overseeing the drug-plagued, zombie-like chaos at MacArthur Park.
Lefty DSA Councilwoman Eunisses Hernandez, now running for re-election in the district that includes the park, took to social media this week for a victory lap, touting claims that drug overdoses are down in the area.
“The opioid epidemic didn’t happen overnight,” she said, blaming “failed policy, corporate greed, disinvestment and a system that treated problematic substance use as a crime instead of a health issue.”
She pointed to investments in street medicine, harm reduction, “Peace Ambassadors” and overdose response, adding: “When we invest, we start to see what’s possible.”
Hernandez called the progress “HUGE.”
But shocking photos taken Wednesday by The Post at MacArthur Park show dead rats and birds floating in the park’s pond, alongside open and ongoing drug use in broad daylight.
The images land just weeks after Hernandez and Mayor Karen Bass staged a high-profile cleanup at the park, complete with cameras, city officials and a social media rollout celebrating the effort.
Hernandez has poured more than $27 million into the park and surrounding area under, funding homelessness outreach, services and on-site programming.
Records show that includes cleanup operations, food distribution, showers and harm-reduction efforts such as needle and pipe distribution.
Hernandez has defended the spending. “We don’t ignore the real challenges here. We lean in,” she said. “That’s why our office has secured and invested over $27 million in the area to address public health and safety and bring the resources this community deserves.”
But critics say the results speak for themselves. “Sadly, for MacArthur Park, election season comes every four years, which is exactly when you will see Eunisses Hernandez attempt to do her job,” said Raul Claros, who is challenging Hernandez for the council seat.
The Post asked Hernandez’s office and the mayor’s office how much debris was removed during the cleanup, and how much it cost taxpayers. Neither responded.
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