The volunteers and outreach workers arrived at the St. Paul homeless camp about 9 a.m. Thursday, handing out doughnuts and hot coffee and offering to help pack up. Starting an hour later, the campers knew, they would have to leave their tent city at the base of Cathedral Hill.
No longer could they fold up their tents, leave and come back once the authorities had gone away. This time, the state, county and city meant to evict them for good.
Though much smaller than the south Minneapolis homeless encampment, the St. Paul outpost offered the same challenges. Throughout the summer and fall, officials had repeatedly moved through to clean away refuse and check on the health and safety of the people living there.
As recently as last month, St. Paul and Ramsey County officials had said they had no plans to relocate the encampment. But in the last few days, officials, saying they were worried about people's safety as winter arrives, distributed fliers advising of Thursday's eviction.
A camp that had grown to 30 or more tents clustered along a paved trail near Interstate 35E began to shrink. By Thursday morning, the camp was down to 15 to 18 tents.
Shadia Dier, a South Sudan native who came to St. Paul from South Dakota two months ago with her husband, had no idea where they would go once they took down their blue tent.
"I want for us to have a home," she said, adding that she feels unsafe in shelters. "We're not at a place where we want to be. We need some help to get there."
By noon, as police moved up and down the site offering to help transport campers' gear to storage and give those who wanted a ride a lift somewhere else, only a handful of campers remained.