San Jose bans homeless encampments near schools, limits RV parking

In San Jose’s latest move to regulate its homeless population, city leaders this week passed two new laws that will ban encampments near school zones and create new limits on where RVs and lived-in vehicles can park.

Officials said the new laws are needed to make students and families feel safer on city streets, which are also home to the city’s 4,411 unsheltered residents.

“We have to do a better job of managing the safety on our roads, particularly for our children,” Mayor Matt Mahan said at a recent City Council meeting. He said he received letters from a dozen students describing the difficulties they had getting to school because of nearby encampments.

The first law will give the council the power to create “no overnight parking” zones, in which police and other city workers have the power to tow large vehicles. The second bans encampments within 150 feet of K-12 schools around the city. The laws will be enforced starting in May.

Homeless advocates are concerned such laws could pave the way for broader restrictions on where people living on the streets can go. In March, Mahan announced a plan to clear 1,000 homeless people from along the city’s creeks and rivers over the next year.

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