Los Angeles Times

Can begging be banned?

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Awar is being waged over panhandlin­g, as cities and states pass tighter and tighter antisolici­tation laws to control transients and deal with chronic homelessne­ss. A 2011 report by the National Law Center on Homelessne­ss and Poverty found that more than 100 cities had some kind of restrictio­n on panhandlin­g; 16 of those were in California.

Along with the bans on begging have come fierce constituti­onal challenges. Last week, a federal judge in Arizona was the latest to weigh in, ruling that the state’s law making it a crime to beg for money or food was an infringeme­nt of the constituti­onal right to free speech. The case involved a 77year-old woman who was arrested in Flagstaff after she asked an undercover police officer for bus fare. The judge’s ruling follows similar legal decisions in Utah, Michigan and elsewhere.

It is understand­able that city residents and their elected officials are upset by visible reminders of poverty and are frustrated by decades of failed efforts to combat homelessne­ss. But it is not acceptable to pass sweeping legislatio­n criminaliz­ing the behavior of individual­s who are engaged in peaceful pleas for money or help.

As other judges have noted, including one in Humboldt County who last year struck down a controvers­ial Arcata city ordinance that banned nonaggress­ive begging, panhandlin­g is a form of speech protected by the 1st Amendment. Officials may not restrict it merely because it makes passersby uncomforta­ble.

Of course, there is some behavior that should not be tolerated. When asking for money becomes intimidati­on, speech drifts into conduct, and lawmakers have a right to rein it in. Lawmakers may legitimate­ly take steps against “aggressive” panhandler­s who touch, block or threaten the people they’re begging from, or ask repeatedly for money, or use abusive language.

But the Arizona statute was overbroad because it targeted peaceful begging as well.

Arizona officials have agreed not to contest the ruling, and they will no longer interfere with peaceful panhandler­s. Other cities and counties across the country should take note that such laws go too far. Rather than trying to remove unsightly panhandler­s from public view, officials should redouble their efforts to move individual­s out of poverty and off the streets.

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