Chattanooga Times Free Press

Miami shelters homeless against their will as Hurricane Irma closes in

- BY ADRIANA GOMEZ LICON

MIAMI — On what is likely the last clear day in Florida before Hurricane Irma’s monster wind and rain, social workers and police officers are giving Miami’s estimated 1,100 homeless people a stark choice: Come willingly to a storm shelter, or be held against their will for a mental health evaluation.

With the outer edge of the storm approachin­g Friday, these officials — backed by a psychiatri­st and observed by an Associated Press team — rolled through chillingly empty downtown streets as dawn broke over Biscayne Bay, searching for reluctant stragglers sleeping in waterfront parks.

“We’re going out and every single homeless person who is unwilling to come off the street, we are likely going to involuntar­ily Baker Act them,” said Ron Book, chairman of the MiamiDade Homeless Trust.

Invoking the “Baker Act” — a law that enables authoritie­s to institutio­nalize patients who present a danger to themselves or others — is not something law enforcemen­t does lightly, but officers detained at least six people by Friday afternoon. Under the law, they can be held up to 72 hours before the state would have to go to court to prolong their detention.

By then, Irma’s howling winds and terrifying storm surge should be somewhere north of the city.

“I am not going to sign suicide notes for people who are homeless in my community. I am just not going to do it,” Book added. “That’s why you have a Baker Act. It’s there to protect those who can’t otherwise protect themselves.”

Book’s group was working closely with police, who acknowledg­ed that the effort is unusual: Officials said it is the first time Miami has invoked the law for hurricane preparedne­ss.

About 70 people willingly climbed into white vans and police squad cars Friday, joining others who already had arrived at shelters. About 600 others were thought to remain outside somewhere, exposed to the storm, despite mandatory evacuation orders for more than 660,000 people in areas that include downtown Miami and coastal areas throughout the county.

One older man pushing his belongings in an empty wheelchair in Bayfront Park tried to wave them off.

“I don’t want nothing,” he said, insulting a social worker.

“So you are cool with dying in the streets?” he asked.

“Get out of my face,” he responded. “What’s your name?” asked Dr. Mohammad Nisar, a psychiatri­st who was looking for evidence of mental illness, a necessary factor for a Baker Act detention.

“None of your business!” Police officer James Bernat intervened.

“We are here to help you. Listen to me. You are being very aggressive. We are trying to help you,” Bernat said. “It’s very dangerous out here.”

“You are trying to make me go somewhere I don’t want to go,” he insisted.

Finally, the man was handcuffed without a struggle and taken to Jackson Memorial Hospital for a 72-hour psychiatri­c evaluation.

“A person who has a history of mental illness and who is staying in harm’s way, and doesn’t have a logical cohesion of what is right or what is wrong at that point, is a harm to himself, and at that point we can Baker Act them for his own protection,” Nisar explained later.

Friday’s encounters alone weren’t enough to justify their involuntar­y detention — Nisar said social workers and officers on the team already know these men and can testify to prior signs of mental illness to support each case.

Also, the law requires a court order to keep them detained against their will after 72 hours, and public defenders have pushed back against such requests, citing court rulings that the Baker Act can lead to unconstitu­tional curtailmen­ts of individual liberty.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An official in Miami speaks with homeless people about moving to shelters ahead of powerful Hurricane Irma.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An official in Miami speaks with homeless people about moving to shelters ahead of powerful Hurricane Irma.

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