As San Jose begins sweeping its largest homeless encampment in Columbus Park, people who have accepted offers of shelter will be safe from having their vehicles towed until space opens up.
City workers on Monday began clearing Irene Street along Columbus Park, home to a camp of roughly 370 people and 120 lived-in vehicles, per city estimates. Vehicles with signs placed on them that said “Do not tow or abate” were left alone, indicating the vehicles will be purchased by the city through a new buyback program and the owners will move into temporary housing. The city is sweeping the park in phases, with officials expecting to have all homeless people cleared out by the end of October.
During the clearing, police confirmed one man was found dead in his RV by a neighbor who hadn’t seen him for a few days. The cause of death is unknown.
“We were worried about what happened to him,” Sergio Valencia, who lives in the park, told San José Spotlight.
The first of five motels being converted to homeless housing is open, providing 42 beds for people living in the park. The other four motels and a safe sleeping site on Taylor Street are expected to open within the next month, offering a total of 390 spaces. That’s enough for every homeless resident in the park who wants shelter, Mayor Matt Mahan said at a news conference.
“We’re offering safe, private, individual, low barrier rooms without a curfew, without a deadline, for every person in the park,” Mahan said. “We need them to choose to come indoors for their safety and for the good of the broader community that deserves to be able to be in that park again.”

Mahan has pushed to build more short-term, temporary shelter — in lieu of permanent affordable housing — to address growing homelessness in the city. The San Jose City Council approved that plan during June budget discussions, as well as a proposal to arrest homeless people for refusing offers of shelter.
There are 6,503 homeless residents in San Jose, according to a point-in-time count conducted in January. Roughly 3,959 people are unsheltered.
Mahan said 68% of Columbus Park residents have accepted an offer of shelter so far. The city is also launching an RV buyback program where it will offer $2,000 to people living in their vehicles. Owners of 80 vehicles at the park have taken the offer, Housing Director Erik Soliván said. He didn’t clarify how much money the city has set aside for the program, but said everyone in Columbus Park who chooses to participate will be able to receive money.
Alyssa Kinney said she is participating in the buyback program, but is skeptical she’ll get into temporary housing. She moved to Columbus Park about four years ago, but said she can’t rely on outreach workers.
“They haven’t really shown me anything because they come out here, but they’re not consistent,” she told San José Spotlight.
Others living in their vehicles are hesitant to give them up for temporary housing.
Petra Aguirre, 78, said she came to Columbus Park with her husband two years ago, after her landlord sold the duplex they had been renting and couldn’t afford anywhere else. She’s made the RV a makeshift home and feels safe around neighbors in the encampment, including someone who helps her occasionally due to her poor eyesight and bad knees. She’s made arrangements for someone to help move the inoperable RV, but she doesn’t know where she and her husband will go — and temporary RV parking bans across the city add to the difficulty.
“I’m scared. I can’t sleep at night,” Aguirre told San José Spotlight in Spanish through a translator. “I want to stay in my trailer because it’s my house. I feel uncomfortable in a hotel room.”

Yari Castillo, 28, doesn’t want to give up her RV either. She said she has a disability that makes it hard for her to work and pay rent.
“An RV at least gives me a sense of stability,” Castillo told San José Spotlight. “I have a home. Why can’t they offer me an RV spot?”
San Jose has two safe parking sites, offering a combined 128 spaces. That’s nowhere near enough room for the estimated 1,000 people living in their vehicles across the city. Soliván said San Jose has no plans to open more safe parking sites as it grows its temporary shelter options, which will cost millions of dollars annually to operate. In addition to the soon-to-be-open motels and safe sleeping site, the city plans to add hundreds of beds for homeless residents later this year through tiny homes at Cherry Avenue, Cerone Yard and the Rue Ferrari expansion.
In total, the city plans to open about 1,000 new beds and spaces this year.
Once Columbus Park is swept of homeless people and cleared of trash, San Jose will move forward with revitalization plans that envision a family-friendly space with basketball courts and more.
“The revitalization of Columbus Park has been a promise unfulfilled,” District 6 Councilmember Michael Mulcahy, who represents the area, said at the news conference. “Its struggles are well documented, all too often due to a tragic outcome, and that changes now.”
Contact Joyce Chu at [email protected] or @joyce_speaks.
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