The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Urban camping’ law targets homelessne­ss

Tucker effort bans sleeping, cooking etc. in public places.

- By Zachary Hansen zachary.hansen@ajc.com

After roughly two months of debate and tweaks, Tucker passed an “urban camping” ordinance intended to limit public homelessne­ss in the city.

The measure received pushback from several residents and community activists after being introduced at the beginning of the year. They worried the ordinance would lead to arrests instead of referrals to shelters and other services.

The negative reception from residents prompted the city to create a task force in February to reevaluate the ordinance and recommend changes. The final version of the ordinance council members passed unanimousl­y Monday prohibits sleeping, cooking or storing personal property in public places, including streets, parks and underneath bridges.

In addition, it added more steps Tucker police officers must take before they can arrest a person in violation. They have to issue a verbal or written warning, and they must offer services to the person, such as calling a home- less shelter, a referral agency or a transporta­tion service.

The ordinance was created through a partnershi­p with Dekalb County police. The county does not have a law banning urban camping, but Tucker said the ordinance mir-rors similar laws in Brookhaven, ch a mb lee and dun woody.

During Monday’s City Council meeting, a Tucker resident thanked city leaders for the extra edits to the ordinance, but he still worried that it will harm homeless individual­s.

The resident, Don Anderson, said the ordinance might not “avoid the situation where a referral simply goes to a waiting list and puts the homeless person in the position to move without having another alternativ­e.”

Councilwom­an Ann Lerner said she didn’t want the ordinance or city police to potentiall­y restrict shelters or referral agencies from doing their jobs, adding that they best know how to address those potential occupancy issues. Lerner also said there were plenty of vacant beds in homeless shelters before the COVID-19 pandemic.

 ?? COURTESY ?? The urban camping ban by Tucker is similar to local laws in Brookhaven, Chamblee and Dunwoody.
COURTESY The urban camping ban by Tucker is similar to local laws in Brookhaven, Chamblee and Dunwoody.

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