‘A World Gone Mad’: Upscale LA Neighborhood Wrestles With Worsening Homeless Crisis

5Mind. The Meme Platform
The Epoch Times Header
Homeless Encampment in Venice, CA
A woman walks down a sidewalk passing a homeless encampment in Venice, Calif., on Nov. 10, 2021. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)

Abbott Kinney Boulevard is a picture-perfect hidden gem in the Venice neighborhood of Los Angeles, known for its boutique shops and locally-owned dining joints. The mile-long strip sings to the tune of upper-middle-class patrons who come to Venice Beach to soak in its peculiar rhythm. The neighborhood’s tight-knit community of homeowners who have lived in the area for decades are proud to reside in this unique nook of town.

But over the last year, the community within this stretch of Venice grew even closer over a common frustration: the growing homeless encampments.

The issue is not new to Los Angeles as a whole, which has more than 41,000 people living on its streets, according to the latest homeless count, with more than 66,000 homeless people countywide. A forecast by the Economic Roundtable estimates that number could reach nearly 90,000 by the year 2023.

Venice has approximately 2,000 people living unhoused, making it the second largest congregant of homeless people in the city after Skid Row in downtown Los Angeles.

Drugs, needles, trash, violence, fires, and encampments have become all too common to the Venice community. They say their pleas for help often fall on deaf ears when it comes to their city leaders, while tourists, homeowners, workers, and other homeless people have become victims to random assaults by a more violent crowd of transients.

“It’s a world gone mad,” Venice resident Deborah Keaton told The Epoch Times. “It’s our own making too. I’m a liberal, a Democrat, and we voted for these measures that decriminalize a lot of this behavior, and so there’s no repercussions for these guys.”

When Keaton steps outside her home on North Venice Blvd. between Abbott Kinney and Electric Ave., her reality is not the white-picket fence experience she bought into 30 years ago when she purchased her home. An encampment, including a handful of parked RVs, has popped up adjacent to her house, making hers the closest house to the neighborhood’s new hot spot for crime and drug dealing.

The transients living inside the RVs play loud music all day and night, she said. She filed a police report against the apparent ringleader of the RV encampment, Brandon Washington, because she says he approached her gate and allegedly made threats against her family.

“He rang the bell, and he was wasted, and he said to me: ‘I just need to know all the evil people, is your husband evil? Because I need to kill your husband,’” Keaton said. “It was scary.”

By Jamie Joseph

Read Full Article on TheEpochTimes.com

Contact Your Elected Officials
The Epoch Times
The Epoch Timeshttps://www.theepochtimes.com/
Tired of biased news? The Epoch Times is truthful, factual news that other media outlets don't report. No spin. No agenda. Just honest journalism like it used to be.

US Natural Gas Market Shielded From Global Price Shocks During Iran War

Analysts say East Asia could see hikes in energy costs after an Iranian strike wrecked Qatari LNG infrastructure that met 20 percent of the world’s demand.

Israel Targets Checkpoints That Hold Back Iranian Uprising

For decades, one of the most visible expressions of state power in Iran has not been found in govt. buildings or military bases, but in the streets.

The Limits of Power—and the Power Behind the Regime

Western policymakers assume regimes fall when they lose legitimacy. History shows they collapse when they lose the power—and money—to enforce control.

Momentum Builds for Regime Change in Cuba

Momentum builds for regime change in Cuba as Cuba’s leadership faces increased strain from U.S. policy and mounting protests on the island.
00:01:55

US Has a New Ally in Latin America—Here’s Why It Matters

“We are going to take back our country,” newly minted Chilean President José Antonio Kast told a crowd of thousands as he took office March 11.

FedEx Rolls Out Same-Day Delivery Service

FedEx launched a same-day delivery service as shipping and retail companies compete to meet growing customer expectations for near-instant order fulfillment.

Suspicious Drone Incursion Causes Alarm at US Bomber Base

Suspicious drone activity recently caused alarm at a U.S. military base in Louisiana that hosts long-range strategic bombers.

Stocks Slip, Oil Holds Above $100 as Iran Tensions Cloud Sentiment

U.S. stocks opened lower while oil prices held above $100 a barrel on March 24, as lingering doubts over easing Middle East tensions weighed on sentiment.

FCC Bans Foreign-Made Routers Citing National Security Risks

FCC banned all imports of foreign-made commercial routers March 23, a move that targets Chinese-linked brands found to pose national security risks.

Markwayne Mullin Sworn In as DHS Secretary

Former Oklahoma Senator Markwayne Mullin was sworn in at the White House as the new Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
00:27:39

US Looking to Seize Iranian Defectors’ Money: Bessent

Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent said that the US is moving to seize funds transferred abroad by Iranian defectors, so it can be to returned to the Iranian people.

Trump Says He’s ‘Not Putting Troops Anywhere’ Amid Iran War

President Donald Trump met with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi to discuss the Iran war, saying he is not inclined to send U.S. ground troops.

US Agencies Terminated or Reduced 95 Wasteful Contracts Worth $2 Billion: DOGE

Federal agencies canceled or scaled back 95 wasteful contracts worth up to $2B in the last four weeks, saving taxpayers $757M.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central