US cities criminalize homelessness
By Ali Ismail
10 August 2009

As the economic crisis continues to intensify, scores of US cities are
enacting undemocratic laws that criminalize homelessness and trample
on the rights of the growing number of homeless individuals and
families who reside in these cities, according to a report released
last month.

The level of homelessness has been increasing rapidly since 2007, and
attacks on the democratic rights of homeless individuals are also on
the increase, according to the report entitled, “Homes Not Handcuffs,”
which was issued on July 13 by the National Law Center on Homelessness
and Poverty (NLCHP) in coordination with the National Coalition for
the Homeless (NCH).

In Denver and Atlanta, for example, 30 percent of the homeless
populations are newly homeless. The report notes that 19 out of the 25
cities surveyed by the US Conference of Mayors for its annual Hunger
and Homelessness study reported an increase in homelessness from 2007
to 2008, with the average increase around 12 percent. Home
foreclosures and the economic crisis in general are contributing to
skyrocketing levels of homelessness in many US cities, the report
notes.

Based on data collected in 2007 and 2008, the law center demonstrates
how homelessness is being criminalized in cities across United States.
The report provides detailed summaries of how cities use undemocratic
measures targeted specifically against homeless individuals.

Several of the most commonly used tactics to force homeless
individuals off the streets are highlighted. These tactics include:

“Enactment and enforcement of legislation that makes it illegal to
sleep, sit, or store personal belongings in public spaces in cities
where people are forced to live in public spaces.

“Selective enforcement of more neutral laws, such as loitering,
jaywalking, or open container laws, against homeless persons.

“Sweeps of city areas in which homeless persons are living to drive
them out of those areas, frequently resulting in the destruction of
individuals’ personal property such as important personal documents
and medication.

“Enactment and enforcement of laws that punish people for begging or
panhandling in order to move poor or homeless persons out of a city or
downtown area.

“Enforcement of a wide range of so-called ‘quality of life’ ordinances
related to public activities and hygiene (i.e. public urination) when
no public facilities are available to people without housing.”

The report also notes the prevalence of city ordinances that
criminalize homelessness. Of the 235 cities surveyed, 33 percent
prohibit “camping” in certain city areas and 17 percent prohibit
“camping” all together. Nearly 50 percent of cities prohibit loitering
or begging in public places, and in 23 percent of cities, begging is
prohibited anywhere within city limits.

Ten US cities that are particularly hostile towards homeless persons
were listed in the “10 Meanest Cities” section of the report. These
cities include Los Angeles, which was ranked in first place for the
ruthless way in which the rights of homeless individuals and families
are routinely violated. Orlando, Florida, Atlanta, Georgia, Honolulu,
Hawaii, and Kalamazoo, Michigan were also in the top 10 list.

According to University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), Los Angeles
was spending $6 million a year up until 2007 to employ extra police
officers to patrol the city’s Skid Row area which has a substantial
homeless population. This came at a time when the city allocated only
$5.7 million for homeless services. The city also spent $3.6 million
in 2007 on arresting and prosecuting 24 persons in the Skid Row area
for “crimes” such as jaywalking which the report notes are rarely
enforced in other parts of the city. The report notes the same amount
of money could have been used to house over 200 homeless individuals.
The homeless in Los Angeles have frequently suffered from police
brutality as well.

“Police brutality against homeless people intensified during the
crackdown on crime in Skid Row. In June 2007, the Los Angeles County
Community Action Network reported one example: two L.A. Police
officers attacked a petite homeless woman, who may have been mentally
disabled, with clubs and pepper spray. Police reportedly beat her and
tied her down.

“Though many business owners in the Skid Row area believe that the
streets are cleaner and safer due to the Safer City Initiative, the
changes come at a substantial cost to the homeless population.
Advocates believe homeless residents have dispersed to areas without
services. According to an Associated Press article, in January 2006,
an estimated 1, 345 people were living on the streets in Skid Row. A
year later, only 875 people remained.

“Moving homeless individuals from Skid Row not only takes them away
from a familiar area, but also moves them farther from service
providers. Around the time of the police crackdown on Skid Row the
providers in surrounding neighborhoods, such as Santa Monica and
Hollywood, noticed an increase in their homeless populations, a
problem for which they were unprepared. Richard, a homeless man
interviewed by Tidings Online, described the problem: ‘Unless you get
[the homeless] a place to go, they’ve got to go somewhere... They’re
going to disperse.’ You hit a bunch of marbles in the middle, they
splatter.”

.In Orlando, the City Council passed a law prohibiting the sharing of
food with 25 people or more in parks in the downtown area of the city.

