HomeMy WebLinkAbout2099ORDINANCE NO. 2099
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF PALM SPRINGS,
CALIFORNIA, AMENDING THE PALM SPRINGS
MUNICIPAL CODE, RELATING TO REGULATING
ENCAMPMENTS AND SLEEPING ON PUBLIC PROPERTY,
AND DETERMINING SUCH ORDINANCE TO BE EXEMPT
FROM FURTHER ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW UNDER THE
CALIFORNIA ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY ACT.
City Attorney's Summary
This ordinance updates the City's existing Municipal Code
provisions relating to camping and sleeping on public
property.
WHEREAS, the City of Palm Springs is committed to protecting the life, health,
and safety of its residents and all people within the geographical boundaries of the City;
and
WHEREAS, the Council finds that certain public lands within the City's
geographical boundaries pose significant health and safety hazards to people who make
shelter or stay overnight in these areas; and
WHEREAS, the Council finds that some of these public lands are environmentally
sensitive and may be significantly damaged by unregulated human activity; and
WHEREAS, the Council is committed to protecting the rights of individuals who
cannot obtain shelter and to treating their personal property with respect and
consideration and therefore updates the Municipal Code to conform to and address the
impacts of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals decision in Martin v. City of Boise; and
WHEREAS, the City currently provides 50, and will soon provide an additional 80,
shelter beds for people experiencing homelessness, which offer a place to sleep and
supportive services including job programs, housing support, treatment for mental health
conditions or substance abuse, and security; and
WHEREAS, the City engages in significant outreach work to build relationships
with people experiencing homelessness, using a person -centered, compassionate
approach to provide services tailored to each person's specific needs; and
WHEREAS, the City provides housing stability support, eviction protection,
transitional housing, and supportive and permanent housing solutions to assist people
with ending their homelessness; and
Ordinance No. 2099
Page 2
WHEREAS, the 2023 Point -in -Time Count administered by the County of Riverside I
Continuum of Care reported 239 people were experiencing unsheltered homelessness
within the City, which represents a 7.7 percent increase from the prior year; and
WHEREAS, City streets, sidewalks, and parks are intended for safe and sanitary
shared use by a diverse community of users including businesses, government, and the
general public for gathering, recreating, movement of people, maintenance, and cleaning,
and are frequently used by people relying on a variety of mobility devices; and
WHEREAS, the Council finds that certain public lands in the City pose a greater
danger to the health and safety of people who may stay in those areas overnight and to
the general public if used for sheltering, including near schools, shelters, in open space
and City waterways, transit hubs, trolley platforms, and in certain City parks; and
WHEREAS, this activity has forced students to walk in the street to pass
encampments blocking City sidewalks on their way to school and puts students at risk of
injury or death from vehicular traffic; and
WHEREAS, there are significant adverse impacts caused by encampment activity
concentrated around shelters provided to individuals and families experiencing
homelessness, including predatory behavior and drug dealing that undermines the
community's efforts to provide meaningful assistance and long-term solutions for people
seeking assistance; and I
WHEREAS, people experiencing homelessness on the City's streets and in transit
hubs have been involved in serious and deadly accidents involving cars, buses, or the
trolley; and
WHEREAS, people experiencing homelessness on City streets, in City parks, and
in transit hubs have been exposed to illicit fentanyl leading to exponential increases in the
accidental deaths by overdose among people experiencing homelessness; and
WHEREAS, the sustained presence of people in the City's open space and
waterways within the City has created unsafe, unsanitary, unhealthy, and dangerous
conditions including water pollution and frequent uncontained fires that threaten people
living or using these areas, first responders, and the general public; and
WHEREAS, Palm Springs Fire -Rescue indicates that fire crews responded to 54
vegetation fires in the City's open space areas and 89 rubbish fires last year, which were
all suspected to have resulted from human activity in these areas; and
WHEREAS, the City annually experiences extended periods of high temperatures
with little or no precipitation and strong seasonal dry winds from the east (i.e., Santa Ana
winds) that can significantly increase the danger and spread of wildfires, adding to the I
severity of fires when they start; and
Ordinance No. 2099
Page 3
' WHEREAS, due to the high wildfire risk in Riverside County, Palm Springs Fire -
Rescue responds to a vegetation fire with at least two fire engines and eight first
responders and these fires are frequently elevated to a First Alarm fire necessitating
