Report Finds Cities Are
Increasingly Criminalizing Homelessness and Poverty
A growing
number of cities are turning to the criminal justice system as a means of
addressing homelessness, a report from the National Law Center on Homelessness
and Poverty finds. “Mean
Sweeps” examines the progress of this trend in the 50 largest cities in the
United States.
Mean Sweeps
updates a 1994 Law Center report on the criminalization of homelessness by local
governments, finding that government actions taken to restrict homeless
people’s use of public space and begging have increased in many cities during
the past two years.
The new
report includes information on numbers of homeless persons, shelter beds,
housing costs, minimum wage levels, and public assistance available in the
cities. By city officials’ own
estimates, in virtually every city the number of homeless people greatly exceeds
the number of emergency shelter and transitional housing spaces.
The report
found:
·
38% of the cities have initiated
crackdowns on homeless people in the past several years.
·
54% of the cities have engaged in
recent police “sweeps” of homeless people.
·
77% of the cities for which
information was available have ordinances that prohibited or restricted begging.
During the
last four years, 31% of the cities for which information was available have
enacted new ordinances or amended existing ones to restrict begging.
Five cities
are named as having the “meanest streets” due to their clear intention to
expel their homeless residents from their city limits or for their concerted,
focused efforts to restrict harshly their homeless residents’ use of public
spaces. The cities are Atlanta, San
Francisco, New York, Dallas, and San Diego.
Cleveland was
a part of this list last year, but was taken off the list this year in part
because of the harsh tactics that other cities had adopted.
Two lawsuits that the Coalition for the Homeless filed have temporarily
curtailed the City of Cleveland’s aggressive response to criminalizing
homelessness. Cleveland was listed
as softening its approach to homeless people because of legal action taken by
the Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless.
Legal
challenges to anti-homeless laws have had mixed results.
Courts have struck down ordinances or portions of ordinances on the
grounds that they violate the constitutional rights of homeless people.
Other courts have upheld ordinances or city practices.
The use of
law enforcement to address public concerns about homelessness are
counterproductive. They undermine
homeless people’s efforts to escape poverty by creating fines and/or criminal
records. They are also fiscally
inefficient and wasteful of cities’ scarce fiscal resources.
The daily
cost of detaining an individual in jail — not including police resources
involved in arrest and processing— is roughly 25% higher than the daily cost
of providing shelter, food, transportation and counseling services combined.
“These
ordinances are inhumane,” said Maria Foscarinis, the Executive Director of the
law center. “By penalizing people
for innocent, necessary, life-sustaining conduct, cities are essentially
punishing people simply for being homeless.”
Several
cities have enacted more constructive alternatives to addressing public concerns
about homelessness.
In Cincinnati
there seems to be a growing perception that homeless people are an
“eyesore,” according to the
report. The report talked about the
anti-panhandling ordinance, and harassment of Grapevine vendors.
In West
Hollywood, the city has created an innovative community-policing program that
uses service providers rather than police officers to make the first contact
with homeless persons.
In response
to the lack of public toilet facilities in downtown Seattle, the city offered to
fund a public “hygiene center” that would provide public toilets, showers
and laundry facilities free of charge for use by homeless people and other city
residents.
Tucson, Arizona created a standing committee of advocates for homeless people, city government officials, and police representatives to which the city refers complaints about homeless people “camping” in certain areas in an effort to resolve complaints before taking law enforcement action.