The Forest Service offered no real solutions or alternatives for us needing a safe place to live. Instead, they issued tickets, made threats, and created an atmosphere of fear. They told us things would “get worse” if we didn’t leave, with some officers even threatening to burn our belongings. After the closure, I heard from some folks who snuck back that their campers, RVs, and vehicles had been destroyed.
In my case, I’ve been living with my boyfriend in an RV near my mom’s house. We are lucky; we’ve been approved for housing. However, we are the only ones I know of to be told we will get housing.
Many of my neighbors at the camp still don’t have a permanent place to live. It’s why I keep raising my voice so we all have permanent housing.
Displacing people with medical needs, disabilities, and mental health struggles without viable alternatives isn’t only unjust and inhumane—it’s bad public policy. Research shows that forced displacement worsens health, increases overdose risks, and can contribute to death. The Forest Service didn’t just remove campers; it shattered lives and increased dangers for desperate people.
The focus now must be on providing real support and solutions, not just pushing people from one temporary spot to the next. We need truly affordable housing, accessible health care, and a social safety net that doesn’t allow so many people to fall through the cracks.
We are not invisible. We are not disposable. We are your neighbors. We deserve to be seen, treated with basic human compassion, and to have our shared humanity recognized.
The woods were my sanctuary because the system failed me. Now that sanctuary is gone, leaving nothing but deeper desperation. This must be a turning point, a catalyst for finding real solutions to homelessness, not just sweeping it out of sight.
This piece was originally published in The Progressive Magazine.