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Before you go to the Jordan River, something to note...
#1
From the KSL website:

[url "http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=245083"]http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=245083[/url]

Transients Causing Trouble Along Jordan Parkway Trail May 3rd, 2006 @ 9:59pm
Tonya Papanikolas Reporting
The Jordan River Parkway has been a favorite spot for bikers, joggers and dog-walkers. But those who patrol the area say there's something recreationists should know.
The concern is the tall grass and brushy areas next to the Jordan River are easy places to blend in and basically hide. That's what people who set up camp are counting on.
Many people bike or walk along the Jordan River parkway, never guessing they could be in danger. But patrollers say a threat does exist.
[url "http://media.bonnint.net/slc/4/463/46377.jpg"][Image: img200][/url]

Jeff Salt, Director, Great Salt Lakekeeper: "It's meant to be disguised, to be out of the way of the public eye and scrutiny."
If you walked off the main trails into the brush along the river, you may just find campsites. They belong to transients.
Chad Evans, West Valley Police COP Officer: "There are just numerous camps."
Officers say transients sometimes have criminal records or mental illnesses, and though it's not common, they have assaulted people along the parkway.
Jeff Salt: "They pose a pubic safety threat."
At one site, we found tools, bikes and spray paint. Police say plastic bags may be an indication of paint huffing. Inside the tent were sleeping bags and a litter of new kittens. Patrollers told us it was clean compared to what they often see.
[url "http://media.bonnint.net/slc/4/463/46378.jpg"][Image: img200][/url]

Chad Evans, West Valley Police COP Officer: "Needles, bottles of alcohol, beer cans, broken bottles, propane tanks, not to mention the drug paraphernalia."
And then there's the waste. Garbage sits in the water, left by a camper who moved to higher ground. At another site food, garbage bags and an abandoned tent were left in the brush. And that's not the worst of it.
Karl Hartman, Environmental Health Specialist, Salt Lake Valley Health Dept.: "Oftentimes associated with these transient camps, we'll find five-gallon buckets half full of human waste. Sometimes it's just directly on the ground."
Police agencies and the Salt Lake Valley Health Department do a cleanup twice a year, telling the transients they need to move, then cleaning up the sites. But they often run into the same people next year in a different spot.
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#2
[cool][#0000ff]Thanks for the "heads up" Kevin. It is a shame that we should even have to be concerned about such things, but better to be cautious and safe than to become a statistic. [/#0000ff]
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[#0000ff]My wife and I walk along some stretches of the river and probably because of my size we have never been bothered, but I have heard some scary things that have happened to lone walkers, bicycle riders or females who were too trusting.[/#0000ff]
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#3
Well, I have never run into anyone along there, but I have seen the areas where they set up camp. This is a problem every major city has, but the SLC I feel has a very small homeless population compared to many other cities, it is not even close to being a big problem as it is in other city's. I grew up in Los Angelos and you see transients everywhere and I mean everywhere!! It is awfull, when you can drive around Salt Lake City and all you see is someone holding a sign off the side of the freeway asking for money, well I dont think that is too bad. But people should always be cautios of such things always, sometimes you forget this type of thing exists being in Utah, but it does and you always have to keep that in mind. Thanks for the info Catman!!
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#4
Also, just remember everybody that these are people too and there are as many reasons to land them in their current circumstances as there are people out there.

They're not all bad, but they're not all good either.
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#5
Thats absolutely the truth Catman, anyone of us could end up in the same boat if the circumstances permitted. We are all human and sometimes we dont see that when what were looking at is so very different from what your used too.
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#6
I've seen quite a few of them in my travels around that river. When I was a couple years younger(and a good 8" shorter) one of them tried to mess with me. Luckilly a bike rider came by.
Not all of em are bad, though. There was one last year I got to know pretty well. I haven't seen him down there so far this spring.
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