Mobile Homes to Isolate Homeless Patients in Los Angeles

The Dockweiler RV Park is one of five shelters commissioned by Los Angeles County to isolate COVID-19 patients Robyn Beck AFP
The Dockweiler RV Park is one of five shelters commissioned by Los Angeles County to isolate COVID-19 patients Robyn Beck AFP
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Mobile Homes to Isolate Homeless Patients in Los Angeles

The Dockweiler RV Park is one of five shelters commissioned by Los Angeles County to isolate COVID-19 patients Robyn Beck AFP
The Dockweiler RV Park is one of five shelters commissioned by Los Angeles County to isolate COVID-19 patients Robyn Beck AFP

The authority in Los Angeles County, where housing is expensive, has decided to isolate homeless COVID-19 patients in a mobile home park with an ocean view near a local beach.

Over 20 homeless people have been taken to the Dockweiler Park in El Segundo, in the southern suburb of Los Angeles.

According to AFP, about 100 white caravans are lined up side by side, and mask-wearing guards are blocking entrances as health workers in protective gear move in and out of the trailers, providing patients with vests and breathing aids.
The park is one of five shelters commissioned so far by Los Angeles County to isolate the COVID-19 patients, mostly homeless people who count 50,000 in the region.

"We need places where people can be safely isolated from the public and even from their families," County Supervisor Janice Hahn said in a statement.

After two weeks of social isolation measures aimed at containing the coronavirus spread, California Governor Gavin Newsom announced a $50 million fund to buy mobile homes and to rent spaces in which those living on the street could self-isolate.

California purchased 1,300 mobile homes to cope with the ongoing health situation.



Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve Celebrates Birth of its 15th Arabian Oryx Calf

The reserve announced the birth of its 15th Arabian oryx calf since the launch of its rewilding program in late 2022. SPA
The reserve announced the birth of its 15th Arabian oryx calf since the launch of its rewilding program in late 2022. SPA
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Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve Celebrates Birth of its 15th Arabian Oryx Calf

The reserve announced the birth of its 15th Arabian oryx calf since the launch of its rewilding program in late 2022. SPA
The reserve announced the birth of its 15th Arabian oryx calf since the launch of its rewilding program in late 2022. SPA

Prince Mohammed bin Salman Royal Reserve has announced the birth of its 15th Arabian oryx calf since the launch of its rewilding program in late 2022, as part of the reserve’s Integrated Development Management Plan (IDMP), launched under the leadership of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, chairman of the Board of Directors.

“The birth of the reserve’s 15th oryx is a milestone in our conservation work and our contribution to the regional conservation effort to establish sustainable wild populations of this culturally iconic Arabian species across its native terrain,” a statement quoted CEO of the Reserve Andrew Zaloumis as saying.

The Arabian oryx, once extinct in the wild across the Arabian Peninsula, was declared extinct in the 1970s due to overhunting and loss of habitat.

Sustained conservation and reintroduction programs have since led to its reclassification as “vulnerable” on the IUCN Red List, highlighting its remarkable recovery.

The reserve’s habitat restoration program continues to support the reintroduction of native species, strengthen ecological resilience, and restore connectivity across landscapes — proof of the reserve’s commitment to Vision 2030 and the Saudi Green Initiative.