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The COVID-19 pandemic has further exacerbated this crisis as the County has implemented <br />overly restrictive admission restrictions at its shelter in Santa Ana and reduced the number of <br />County shelter beds, leaving more homeless individuals unsheltered in the city, the complaint <br />states. <br /> <br />These and other actions by the County have resulted in the City of Santa Ana, which has the <br />highest Latino population and one of the lowest median household incomes in Orange <br />County, bearing an inequitable share of the responsibility for addressing the countywide <br />homelessness crisis. The City has diverted millions of dollars from programs and services on <br />which residents depend in order to address the disproportionate share of homeless people <br />living in Santa Ana, the City alleges. <br /> <br />After numerous attempts to seek assistance from the County in the City’s efforts to relieve <br />homelessness, the City had no other choice but to file suit. <br /> <br />The First Amended Complaint and writ of mandamus in Case No. 8:20-cv-00069-DOC (KESx) <br />was filed in U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, Southern Division. The <br />complaint names the County of Orange as defendant. The lawsuit was originally filed on Jan. <br />13, 2020. <br /> <br />This legal action follows a July 23, 2019, settlement agreement between the County and <br />Orange County Catholic Worker that required the County to adhere to certain guidelines for <br />the operation of its shelters. It also prohibited the Orange County Sheriff’s Department from <br />transporting individuals experiencing homelessness across the boundaries of the County’s <br />three Service Planning Areas. <br /> <br />Although Santa Ana is not a party to the OCCW Settlement Agreement, Santa Ana is a third- <br />party beneficiary of the agreement and entitled to relief for breach of contract because it was <br />intended that Santa Ana would benefit from the Settlement Agreement. <br /> <br />Allegations in the amended complaint include: <br />• The County has engaged in the de facto transportation of homeless individuals across <br />Service Planning Area boundaries to Santa Ana by arresting and transporting them to the <br />County Intake Release Center located in Santa Ana, where they are released rather than <br />being transported to their cities of arrest. <br />• The Orange County Sheriff’s Department has admitted that it “does not keep statistics <br />related to the transportation of homeless individuals,” making it impossible to track OCSD’s <br />compliance with the OCCW Settlement Agreement’s prohibition on transportation across <br />Service Planning Area boundaries. <br />• The Courtyard, a County shelter in Santa Ana, no longer provides sufficient access to beds, <br />which has increased the number of unsheltered people experiencing homelessness in Santa <br />Ana. <br />• The County has failed to build additional shelters and has caved to pressure from wealthier, <br />whiter cities in South County, rescinding its plans to open shelters in those communities. <br />• Due to the disproportionate growth in the number of people experiencing homelessness in <br />Santa Ana as compared to the county as a whole, Santa Ana has incurred millions of dollars <br />in expenses and diverted resources. The City spent an estimated $25.4 million to address <br />homelessness-related issues in the 2019-20 fiscal year and has increased the number of <br />2 <br /> <br />