“Shortly after the ordinance was passed, the ACLU sued the city on
behalf of First Vagabonds Church and Orlando Food Not Bombs, two
groups that share food with homeless individuals on a weekly basis ...
While the litigation was ongoing, Eric Montanez of Food Not Bombs was
arrested for serving ‘30 unidentified people food from a large pot
utilizing a ladle.’ After being held for three hours, he was released
on $250 bond and continued serving food. He explained that the
government’s inability to provide for homeless people is the reason
Food not Bombs and other organizations are helping homeless and hungry
individuals. He believes the community should fill in the gaps the
government leaves until the government takes on the responsibility.
Montanez was eventually acquitted at trial.”

The law against sharing food can only be seen as a direct attack
against the democratic rights of homeless individuals as there is no
conceivable purpose for it other than to make life even more difficult
for people living on the streets.

The situation confronting the homeless population in Atlanta isn’t any
better.

“On August 2nd 2008, police officers in Atlanta began dressing as
tourists in order to catch people ‘aggressively begging’ for money.
This undercover effort was part of a ‘30-day crackdown’ conceived and
implemented by the commander of the police, Maj. Khirus Williams, who,
according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, had ‘received letters
from visitors who said the begging was so bad that they were never
going to come back to Atlanta.’

“The newspaper noted that while under normal circumstances a tourist
typically did not return to testify in court against the defendant,
Maj. Williams expressed hope that ‘having officers pose as tourists or
office workers’ would result in more convictions because the officers
were certain to testify. By August 22, 2008, the officers arrested 44
people for panhandling and warned another 51. The Washington Post
reported in October 2008 that the sting resulted in 50 arrests.”

Not surprisingly, city officials are preoccupied with maintaining the
profitability of Atlanta’s tourism industry rather than with
alleviating the problems facing homeless individuals and families, or
at least respecting their fundamental rights.

Kalamazoo, Michigan was also included in the “10 Meanest Cities”
section of the report. The state of Michigan has undoubtedly been
battered by the economic crisis. It currently has the highest official
rate of unemployment in the US at over 15 percent. The report notes
the homeless population of Kalamazoo has been subjected to targeted
arrests and other methods used by officials to remove homeless
individuals from public view.

“In the summer of 2007, several members of Michigan People’s Action
were arrested for

sleeping in public parks following the enactment of an ordinance
prohibiting such activities. In addition, homeless individuals who
have been ticketed for sleeping in public parks have been unable to
obtain housing. Those homeless individuals and Michigan People’s
Action members who were ticketed or arrested for sleeping in public
parks challenged their arrests in court. By early September 2008, all
charges had been dropped against the homeless individuals and
activists.

“During the same period, homeless advocates and homeless persons began
having difficulty accessing the Kalamazoo Transportation Center (a
public transportation bus station). Public Safety Chief James Mallery
said that due to a large number of calls regarding drugs, fights,
loitering, and panhandling, they were attempting to move people out of
there that did not appear to be using the buses. However, Michigan
People’s Action claimed that law enforcement was particularly
targeting people who appeared to be homeless. Michigan People’s Action
said that homeless people were being harassed at the Transportation
Center by officers who asked for their identification and proof that
they were waiting for a bus to arrive.

“Even after being urged by Michigan People’s Action to stop the police
sweeps at the Transportation Center, the police continued to do so and
arrested and jailed dozens of homeless people and activists for
violation of the local anti-loitering law. Activists and the homeless
individuals arrested in the Transportation Center challenged the
arrests in court arguing the loitering law used to arrest them is
unconstitutionally vague. Those charges were eventually dismissed.
Kalamazoo has instituted a new set of transportation center rules.
Michigan People’s Action is concerned these new rules will be used to
continue to target people who appear to be homeless.”

The report discusses the how many of the laws enacted against homeless
individuals violate their constitutional rights. Laws that prohibit
begging, panhandling, or sharing food in public places often violate
the right to free speech guaranteed by the First Amendment. Laws that
prohibit sleeping in public spaces in cities where there are no
alternatives for homeless individuals have been found by some courts
to be in violation of the Eighth Amendment because it constitutes
cruel or unusual punishment.

Sweeps on homeless persons that result in loss of property are
rightfully considered by many to be an infringement on the right to be
free from warrantless search and seizures. Many laws are also in
violation of international laws related to human rights, including the
right to freedom of movement.

The attack on the democratic rights of homeless individuals is part
and parcel of the ruling elite’s assault on the democratic rights of
the working class as a whole. By making homelessness a punishable
offense, the capitalists have once again proven that they have no
interest in addressing the root causes of homelessness-unemployment,
poverty, mental illness, and addiction. As the economic crisis
continues to escalate, even more people will be left without a home
and treated like criminals rather than victims of American capitalism
and its relentless focus on profit at the expense of human need.

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to