Silicon Valley clears out 'Jungle' camp, full of people made homeless by rising rents

A bulldozer carries debris at a Silicon Valley homeless encampment known as The Jungle on Dec 4, 2014, in San Jose, California. Authorities began dismantling the homeless camp in the heart of California's affluent Silicon Valley. Municipal workers mo
A bulldozer carries debris at a Silicon Valley homeless encampment known as The Jungle on Dec 4, 2014, in San Jose, California. Authorities began dismantling the homeless camp in the heart of California's affluent Silicon Valley. Municipal workers moved into the camp along a creek in San Jose, where some 300 people live in tents and other makeshift lodging. The encampment, only a few minutes away from the city's downtown district, is home to people forced out of an overheating rental market as lucrative tech companies moved in in recent years. -- PHOTO: AFP
An unidentified person walks along a muddy path at the Silicon Valley homeless encampment known as "The Jungle" on Wednesday, Dec 3, 2014 in San Jose, California. More than 300 residents of the shantytown were given notices to leave the area by the morning of Thursday, Dec 4, 2014. Many of have nowhere else to go. -- PHOTO: AFP 
A man who only goes by the name David gulps down a drink at the Silicon Valley homeless encampment known as "The Jungle" on Wednesday, Dec 3, 2014 in San Jose, California. More than 300 residents of the shantytown have been given notices to leave the area by the morning of Thursday, Dec 4, 2014. Many of have nowhere else to go. -- PHOTO: AFP
Valentin Cortez, a two-year resident, looks on as a Silicon Valley homeless encampment known as The Jungle is bulldozed on Dec 4, 2014, in San Jose, California. Today, bulldozers, trash trucks and police officers assisted dozens of city contractors as they removed residents and dismantled and removed the shantytown. -- PHOTO: AFP 
Grace Hilliard stands outside her tent at a Silicon Valley homeless encampment known as "The Jungle" on Wednesday, Dec 3, 2014 in San Jose, California. More than 300 residents of the shantytown have been given notices to leave the area by the morning of Thursday, Dec 4, 2014. Many of have nowhere else to go. -- PHOTO: AFP

SAN JOSE, United States (AFP) - Authorities began Thursday dismantling a notorious homeless camp known as "The Jungle" in the heart of California's affluent Silicon Valley.

Municipal workers in white overalls and face masks moved into the camp along a creek in San Jose, where some 300 people live in tents and other makeshift lodging.

The encampment, only a few minutes away from the city's downtown district, is home to people forced out of an overheating rental market as lucrative tech companies moved in in recent years.

"We have been rehousing for the last 18 months," San Jose city spokesman David Vossbrink told AFP, saying they had found places for some 140 people in shelters, with some in hotels and motels.

Some 60 other people had received offers of rent subsidies but have not yet found somewhere to live, he added.

The operation to close down the camp will last two or three weeks, and will include putting up a reinforced fence to prevent anyone coming back and settling in again.

But the spokesman admitted that those forced to leave the "Jungle" could not all expect to be housed by the city, which has budgeted nearly US$10 million (S$13 million) over three years for homeless.

San Jose is counting on a refuge set to open for the winter to house some 200 people of Santa Clara County's estimated 5,000 to 7,000 homeless, he said.

The city, with its population of around one million, has one of America's highest proportions of homeless people.

The spokesman attributed the problem to various factors, including the 2008 global financial crisis, exorbitant rents fuelled by the tech boom, and the scarcity of unskilled jobs.

Vossbrink said the "Jungle" had to be cleared because it posed security, public health and pollution problems, and because of looming winter temperatures.

"It's becoming urgent," he said.

But some activists are protesting the operation.

Scott Wagers, a pastor who heads a homeless support association, said the camp developed over the last two years, after the clearance of another slum in San Jose.

"The people are just going to move to another place that will become another jungle," he said.

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.