Bay Area RV homeless whack-a-mole finally sees crackdown as cities reach breaking point

Throughout the Bay Area, a growing crackdown on homelessness involving vehicles and RVs is gaining momentum. Cities are tightening regulations, ramping up towing efforts, and shifting unhoused individuals from one location to another, creating a dynamic that resembles a game of whack-a-mole.

Recently, Oakland stepped up its efforts, becoming the latest major city to take action aimed at clearing its streets.

On April 14, the Oakland City Council approved a policy to expedite the towing of vehicles and RVs being used as makeshift homes. This decision followed concerns that Oakland is turning into a refuge for those displaced from neighboring areas.

With these new regulations, Oakland will cease treating vehicles as encampments. This change grants authorities greater latitude to tow them with less notice and fewer protections compared to traditional tent encampments.

This shift is part of a broader regional trend, which experts observe is gaining speed.

For instance, Mountain View implemented citywide restrictions on RVs in 2020, with the enforcement of these rules commencing two years later.

San Jose and San Francisco have also expanded restrictions, helping drive Oakland’s latest action as homelessness remains widespread across the region.

Recent estimates show 9,500 unhoused people in Alameda County and 10,700 in Santa Clara County, with most living in vehicles.

A 2024 Supreme Court ruling gave cities more authority to enforce camping bans even when shelter space is not available, accelerating crackdowns across California, which contains nearly half of the nation’s unsheltered homeless population.

Gov. Gavin Newsom has urged cities to clear encampments more quickly, though without consistent state funding.

San Jose has taken some of the most aggressive steps, issuing citations and arresting people who refuse shelter offers and carried out large-scale encampment removals, including efforts to dismantle one of the last major homeless communities.

The city has also created no-parking zones and began towing RVs when residents fail to move by deadlines.

Most people leave before their vehicles are towed.

“We feel this approach has balanced the need to clean up locations and provide relief to neighborhoods while respecting the needs of unhoused residents,” City spokesperson Colin Heyne told The Mercury News.

San Francisco has also tightened enforcement, introducing a two-hour parking limit on oversized vehicles unless residents can prove they have lived in the city for at least one year.

Mayor Daniel Lurie said in a social media post this month, “We had far too many RVs on our streets,” describing “families living in really terrible conditions.”

In Oakland, the details of enforcement are still being finalized.

Cupid Alexander, the city’s new homelessness policy chief, told The Mercury News that the police and transportation departments are drafting procedures.

The policy also requires officials to “attempt to identify” available shelter space before towing a vehicle.

Oakland has already conducted repeated sweep operations.

City officials have acknowledged that two years of intensified clearing did not reduce the overall number of encampments.

The city is also under significant strain.

More people enter homelessness each year in Oakland than exit it, and budget pressures have forced shelter closures, including one that served 30 people living in RVs, according to The Mercury News.

Supporters of tougher enforcement argue RV encampments are linked to public safety concerns, including drug activity, violence and property crime.

Reports from surrounding neighborhoods include open drug use, overdoses, shootings, fights and vehicle break-ins.

Residents also cite so-called “vanlords,” individuals who rent out deteriorating RVs to homeless tenants, sometimes tied to organized crime and extortion.

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