additional support including brush engines, battalion chiefs and helicopters; and
WHEREAS, people sheltering along riverbeds and flood control channels within
the City are at risk of experiencing flooding, vector -related disease and other health
issues and these areas often contain sensitive environments at risk of significant damage
by unregulated human activity; and
WHEREAS, the City counted approximately 200 encampments along the riverbed
in 2023 and collected over 150 tons of trash; and
WHEREAS, the City is obligated to protect public health and safety and its natural
resources by maintaining clean, safe, and accessible City properties for all residents to
enjoy, including parks, open space, and the public right of way; and
WHEREAS, to mitigate risks to the health and safety of its citizens and potential
damage to environmentally sensitive lands, the Council desires to adopt regulations
establishing locations where camping and the maintenance of an encampment is
prohibited, regardless of the availability of shelter, due to the significant health and safety
risk to those engaged in that activity, the general public, and the environment; and
WHEREAS, outside of these specific locations, the prohibition on camping,
sleeping, and maintaining an encampment will not be enforced when there are no
available shelter beds; and
WHEREAS, it is the intent of this Ordinance to prohibit camping, sleeping, and
maintenance of encampments within the City while encouraging people experiencing
homelessness to use available low barrier shelters and access a variety of services
available from the City and its partners; and
WHEREAS, when abating any encampment, the City will provide written notice in
advance of the cleared that explains when the encampment will be cleaned up and how
an individual can reclaim items stored during the process; and
WHEREAS, the City will store any personal property that may belong to a person,
has apparently utility in its current condition and can be safely retrieved from the site, but
will not store property that is hazardous, practically un-storable, contraband, or listed on
the City's current list of common items regularly abandoned during the abatement
process.
Ordinance No. 2099
Page 4
NOW, THEREFORE, THE' CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PALM SPRINGS '
DOES ORDAIN AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1. Chapter 11.40 of the Palm Springs Municipal Code (Camping on
Public or Private Property) is hereby amended in its entirety to read as follows:
"Chapter 11.40 ENCAMPMENTS ON PUBLIC PROPERTY
§11.40.010
Purpose
§11.40.020
Definitions
§11.40.030
Protection of Waterways
§11.40.040
Unauthorized Encampments or Sleeping on Public Property
§11.40.050
Abatement of Encampments
§11.40.060
Abandoned Personal Property
§11.40.070
Enforcement
§11.40.010 Purpose
The Council finds that the City is committed to protecting the life, health,
and safety of all people in the City and finds that certain public lands within
the geographical boundaries of the City pose significant health and safety
hazards to the people who make shelter or stay overnight in these areas.
Additionally, the Council finds that some of these public lands are
environmentally sensitive and may be significantly damaged by unregulated '
human activity. The Council is committed to protecting the rights of
individuals related to their personal property and to treating such, property
with respect and consideration. It is the purpose of this Chapter to set
standards for the preservation and protection of human life, health, and
safety, to further the preservation and protection of sensitive public lands to
prevent destruction of these assets, and to establish a process for the
collection, storage, and disposal, recycling, or reuse of personal property
found in encampments on public property.
§11.40.020 Definitions
For purposes of this Chapter, the following definitions apply in this Chapter:
Abatement means the process of documenting and collecting eligible items
for storage, and removing and disposing of, recycling, or reusing of waste
at an encampment according to the process in section 11.40.050
(Abatement of Encampments).
Camp means to pitch, erect, or occupy an encampment, or to use camp
paraphernalia or both, for the purpose of, or in a way that facilitates outdoor
sheltering for living accommodation purposes or for remaining outdoors
overnight.
Camp paraphernalia means personal property used to facilitate occupancy
of an area and includes personal property typically associated with camping '
such as tarps, cots, beds, sleeping bags, hammocks, bedding, camp
Ordinance No. 2099
Page 5
' stoves, cooking equipment, buckets, and similar equipment, mattresses,
couches, dressers, or other furniture.
City Manager means the City Manager, or the City Manager's designee.
Encampment means one or more temporary, makeshift, or hand -built
structures not intended for long-term continuous occupancy, including tents,
that are used to shelter one or more persons or their belongings and that
are not authorized by the property owner. Encampment includes any camp
paraphernalia and personal property associated with or located in or around
the structures or tents.
