Los Angeles Times

Desert group-home battle settled

Hesperia to pay for nonprofit’s legal costs and refund the fines levied on its houses.

- By Joel Rubin

When Sharon Green sued the city of Hesperia two years ago for discrimina­ting against the group homes she ran for homeless felons, city officials doubled down on their efforts to shut down her program.

They levied daily fines on the houses she rented and pressured Green’s landlords to evict her.

Last week, Hesperia’s manager and members of the City Council who had pressed the fight with Green conceded defeat when they agreed to settle her lawsuit.

Under the terms of the deal, the city must refund all the money it extracted from Green and pay her legal fees, which totaled nearly half a million dollars.

The city last year repealed or rewrote the housing rules at the heart of the fight after a federal judge questioned their constituti­onality.

“It’s about time,” Green, a pastor, said in an interview Tuesday. “I’m really encouraged it has ended and ended favorably.”

The American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California filed the suit on Green’s behalf.

Calls to Hesperia officials for comment were not returned.

Through her nonprofit program, the Victor Valley Family Resource Center, Green for several years has rented houses in Hesperia to

provide beds, meals and other help to hundreds of low-level offenders who have nowhere to go when they are released from jail as part of the state’s effort to reduce its teeming prison population.

She operated without problems until 2015, when she rented a drab house and guesthouse on a dusty, residentia­l road in the small, high desert city 80 miles outside Los Angeles.

Routine visits by probation officers to check on the 13 men in the house drew the attention of some neighbors, who went to City Council meetings to complain.

One woman claimed inaccurate­ly that the men living next to her were violent felons. The neighborho­odwatch captain suggested the men were pedophiles targeting children on the street. Others added to the chorus of complaints.

City code enforcers suddenly began issuing citations at the house as council members criticized Green’s program, saying it was a symptom of a larger problem brought on by the state’s prison realignmen­t plan and Propositio­n 47, a 2014 law that reduced certain drug possession and theft crimes from felonies to misdemeano­rs.

Mayor Russ Blewett warned at a public meeting that crime had surged throughout Hesperia — a claim not supported by

‘This case affirms that excluding people in reentry from housing just to stigmatize and banish them is unconstitu­tional.’

— Adrienna Wong staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California, speaking on last week’s settlement

crime statistics.

It was, he said, a result of “the state of California releasing all these deadbeats into our community.”

Mayor Pro Tem Bill Holland said the city needed to purge itself of criminal outsiders the council believed were overrunnin­g the city the same way “you would call an exterminat­or to kill roaches. Same difference.”

To target Green’s houses, the city began enforcing an ordinance that made it illegal to run a group home in which two or more people were on probation.

It also adopted a draconian rental ordinance, which required landlords to start eviction proceeding­s within 10 days of being notified by police that a tenant was suspected of “criminal activity” in or around the rental property.

The law did not require the tenant to be arrested for the eviction proceeding­s to begin, and there was no way for a person to appeal.

As daily fines continued to pile up and her landlords moved to evict her, Green sued, claiming the group home and rental ordinances were illegal.

Last year, after U.S. District Judge Andre Birotte issued a preliminar­y injunction that halted the evictions and barred the city from enforcing its group home and rental ordinances against Green’s landlords, the City Council repealed the group-home ordinance. A few months later it rewrote its rental law to make it voluntary and protect tenants’ rights.

In the settlement agreement finalized last week, the city agreed to reimburse Green nearly $14,500 in fines it had imposed. It must also pay $470,000 in legal fees to the ACLU and other attorneys who represente­d Green.

“This case affirms that excluding people in reentry from housing just to stigmatize and banish them is unconstitu­tional,” said Adrienna Wong, staff attorney for the ACLU of Southern California. “So is forcing landlords to evict tenants by labeling them ‘nuisances’ without any kind of due process.”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? SHARON GREEN, seen in 2016, runs a Hesperia nonprofit that rents housing to low-level felons. The city last week ended its legal battle with her program.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times SHARON GREEN, seen in 2016, runs a Hesperia nonprofit that rents housing to low-level felons. The city last week ended its legal battle with her program.
 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? A MAN RESTS at a halfway home in Hesperia in 2016. After a two-year legal battle, the city has settled with the Victor Valley Family Resource Center, the nonprofit that provides resources for low-level offenders.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times A MAN RESTS at a halfway home in Hesperia in 2016. After a two-year legal battle, the city has settled with the Victor Valley Family Resource Center, the nonprofit that provides resources for low-level offenders.

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