When San Jose announced plans last month to ban RV dwellings near schools, that was just the beginning of potentially more laws to reign in the hundreds of vehicles parked along the city’s roadways — a growing problem that has enraged residents and led to a slew of public safety concerns.
San Jose officials are exploring policies that include banning RVs from certain streets and sanctioning others who park on designated roads, increasing enforcement for street parking time limits and a permit system attached with a code of conduct, such as agreements that would ensure personal items are kept off the sidewalk.
The restrictions on vehicles near schools — combined with the possibility of new enforcement laws — marks a new chapter in San Jose’s stance towards homelessness and falls in line with Mayor Matt Mahan’s tougher approach to combatting one of the Bay Area’s most intractable problems. Facing one of America’s most acute affordable housing crises, homeless residents across California have resorted to living in RVs that sometimes overlap with tent encampments.
But the stricter policies could also land San Jose in legal hot water: Mountain View, Pacifica and other California cities have all faced lawsuits after trying to implement similar rules.
Within 90 days, San Jose councilmembers will decide what policies to move ahead with. Efforts also are underway to figure out how to streamline the construction of large-scale safe parking as San Jose plans to open its second site next year in the Berryessa neighborhood with enough room for 85 vehicles — upping the city’s capacity to roughly 130 spots — but still well below the estimated 770 occupied RVs scattered across the city. Officials said they’re trying to get an approved list of construction vendors who can get the sites up and running quickly — rather than having to conduct individual city council sessions on each new safe parking project.
“While I don’t want to unduly burden those who are living in vehicles, we have far too many cases of vehicles, seemingly permanently encamped in the same place, blocking the public right of way,” said Mahan, who is proposing the new rules along with Councilmembers Sergio Jimenez, David Cohen and Bien Doan. “We’re getting a lot of frustration and complaints from residents and businesses dealing with trash, noise, crime, etcetera.”
In August, Mahan proposed banning RVs from parking within 150 feet of K-12 schools, daycares and preschools — the first time he began considering restrictions on where San Jose’s homeless residents can and can’t reside. The rule — which will come before the city council for a vote by the end of the year — was proposed after a cohort of east San Jose students claimed the dozens of RVs parked near their high school along Education Park Drive were the reason for a spate of break-ins and needles being left on lunch tables.
The mayor has a more heavy-handed approach to dealing with homelessness compared to his predecessor Sam Liccardo. San Jose’s key homelessness strategy under Mahan includes the construction of emergency interim housing units across the city — with the hopes that a simple shelter will allow unhoused residents to eventually transition to more permanent dwellings. The mayor has a goal of moving 1,000 of San Jose’s roughly 4,500 unsheltered homeless off the streets by the end of the year. A vote last week, however, threw a possible wrench into those plans after a Valley Transportation Authority board approved moving ahead with a site in north San Jose for 200 tiny homes provided by Gov. Gavin Newsom — while at the same time exploring three other locations and possibly delaying their construction.
San Jose isn’t the first city to consider setting guidelines around the use of RVs.
In 2020, Redwood City developed a permitting program that allowed on-street parking for some RV residents. The following year, Mountain View passed a law that banned oversized vehicles from parking on most of the city’s streets. But Mountain View eventually had to pull back on some of the rules after RV dwellers sued. A similar situation occurred in the coastal town of Pacifica, where a legal challenge resulted in the city still enforcing a ban but committing to helping vehicle owners find affordable housing.
Tristia Bauman, an attorney with Silicon Valley Law Foundation, a firm that has challenged Bay Area city policy on homelessness, said she would support the idea of offering a permit to RV dwellers in San Jose.
“A permit program that allows people to safely and lawfully park in a location is potentially a very good thing,” said Bauman. “But a lot depends on the permit program system. Are the permits readily available? Is parking available in places that are safe and stable?” But banning RVs in certain places could lead San Jose into the same situation as other Bay Area cities, she said.
“There is the potential that what is being described could run into the same problems that other cities have run into when it comes to violating people’s rights,” said Bauman.
When asked how he would avoid the city landing into legal trouble, the mayor replied, “My intent is to begin a conversation about how we better manage unsheltered homelessness – not criminalize the unhoused.”