Open space means any undeveloped public property either primarily in its
natural state, including canyons, bluffs, and unimproved waterways, or that
is held out by the City or used by the public for passive recreational
purposes, conservation, habitat preservation, or that maintains or enhances
the conservation of natural or scenic resources.
Park means any public property, whether developed or undeveloped, held
out by the City or used by the public for active or passive park and recreation
uses, including adjacent buffer lands and natural areas and any adjacent
parking lots and perimeter sidewalks.
Shelter means any City -funded shelter or shelter provided by the City for
shelter placements where individuals or families experiencing
homelessness can access beds and other services or an area designated
by the City Manager for use by individuals or families experiencing
homelessness.
Waste means any rubbish, solid waste, liquid waste, infectious waste, or
medical waste. Waste does not include compost piles, composting or
Recyclable Material properly contained and disposed of in a timely fashion.
Waterway means all the portions of the Whitewater River, Tahquitz Creek,
Tahquitz Creek Channel, or any flood control channel located within the
boundaries of the City of Palm Springs.
§11.40.030 Protection of Waterways
(a) It is unlawful for any person to do any of the following:
(1) build or erect a structure of any type along the banks of any
waterway, or drive a nail or other object into any tree or other natural
area vegetation for the purpose of building an encampment or any
other structure, or to affix an object to any tree or other natural
vegetation,
(2) move boulders or large rocks, destroy vegetation, paved roads or
paths created by the City, or otherwise reconfigure the natural
landscape in the waters of or along the banks of a waterway,
(3) drive, park, or bring any vehicle along the banks of a waterway,
except in places specifically provided and designated for vehicular
use,
(4) dig on the banks of a waterway, or
(5) discharge or store waste, including garbage, refuse, or human or
animal waste, along the banks or into the waters of a waterway.
Ordinance No. 2099
Page 6
(b) Nothing in this section 11.40.030 is intended to prohibit the activities of an '
owner of private property or other lawful user of private property that are
normally associated with and incidental to the lawful and authorized use of
private property; and nothing is intended to prohibit the activities of a lawful
user if such activities are expressly authorized by the City Manager or by
any law, regulation, permit, order or other directive from a regulatory
authority.
§11.40.040 Unauthorized Encampments or Sleeping on Public Property
(a) It is unlawful for any person to camp or to maintain an encampment in or
upon any public property, including in any street, sidewalk, park, open
space, waterway, and banks of a waterway, unless specifically authorized
by the City Manager.
(b) No person may sleep on public sidewalk, street, alleyway, median, parkway
or right of way, or in any pedestrian or vehicular entrance to public or private
property abutting a public sidewalk, at any time as a matter of individual and
public safety.
(c) At all times, regardless of the availability of shelter space or beds, it is
unlawful for any person to camp maintain an encampment, or sleep, where
such activity poses:
(1) an immediate threat or an unreasonable risk of harm to any natural
person,
(2) an immediate threat or an unreasonable risk of harm to public health
or safety, or
(3) disruption to any business, store, religious institution, educational
facility, or government services.
(d) At all times, regardless of the availability of shelter space or beds, it is
unlawful for any person to camp, maintain an encampment, or sleep, in the
following locations:
(1) within two blocks of a school that offers instruction on those courses
of study required by the California Education Code or that is
maintained pursuant to standards set by the State Board of
Education provided that signs are posted prohibiting camping that
are clearly visible to pedestrians. School for purposes of this section
11.40.040(c) does not include a vocational or professional institution
of higher education, including a community orjunior college, college,
or university;
(2) within two blocks of any shelter provided that signs are posted
prohibiting camping that are clearly visible to pedestrians;
(3) in any open space, waterway, or banks of a waterway;
(4) within any transit hub or bus shelter, or along any rail tracks provided
that signs are posted prohibiting camping that are clearly visible to
pedestrians; and
(5) in any park where the City Manager determines there is a substantial ,
public health and safety risk and provided that signs are posted
prohibiting camping that are clearly visible to pedestrians. For
Ordinance No. 2099
Page 7
purposes of this section 11.40.040(c)(5), the definition of park does
not include open space, as defined in section 11.40.020.
§11.40.050 Abatement of Encampments
The City Manager may remove personal property, camping paraphernalia,
and all other property, contraband, litter, and waste found at an
encampment or at a location where a person is engaged in unlawful
camping in compliance with the following procedures:
(a) Written Notice Required Prior to Abatement
(1) A written Notice of Clean -Up, in English and Spanish, will be posted
on each tent or structure and in any other distinct areas of the
encampment providing notice of the date of clean-up and giving a
minimum of 72 hours for persons to remove their personal property.
