Connect with us

Star Tribune

Rochester grapples with growing number of homeless camps

Avatar

Published

on


ROCHESTER – Rochester city officials are struggling with a growing number of homeless encampments — at least 20 that have been cleaned up or abandoned since April — while police get more calls concerning homeless residents than in previous years.

Police are urging the city to expand a 2014 City Council resolution prohibiting camping overnight in parks to all city-owned property. Some council members want a permanent camping spot for homeless residents while the city and county tackle an ongoing lack of housing and shelters.

All agree on one thing: There are no easy answers for how to handle the growing issue — for Rochester or other cities across the state.

“If there was we’d all be doing it,” Rochester Police Chief Jim Franklin told the council on Monday during a study session on the issue.

The number of homeless residents continues to grow in Rochester and Olmsted County. Rochester Public Schools reported about 640 students without permanent shelter this year, up from about 400 in 2022. The city’s aging 45-bed Community Warming Center is at capacity, turning away two to three people on average each night. And about 15 to 20 evictions take place in Olmsted County each week.

Though resources are limited, housing officials say they try to connect people with services as much as possible. That doesn’t mean those services help end homeless camps, though.

There are “a lot of people who are camping who have been made aware of services and who chose not to utilize them,” said Dave Dunn, Olmsted County’s housing director.

City and county officials have spent months working with nonprofits and advocates on expanding shelter space within Rochester. Dunn said the county has acquired property for a proposed family shelter that could start later this year, while local officials hope to secure part of the $100 million in shelter funding the Minnesota Legislature approved last month.

Rochester police say they’ve had about 1,790 incidents reported this year involving homeless people. Police project that could lead to more than 4,000 incident reports in 2023, significantly higher than the 2,714 incidents reported last year and 1,916 incidents reported in 2021.

Most homeless camps that are reported are inhabited by one to six people near public parks.

“It’s quite often next to trails, near bridges, near walkways, near roadways,” Parks and Recreation Director Paul Widman said.

Police and parks officials cleared out a homeless man’s camp near Silver Lake Park on Monday morning across from the fire station, then again Tuesday after the man moved to the station’s yard.

Then “they pushed him into a residential neighborhood,” said Dan Fifield, co-founder of the Landing homeless shelter.

While officials stress they’re trying to be compassionate, they say the camps are a growing safety hazard for all involved. Widman pointed out one of his department’s staff found a 61-year-old man dead at Cook Park last week.

Franklin wants an ordinance to make camping on city property a misdemeanor criminal offense. He said there are few arrests made at encampments as most people comply, but there needs to be legal consequences and consistent follow-through to make some change their habits and comply.

“We’re not trying to criminalize this,” Franklin said. “There are times where we do need some teeth from a law enforcement perspective.”

Fifield and other homeless advocates say a city ordinance will only make things worse. And Fifield said county services don’t help the homeless as much as housing or shelter.

“There are other ways to handle it than trying to run them out,” Fifield said.

Council Member Kelly Rae Kirkpatrick suggested opening a permanent camp. She said she previously spoke with city officials about potentially using part of the Olmsted County Fairgrounds at Graham Park south of downtown, while Fifield and other advocates have pushed for public land near the Rochester Police Department’s North Station in northeast Rochester.

“How compassionate is it to break an encampment yet no one has any place else to go?” Kirkpatrick said.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

Star Tribune

Pedestrian struck and killed by pickup truck in Shorewood

Avatar

Published

on


A 65-year-old pedestrian was struck and killed by a pickup truck near Christmas Lake Friday afternoon as she was walking through a crosswalk, the Minnesota State Patrol said.

The woman was crossing Highway 7 around 1 p.m. when she was hit by a 2019 Ford F-150 turning left from Christmas Lake Road onto the highway headed east, the State Patrol said in its report. The intersection is just east of Excelsior, between Saint Albans Bay and Christmas Lake west of Minneapolis.

The Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office, Minnetonka police, and other agencies responded to the fatal collision. The State Patrol has not released the identity of the pedestrian.

The driver has not been arrested. Agencies are still investigating the collision, State Patrol Lt. Michael Lee said. Alcohol was not involved in the crash, the State Patrol said.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Star Tribune

Minnesota trooper charged with vehicular homicide no longer employed by state patrol

Avatar

Published

on


Former trooper Shane Roper, 32, had his last day Tuesday, State Patrol Lt. Michael Lee said. Roper’s attorney did not immediately return a request for comment Friday evening.

In July, Roper was charged with criminal vehicular homicide and manslaughter. He was also charged with criminal vehicle operation related to five other people who were seriously injured in the incident.

The criminal complaint states that Roper had been pursuing someone “suspected of committing a petty traffic offense” as he exited Hwy. 52 onto 12th Street SW. As he neared the intersection with Apache Drive, he reportedly turned his lights off and continued to accelerate with a fully engaged throttle.

Roper was traveling at 83 mph with his lights and siren off as he approached the intersection, a Rochester police investigation found. The trooper’s squad car slammed into the passenger side of a car occupied by Olivia Flores, which was heading west and turning into the mall.

Flores died from the blunt force injuries. She was an Owatonna High School cheerleader and set to graduate June 7. There were two other people in the car with Flores.

Olmsted County Attorney Mark Ostrem said in a statement following the charges that Roper violated his duty in “a gross fashion.”

Roper told investigators he was not paying attention to his speed at the time of the crash, and that he believed his lights were still activated when he exited the highway.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Star Tribune

Park Tavern crash victim released from hospital, condition of 2 more improves

Avatar

Published

on


Steven Frane Bailey, 56, of St. Louis Park was arrested in connection with the incident and charged with two counts of criminal vehicular homicide and nine counts of criminal vehicular operation. His blood alcohol content measured at 0.325% after officers administered a preliminary breath test at HCMC, according to charges filed in Hennepin County District Court.

In his first court appearance Wednesday, Bailey told a judge his use of alcohol is not a problem. He has an extensive history of drunken driving convictions, starting in 1985 in Wisconsin. Additional convictions followed in Wabasha County in 1993 and Hennepin County in 1998, according to court records. Two more convictions followed in 2014 and 2015.

A Hennepin County judge set his bail at $500,000 with several conditions, including that Bailey take a substance use disorder assessment, that he abstain from drinking alcohol, avoid Park Tavern and stay away from the victims and his family.

His next court appearance is tentatively scheduled for Oct. 1.

Staff writers Paul Walsh and Jeff Day contributed to this report.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2024 Breaking MN

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.