Just outside the entrance to Camp Rhonda under Interstate 45, Carl Hodge leaned against his car to take a breather. He spent much of the day Tuesday cleaning and packing under the hot Texas sun.
Hodge and dozens of other residents spent the day stuffing belongings into cardboard boxes and trash bags, getting ready to move out.

But Hodge says he鈥檚 not quite ready to leave the community they鈥檝e built at Camp Rhonda in Dallas鈥 Deep Ellum neighborhood. It's a space where about 30 people facing homelessness have resided.
鈥淥ut here in the elements and everything, we need each other,鈥 Hodge said. 鈥淲e watch each other, we watch each other鈥檚 property. What little property we have, you know, is worth a lot. So we gotta look out for each other.鈥
The city of Dallas is cracking down on the encampment, citing safety and security issues. The city says the property is industrially zoned and has been used illegally.
Johnny Aguinaga owns the property the encampment sits on. He asked residents of the camp, and a smaller one called Camp Joy, to clear out by Wednesday to avoid fines from the city.
Dallas鈥 Office of Code Compliance issued a notice of violation to Aguinaga in late January. The city threatened to fine him up to $2,000 per day if the encampment wasn鈥檛 shut down.
"All we鈥檙e trying to do is get housing, housing and better living, you know? This COVID thing has brought a whole lot of people down. People lost cars, houses and everything..."Carl Hodge, resident of Camp Rhonda
But Aguinaga still sees the endeavor to get people off the streets as a success.
鈥淭his was not a forever camp,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his was to recognize the issue and do something about it.鈥
Hodge and about 20 other residents are headed to a hotel for two weeks, paid for by a group of nonprofits, including Dallas Stops Evictions and Feed the People Dallas. Everyone else will relocate to one of Aguinaga鈥檚 other lots in an undisclosed location, to set up a new camp.
Hodge said it鈥檒l be nice to stay in a hotel for awhile, but it鈥檚 temporary 鈥 like most of his living situations have been since becoming homeless.
He said he鈥檚 disappointed in the city of Dallas for what he calls its "lack of action" to address housing issues that have been exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic.
鈥淎ll we鈥檙e trying to do is get housing, housing and better living, you know?鈥 Hodge said. 鈥淭his COVID thing has brought a whole lot of people down. People lost cars, houses and everything. That鈥檚 the problem here, so if the city would kick in and help us with housing that would be a better thing. A solution.鈥
In an interview earlier this month, city spokeswoman Catherine Cuellar said Dallas is committed to finding a compassionate solution to bring the lot into compliance.

鈥淭he goal is code compliance, so no citations have been issued,鈥 Cuellar said. 鈥淭he zoning is there for everybody's health and safety.鈥
Earlier this month, the city helped move about 15 people who were previously staying at the camp into hotel rooms owned by the city. The intention was to get people connected with case managers and social workers who could help find permanent housing.
"Our staff will continue to work to build relationships as they do with other residents of encampments to try and get them into the continuum of care,鈥 Cuellar said. 鈥淓ncampments are not a healthy or safe place to live stably. But building those trusting relationships with people in need of these services takes time."
Homeless advocates want the city to do more.
Aguinaga says he wishes the city would allow encampments under special circumstances, like a pandemic and severe winter storms.
鈥淛ust something to get them off the streets,鈥 he said.
Ryan Ahmadian is with Dallas Stops Evictions and is co-founder of the Dallas Homeless Committee. He said volunteers are providing support to unsheltered people in Dallas when that help should come from the city. The nonprofit groups working at Camp Rhonda are demanding city leaders take action to address what Ahmadian calls "a housing crisis."
鈥淪tart allocating properties over to low-income and extremely low-income housing so there鈥檚 more opportunity to actually get into housing,鈥 Ahmadian said.
Adding low-income housing is just one of the groups鈥 demands.
They want the Camp Rhonda and Joy properties rezoned as residential properties and for the city to cease fines for property owners who allow people facing homelessness to stay on their land. They鈥檙e also demanding that all homeless camps be allowed to operate permanently, and for the city to provide enhanced sanitation like restrooms and hand washing stations.
鈥淲e鈥檙e going to continue working with the city to meet our demands but also work with us. We've kept that line of communications open at all times,鈥 Ahmadian said.
四虎影院 requested information from the city about whether people from Camp Rhonda have found permanent housing yet, and if it has a response to the nonprofit groups鈥 demands. The city has not immediately responded.
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