The written notice shall also include the following statement, which
may be updated by the City Managerto provide accurate and current
information:
You must remove your belongings from the site within 72
hours. You should not leave behind any belongings you want
to keep. All belongings left behind will be removed by the City.
The City will post an Impound Notice, in English and Spanish,
if belongings are stored during the clean-up process.
' If you wish to minimize the risk of losing valued belongings,
you should try to keep those belongings on your person at all
times, in a storage facility, or in visible, sanitary, and safely
accessible bags or bins.
If you think your belongings were stored, you can claim them
by following the directions on the Impound Notice after the
clean-up is complete. Information about how to claim your
belongings is also available on the City's website. You may
retrieve any stored belongings without being asked about your
criminal background or outstanding warrants.
You may access shelter or services, including access to
storage for your personal belongings, through the City of Palm
Springs's website or by calling 2-1-1 Palm Springs.
(2) After 72 hours, the City Manager shall be authorized to conduct
abatement of the site on the date posted on the Notice of Clean -Up.
If abatement is delayed or rescheduled, the City Manager may
conduct abatement within 72 hours of the posted Notice of Clean -Up
without reposting a new Notice of Clean -Up. If abatement is delayed
longer, the City Manager shall repost a Notice of Clean -Up with a
new date.
(b) The City Manager shall follow these additional procedures when persons
are present at an encampment during abatement:
(1) When shelter is available, the City Manager shall provide any person
at an encampment with shelter and service information and direct
them to remove their belongings from the site. The City Manager
Ordinance No. 2099
Page 8
shall evaluate reasonable requests for additional time or assistance ,
to remove items and may accommodate those requests to the extent
practicable.
(2) Any person who returns to an encampment during abatement shall
be allowed to remove their personal property from the site. Personal
property left behind will be deemed abandoned.
(3) Any person arrested for a criminal offense or an outstanding warrant
shall not be required to abandon personal property they identify as
their own. Unless the person requests the personal property be
discarded or entrusted to another, all personal property of apparent
value will be taken to the Palm Springs Police Department for
impoundment in accordance with existing policy and procedure.
Where the owner of the items cannot be readily identified or
discovered, the City Manager shall follow the abatement process in
this Chapter.
(c) The City Manager shall document the abatement process as follows:
(1) photograph or video record the site before any abatement begins,
(2) open backpacks, purses, suitcases, and other small storage
containers to determine whether they contain items eligible for
storage,
(3) set out items contained in bags or suitcases, and photograph the
items,
(4) photograph or video record all items to be stored, '
(5) photograph or video record the cleanup process, and
(6) photograph or video record the site after abatement has concluded.
(d) Unclaimed items found in abatement shall be eligible for storage if:
(1) circumstances indicate that the item belongs to a person,
(2) the item has apparent utility in its current condition and
circumstances, and
(3) the item can be safely retrieved from the site.
Examples of items potentially eligible for storage include
identification and associated paperwork, medication stored in
medication bottles with identifying information, art, art supplies,
musical instruments, and items that reasonably appear to have
sentimental value in their current condition. An item need not be in
a new or perfect condition to have apparent utility.
(e) An eligible item found during an abatement shall be put into storage, unless
it meets one the following disqualifying conditions: ,
(1) hazardous, including items contaminated with human waste or bodily
fluid, soiled items likely to expose others to disease, animal waste,
or bugs, explosives, weapons, liquids, drug paraphernalia, or mold;
(2) likely to become hazardous in storage, including perishables, wet
materials that might become moldy, and items covered in mud;
(3) practically un-storable, due to large size, weight, or other similar '
characteristic;
(4) contraband or stolen; or
Ordinance No. 2099
Page 9
' (5) is on the City Manager's current list of common types of items that,
in the experience of City staff, individuals regularly abandon during
abatement, and there is no contrary indication as to the specific item.
(f) The City Manager shall record each eligible item to be stored, including the
location it was found and the date of storage. Any stored items shall be
kept in storage at least 90 calendar days and then may be disposed of,
recycled, or reused following the process in Palm Springs Municipal Code
section 11.40.060 (Abandoned Personal Property).
