The city moved Sunday to “evict” the homeless man who has been allegedly living like a squirrel in a tree in a Manhattan park for months.
City officials issued a one-day “notice of clean up” targeting the section of Riverbank State Park where the man’s illegal makeshift treehouse is located.
The unidentified man will have to vacate his sky-high digs by Monday, according to notices posted in three locations on the wrought iron fence nearby.
The notice includes information on local homeless shelters.
City action to remove the months-old encampment comes after The Post showed Mayor Eric Adams a photograph of the scene during an unrelated event Saturday.
Frequent visitors of Riverbank State Park in Upper Manhattan say the unidentified man, who looks to be in his 30s, has been living on the thicket of branches about 30 feet above a wooded area near railroad tracks, un’bough’ed by curious onlookers.
“Real estate; you take it where you can find it. I think he feels more protected than he would be down on the ground, but I kind of admire it,” said 47-year-old parkgoer Daniel Hobbs.
“It’s like a lot of work went into it. He just kind of made it his home.”
The “grassroots” denizen routinely scampers up and down with the precision of a tree sloth, but the speed of a cat, usually to make a fast buck collecting and returning cans and bottles.
“He shimmied down a branch and then he put on rubber gloves and grabbed his sack of cans and went off to work basically,” said Hobbs. “It’s definitely not a convenient place to get up and get out of, but I’ve only seen him actually come out of it once.”
Added English Anderson, a longtime neighborhood resident.: “He uses his hands to hold on to the branches to swing himself and make his way down. He seems strong; he is definitely fit.”
Anderson said it’s easy to tell someone lives there because there’s always food wrapping and other garbage tossed to the ground.
It’s a shame we have so many homeless people in our country. We are spending billions of dollars, helping other countries rebuild and fight wars, when we don’t even take care of our own people in the United States.
So many are without food, shelter, and mental health help. Shouldn’t we, as a country, be focusing on fixing our own issues before helping other countries out?
“Sometimes there were towels hanging on the limbs. There were pants hanging there, too,” she said.
Mayor Eric Adams, who wants to rid the city of homeless encampments flooding streets and parks, and reportedly is preparing a sweeping plan to rid the city of encampments over a two-week period, was aghast when shown a photo of the tree man.
“That’s not what we want,” said a stunned Adams at an unrelated Brooklyn event.
“That’s not dignified for people. That’s not what we want.”
In January 2021, the city estimated around 1,100 people live on the streets and in parks, although the tally is widely considered an undercount.
Many homeless people who live on the streets, parks and subway trains are typically fearful of going inside because longstanding safety and sanitation woes at city shelters continue to persist despite years of stories and promises of reforms.
Additionally, many shelters, including those designed to help bring the chronically homeless in off the streets, fail to offer essential mental health services, such as therapy, on-site.
Adams, however, said people should not be sleeping on the street, and especially not up a tree.
“It’s not dignified; it’s unsafe, the mayor said. “We can’t do anything about them sleeping, but we have to do something about the encampments. It’s unsanitary, and we are going to make sure we move them into proper care and treatment.”
Some issues are #1 truely not everyone homeless wants a home. More than you would think are comfortable living on their own terms whether it’s considered dignified or not. Yes please help those who want help; yet I say leave be those who don’t and are not bringing harm to anyone. Others are down trodden. They are overwhelmed. They no longer want the responsibikity that goes with a home, with taxes, all the bills that come with having a home. They don’t have to follow anyone’s orders on the street; a form of PTSD.
But, u have great places for the imagrants.