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LA’s homeless crisis hits shocking new low — here’s what The Post found in the drain

la’s-homeless-crisis-hits-shocking-new-low-—-here’s-what-the-post-found-in-the-drain
LA’s homeless crisis hits shocking new low — here’s what The Post found in the drain

LA’s homeless people are now living along a filthy riverbed despite the city blowing over $1 billion on housing solutions.

Last week the California Post found a large homeless encampment on the Los Angeles River next to Griffith Park, surviving on scraps and washing in the putrid water.

More than 25 people have set up on the heavily polluted stretch, seeking shelter in storm drains from intense daytime heat and chilly winter nights.

It comes as LA’s homeless crisis continues to blight the city, with The Post reporting last week an encampment has now set up in the sewer system.

This is despite a $2.6 billion cash injection from Gov. Gavin Newsom to buy and renovate properties for people sleeping rough.

Homeless woman Ises washes her clothes in the Los Angeles River.

Ises, who says she’s lived along the river for nearly 20 years, washes in polluted runoff as she battles mental illness. David Buchan for CA Post

A homeless woman washes clothes in the LA River.

More than 25 people live along this stretch of the river, navigating daily survival in harsh conditions. David Buchan for California Post

Some along the riverbed told The Post they had been there for decades in squalid conditions after passing through shelters and treatment facilities.

One of them, who said her name was Ises, revealed she moved from Alaska to LA and claimed she had been there for 20 years.

She said she had been battling mental illness and was addicted to meth, but added she stays by the river for the freedom and the animals she feeds along the bank.

The Post watched as she bathed in murky runoff, scrubbing her filthy clothes in the polluted water, with zero sanitation.

Her belongings were out in the open, without anything to protect her from the elements. Stinking hot in summer, cold in winter, and no way out should a flash flood hit.

She used to have protection from the weather, pointing to a nearby stormwater drain, but she said: “They bricked it off. … There’s no oxygen now. Like being in a plastic bag.”

Kween, a woman with tattoos, stands with her dog in front of her makeshift shelter by the Los Angeles River.

Steps away from public parks, people live in conditions that show how the city’s homelessness response has failed. David Buchan for California Post

Ises, who is homeless, washes her clothes in the LA River.

Ises, who has battled mental illness and addiction, lives along the river where survival plays out in full view of a system that has yet to reach her. David Buchan for California Post

Kween cleaning a glass bottle, surrounded by various personal items on a colorful blanket.

More than two-dozen people are living along a concrete flood channel near Griffith Park. David Buchan for California Post

Former LA mayoral candidate and developer Rick Caruso told The Post: “It’s criminal to allow people to live like this. It’s unsafe.

“We should be providing [the homeless] the proper housing and the proper care that they need to get their life back on track,” he added.

Community advocate Cameron Flanagan has spent years working this stretch of the river, trying to pull people into services as conditions on the ground continue to spiral.

She said: “There’s been constant graffiti, trash, blown-up sites, drugs being bought and sold. It’s dangerous, and the right systems aren’t in place.”

Flanagan said what has unfolded is not just worsening, it was being fundamentally misread by officials, adding: “We had two of the homeless die this past month.”

Ises, a homeless woman, washes clothes in the Los Angeles River.

Ises lives in conditions that leave little room for stability or care. David Buchan for California Post

Homeless advocate Cameron Flanagan speaks with Kween beside Kween's shelter on the banks of the LA river.

Kween speaks with homeless advocate Cameron Flanagan beside her shelter on the banks of LA River. David Buchan for California Post

A black plastic spoon with a burned bowl lies on rough, grey ground.

Drug paraphanilia lies on the ground near a homeless camp along the LA River. David Buchan for California Post

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Ises is living in horrific homeless conditions after a series of underground encampments were raided last week.

Officers pounced on one group found living in a storm drain tunnel in Canoga Park on Friday after they had gained access through a manhole entrance on the sidewalk.

Rangers with the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority moved in to safely remove the occupants, placing them into temporary housing and sealing the drain entrance to block future access.

The interior of the tunnel was thick with debris, trash and human waste, turning the storm system into an unsafe shelter.

Officials said many unhoused residents they encounter decline city services and later return to abandoned drains, digging deeper rather than seeking help.

Two city officials inside a graffiti-covered storm drain with scattered belongings on the wet ground.

A series of underground encampments were raided last week in the Canoga Park area of Los Angeles. KTLA

A man standing in a storm drain with graffiti on the walls and a city official behind him.

Officers pounced on one group found living in a storm drain after they had gained access through a sidewalk manhole.

And this came just days after a cleanup operation at yet another site in South Los Angeles. That one, near West 88th Street and South Grand Avenue, had been used intermittently as overnight shelter.

Neighbors around these underground encampments have long complained about crime, vandalism and drug activity pouring out of hidden tunnels and the tent communities above ground.

One nearby resident said it is a “terrible” situation and that officials could be doing more to protect the neighborhood.

These people are still living in hell despite the state and city splashing a fortune on new housing opportunities for homeless people.

A person sits near a doghouse on a sidewalk next to a chain-link fence, with a news chyron at the bottom of the screen.

The Los Angeles homeless crisis has sunk to a new low, with people seen living underground in sewers. FOX 11 Los Angeles

Rubbish and clothing piled in a dark sewer tunnel.

Footage showed the horrifying conditions of sewers in South LA, overflowing with trash and human waste. FOX 11 Los Angeles

At least $2.6 billion of taxpayers’ cash has been spent on buying and renovating hotels, motels and dorms for the huge unhoused population in the city and county since 2020.

The properties were all purchased with $1.3 billion from Newsom’s Homekey initiative, which then renovated with another $1.3 billion in funding from the city and county of Los Angeles.

Experts are demanding an investigation and blasted the spending spree — as Los Angeles continues to grapple with a housing crisis, draconian building restrictions and a budget deficit.


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