(g) After abatement has concluded and when eligible items are collected and
will be placed in storage, the City Manager shall post notices, in English and
Spanish, at the location of the abatement that includes information how a
person can claim stored items. Information about retrieval of stored items
shall also be available on the City's website. A person may retrieve stored
items based on a description with sufficient specificity to demonstrate
ownership. A person may retrieve stored items without inquiry into the
person's criminal background or outstanding warrants.
(h) Expedited Abatement
(1) In an expedited abatement, the City Manager shall follow the same
abatement and storage procedures in section 11.40.050 (Abatement
of Encampments), but shall post a Notice of Clean -Up, in English and
Spanish, giving a minimum of three (3) hours for all persons to
remove their personal property.
(2) The City Manager shall prioritize and expedite the removal of an
encampment if.
(A) the City receives direction from County of Riverside or
other governmental authority that abatement of the
encampment is necessary to preserve public health or safety,
including to address known or suspected outbreaks of
diseases; or
(B) the City Manager observes or reasonably suspects the
encampment creates a condition that presents a significant
risk of property damage, bodily injury or death.
§11.40.060 Abandoned Personal Property
(a) Any personal property or possessions located on Public Property that are
unattended and whose owner cannot be readily identified are presumed to
be abandoned and, pursuant to Civil Code section 2080.7, the provisions of
Municipal Code section 7.07.020 (Disposition of Surplus Property) do not
apply. Enforcement Officials shall make a reasonable effort to ascertain
whether the unattended personal property or possessions have been
abandoned and, if so, to thereafter cause their removal. Any personal
property or possessions found during the abatement process in Municipal
Code section 11.40.050 shall first be stored as required by that section.
(b) Unattended personal property or possessions that are unsanitary, soiled or
verminous may be summarily abated and destroyed. Unattended personal
property or possessions that are not summarily abated or destroyed under
Ordinance No. 2099
Page 10
this section may be disposed of or recycled by the City Manager or donated ,
for reuse.
§11.40.070 Enforcement & Administrative Regulations
(a) Violations of this Chapter may be prosecuted as misdemeanors subject to
the fines and custody provisions in Palm Springs Municipal Code section
1.01.160.
(b) Law enforcement officers shall not enforce a violation of subsections
11.40.040(a) or 11.40.040(b), or both, between the hours of 9:00 p.m. and
6:00 a.m. or when the person is on public property at a time when there is
no available shelter. For purposes of this Section, available shelter means
the shelter is reasonably available to that specific person at the time the
proposed enforcement is taking place, taking into consideration any
disability or other specific circumstances applicable to that person.
(c) Sections 11.40.030 and 11.40.040 (c) and (d) are enforceable at all times
regardless of shelter availability.
(d) The City Manager and Police Chief shall each have the authority to, and
shall, issue administrative regulations in order to implement the
administration and enforcement of this Chapter. Such regulations shall
include, but not be limited to, processes for the provision of information
regarding housing and other social services prior to citation or arrest of
individuals, as well as a process for determining whether and how many
shelter beds are available at a given time. Such regulations shall be posted
and maintained on the City's Police Department website. City staff shall
bring back to City Council, as a receive and file agenda item, any such
administrative regulations, and any amendments thereto."
Section 6. That this Ordinance shall take effect and be in force on the thirtieth day
from and after its final passage or on the date the second phase of the City's Navigation
Center is open for use, whichever is later.
PASSED, APPROVED, AND ADOPTED BY THE PALM SPRINGS CITY
COUNCIL THIS 25TH DAY OF JULY 2024.
ATTEST:
BRENDA REE ,
CITY CLERK
Ordinance No. 2099
Page 11
STATE OF CALIFORNIA )
COUNTY OF RIVERSIDE )
CITY OF PALM SPRINGS)
CERTIFICATION
ss.
I, Brenda Pree, City Clerk of the City of Palm Springs, California, do hereby certify
that Ordinance No. 2099 is a full, true, and correct copy, and was introduced at a regular
meeting of the Palm Springs City Council on July 9, 2024, and adopted at a regular
meeting of the City Council held on July 25, 2024, by the following vote:
AYES: Councilmembers, Holstege, Middleton, Mayor Pro Tern deHarte, and Mayor
Bernstein
NOES: Councilmember Garner
ABSENT: None
ABSTAIN: None
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the official seal of the
City of Palm Springs, California, this 7th day of August 2024.
A � �
'BRENDA'PIREE, MMC, CERA
CITY CLERK