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On Friday, the remaining portion of a long-standing homeless encampment along Venice’s Rose Avenue was cleared, as Los Angeles officials once more sought to rejuvenate a corridor plagued by cycles of cleanups followed by the return of tents.
City crews, accompanied by outreach teams, revisited the area around Hampton Drive and Rose Avenue. Despite previous Inside Safe operations that successfully relocated over 100 individuals into housing, makeshift shelters had once again emerged.
For local residents, this recent effort felt less like a significant breakthrough and more like a repetitive chapter in an ongoing saga on a street that has been repeatedly assured of impending change.
Residents voiced their frustration on Councilwoman Traci Park’s social media, highlighting the persistent nature of the issue:
“Show me these sites in two weeks please.”
“And they’re back already.”
“Please ask the mayor to come back in 1 month to see how things are going.”
The operation followed an 11-4 vote by the City Council to apply a no-camping designation to 220 Rose Avenue, closing what officials described as the final remaining unregulated section of the corridor.
But the decision also reignited debate at City Hall.
Councilwoman and mayoral candidate Nithya Raman opposed the measure, arguing it would not solve the underlying issue.
She told the Westside Current the ordinance “duplicates laws we already have to regulate camping, and at best succeeds in moving homelessness around a neighborhood.”
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The Venice corridor has already become a proving ground for Mayor Karen Bass’s Inside Safe initiative.
A previous operation near Hampton Drive moved 107 people indoors at a cost of more than $2.8 million, but fewer than half ultimately secured housing.
The same area later saw renewed encampment activity, followed by a daylight confrontation involving at least four people that heightened concerns among residents.
Bass had previously visited the site during an earlier cleanup push roughly three years ago, framing it as a turning point and stressing she wanted to ensure the area “isn’t re-populated.”
Yet Friday’s clearance did little to quiet skepticism on the ground.
“It’s nice to see all of this action before the up coming election,” another person wrote on social media.
For nearly four decades, the Rose Avenue corridor has remained a volatile epicenter of Venice’s homelessness crisis, characterized by a persistent “see-saw” cycle of expansive encampments and high-profile city sweeps that dates back to the late 1980s.