LA County finds health-code violations in Skid Row
Topics: From the Wires, News
FILE- In this April 14, 2006, file photo, a homeless woman seeks shelter under construction scaffolding in the Skid Row area of downtown Los Angeles. The city of Los Angeles is violating the county health code in its Skid Row area by allowing the nation's densest population of homeless people to live on streets infested with rats, human excrement and used hypodermic needles, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health has found, in a survey conducted through May 2012. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File)(Credit: AP)LOS ANGELES (AP) — The city of Los Angeles is violating the county health code in its Skid Row area by allowing the nation’s densest population of homeless people to live on streets infested with rats, human excrement and used hypodermic needles, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health has found.
An extensive agency inspection of the downtown district found nearly 90 rats’ nests, mostly around street planters, people living in about 60 tents on sidewalks — some with animals — and 90 piles of human waste. The inspection last month focused on eight blocks of the 10-block district. On one block alone, close to 30 piles of excrement were noted.
The department ordered the city to clean up the area by this week and will start making routine inspections, roughly every week, to ensure hygiene is maintained, said Jonathan Fielding, county director of public health.
“There are clear health risks,” he said. “Conditions seem to have been exacerbated there. There are more people, more material of different kinds on the sidewalks.”
Some 800 people bed down on Skid Row sidewalks nightly, and 3,000 others cram into its shelters and special housing. During the day, they teem into the streets. Most are mentally ill or substance abusers.
The May 21 Health Department report underscores the precarious conditions that homeless advocates have long decried.
Inspectors found 13 hypodermic needles strewn on the ground and disposable rubber gloves tucked under tree roots. They also found people were disposing of human waste — including vomit, feces and buckets of urine — in storm drains.
The crowded, unsanitary conditions make the area a high risk for communicable disease. Four cases of meningococcal disease cropped up in March 2011, and outbreaks of staph infection were reported in 2005, inspectors said.
The report recommended the city install more trash cans and public toilets, provide soap, water and hand basins, and step up waste collection.
The city must implement a vermin-control program in the area and monitor for hypodermic needle litter, the report said.
Inspectors also noted the desperate condition of many of Skid Row’s residents, including one man observed crawling across the street on his hands and knees, another eating out of a trash can and many unkempt people living amid garbage and debris. They recommended increasing efforts to get more social services to people.




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