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LOW INCOME HOUSING, BUT RIGHT NOW, THERE IS A STALEMATE UNTIL THESE SQUATTERS MOVE OUT. THIS ILLEGAL ENCAMPMENT IS MARKED BY MOUNTAINS OF TRASH, TENTS, AND HYPODERMIC NEEDLES, CAUSING CONCERN FOR BUSINESSES. >> WE WITNESSED PEOPLE SHOOTING UP WITH DRUGS. WE WITNESSED PROSTITUTION COMING AND GOING. MIKE: THE SQUATTERS CREATED PROBLEMS FOR THE OIL CHANGE BUSINESS. WE TRIED TO SAY NO. THEY JUST DO NOT CARE. MIKE: THE A LITTLE ENCAMPMENT HAS BEEN HERE FOR MONTHS. TIME HAS RUN OUT AMID GROWING PRESSURE FOR SQUATTERS TO MOVE. >> BY TOMORROW MORNING, THEY NEED TO PACK UP THEIR BELONGINGS AND FIND A NEW LOCATION ON TUESDAY. MIKE: THESE OF ACTION NOTICES MEANS CAMPERS WILL HAVE TO FIND A NEW PLACE TO LIVE. >> WHERE ARE YOU GOING TO GO? >> NOWHERE TO GO. NO IDEA. MIKE: SOME HAVE NO PLACE TO LAND. OTHERS LIKE THIS WOMAN TELL US SHE IS LIVING HERE BY CHOICE. >> I LOVE THE FREEDOM AND LACK OF RESPONSIBILITY. I WAS BOGGED DOWN WITH RESPONSIBILITY MY WHOLE LIFE AND I HATED IT AND IT WAS KILLING ME. I AM COMPLETELY FREE OUT HERE. MIKE: FREEDOM COMES WITH A PRICE, ESPECIALLY FOR NEIGHBORING BUSINESSES WHO ARE EAGER TO SEE THESE PEOPLE GO. >> THE NEIGHBORHOOD WILL BE SAFER, ESPECIALLY WHEN THE CUSTOMERS ARE COMING AT NIGHTTIME, RIGHT? THEY DON’T HAVE TO WORRY ABOUT BEING

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Nearly 100 homeless people are just hours away from being evicted from their illegal encampment along a very busy Sacramento County street, where there are growing concerns about health and safety. “We have witnessed people shooting up with drugs” said James Musgrave, manager of Beck’s Shoes, which is located across the street from the encampment on Stockton Boulevard. “We've witnessed prostitution coming and going."“We saw a fight,” Musgrave added. “And then it came across the street with all their debris that they travel with. And there was just needles all over the ground -- and different pills. It’s just very unsanitary.”The squatters have also created problems for Victor Lu’s oil change business. “Without even asking us, they just bust into the restroom because they really need to do it,” Lu said. “And we try to say no and they just don't care."The encampment just north of Fruitridge Road has been there for months. Since January, Sacramento County has been offering housing vouchers and pet services to help people to leave. But now, time has run out, amid growing pressure for the squatters to move. “By (Wednesday) morning, they will need to pack up their belongings and find a new location to stay,” said Sgt. Tess Deterding, a spokesperson for Sacramento Sheriff Scott Jones.Nearby residents have also alerted authorities about the endless piles of filth, trash and dangerous items that they see as a threat to public safety. “Children are walking by syringes on their way to school in the middle of the street,” Deterding said.The eviction notices at the camp mean that people such as Timothy Tice will have to find a new place to live. When asked where he planned to go, Tice said, “Nowhere to go, no idea.”Some have no place to land, but others including Sabrina, a homeless woman who gave only her first name, said she’s living in the camp by choice. “I love the freedom, the lack of responsibility, absolutely,” Sabrina said. “I was bogged down with tons of responsibility my whole life because that's what I was taught and I hated it. It was killing me. And I'm completely free out here."Sacramento County wants to build low-income housing on the spot of the encampment, but homeless advocates have vowed to fight the evictions.