Lake County Record-Bee

STATE LEADERS TAKE SIDES IN SCOTUS CASE

- By Marisa Kendall

The U.S. Supreme Court is about to hear the biggest case about homelessne­ss in decades, and it seems like everyone in California has an opinion.

At issue: whether and under what conditions cities can fine or arrest people for camping in public spaces. The ruling will have nationwide implicatio­ns for how local leaders manage homeless encampment­s.

Where does Gov. Gavin Newsom stand on that issue? What about the leaders of California's major cities? Our law enforcemen­t agencies? Homelessne­ss experts? How about President Joe Biden's administra­tion?

Good questions! The good news is we can actually answer that. Many people and organizati­ons have filed amicus briefs to

the Supreme Court for the case, which means they've written out their opinion and submitted it in writing to the Justices for them to consider.

Read on to find out where many of the most important stakeholde­rs in the homelessne­ss crisis stand on homeless encampment­s.

What's at stake in these Supreme Court arguments

The case, Johnson v. Grants Pass, stems from a 2018 lawsuit challengin­g an ordinance approved by the small city in Southern Oregon that essentiall­y made it illegal for homeless residents to camp on all public property throughout the city.

The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in the case Monday, to determine if the ordinance violates the 8th Amendment's ban on cruel and unusual punishment to penalize someone for camping if they have nowhere else to go.

“This is the most important Supreme Court case about homelessne­ss in at least 40 years, and the results will be tremendous,” Jesse Rabinowitz, communicat­ions and campaign director of the National Homelessne­ss Law Center, said during a media call.

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals already has ruled in the Grants Pass case, and in a prior case (Martin v. Boise) that cities cannot punish someone for camping if that person has no other shelter. Grants Pass has asked the Supreme Court to overturn both prior rulings.

Since the Ninth Circuit first weighed in, numerous California cities have been sued over their efforts to remove homeless camps. Judges have delayed or halted efforts in several places, including San Francisco, Sacramento, Chico and San Rafael. On Tuesday, California Democrats voted to kill a bill that would have prohibited encampment­s near schools and other areas statewide.

More than three dozen elected officials and organizati­ons have weighed in on the Grants Pass case.

Taking the pro-enforcemen­t side

Those on this side argue that by restrictin­g the enforcemen­t of anti-camping ordinances, the courts have made it impossible for cities to lessen the harm encampment­s do to neighborho­ods. They also argue the prior rulings — which they want overturned — are confusing and too hard to follow.

California State Sheriffs' Associatio­n and California Police Chiefs Associatio­n: Local government­s now have little or no power to enforce rules when it comes to homeless residents, “leading to an explosion of encampment­s throughout the state of California.”

California State Associatio­n of Counties and League of California Cities: The courts have become “micromanag­ers” of homelessne­ss policy. Those decisions instead should be left up to cities and counties.

California Republican Reps. Kevin Kiley of Rocklin, Doug LaMalfa of Yuba City, Tom McClintock of El Dorado Hills, Jay Obernolte of Hesperla and Darrell Issa of Temecula: “Statistics demonstrat­e that homeless encampment­s and crime go hand-in-hand,” and therefore the Ninth Circuit rulings have made it practicall­y impossible for cities to combat crime.

Venice Stakeholde­rs Associatio­n: The rulings have created an “extreme imbalance between the rights of the homeless and those of Venice's residents and business owners” who have to deal with encampment­s near their homes and businesses.

Office of the San Diego County District Attorney: San Diego recently passed an ordinance banning homeless encampment­s near schools, shelters and transit hubs and in parks, and, if shelter is available, on public sidewalks. The recent Ninth Circuit rulings “create uncertaint­y about the validity of the ordinance as a whole.”

California Chamber of Commerce: Employers have trouble hiring and keeping employees, and attracting customers, when their business is near a homeless encampment.

Cicero Institute: The Cicero Institute, a public policy organizati­on, drafted model anti-camping legislatio­n that has been adopted in states including Texas and Utah. “Several jurisdicti­ons have made great progress by enforcing public camping bans.”

Siding with homeless residents: Banning camping is inhumane

These groups and individual­s support court rulings that limit enforcemen­t of anti-camping ordinances. They argue punishing someone for camping when there isn't enough shelter available — as is the case in most California cities — is wrong.

California Democratic Reps. Ro Khanna of Fremont, Barbara Lee of Oakland and Linda Sanchez of Whittier: “Punishing human beings for existing when they have nowhere safe to rest is not only unconstitu­tional, it is also the least effective and most costly response a city can choose.”

American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n and the National Alliance on Mental Illness: For unhoused people with severe mental illness, being approached by police for violating a camping ban could turn into a deadly altercatio­n. People with untreated mental illness are 16 times more likely to be killed by law enforcemen­t than those without a mental illness.

National Homelessne­ss Law Center: The Grants Pass ordinance is just as morally and legally wrong as Jim Crow Laws and “anti-Okie” laws that discrimina­ted against refugees migrating into California during the Dust Bowl.

Fifty-seven social scientists who have published research on homelessne­ss: Research shows that punishing people for camping negatively impacts their physical and mental health, exacerbate­s the spread of disease and prolongs homelessne­ss by making it harder for them to get out of debt, find jobs and access housing and other services.

American Civil Liberties Union: The Grants Pass ordinance punishes people for “unavoidabl­e, life-sustaining, and fundamenta­lly human acts.”

National Coalition of Men: The court should consider whether Grants Pass is discrimina­ting against a protected class by targeting unsheltere­d homeless people in its anti-camping ordinance.

Taking neither side: A middle-of-the-road approach

Homelessne­ss policy is a hyper-emotional, intensely polarizing issue, and by siding with neither party in the Grants Pass case, those in this group are attempting to occupy the political middle-ground. They don't want to be seen as supporters of “criminaliz­ing homelessne­ss.” But they also don't want to be seen as too soft on enforcemen­t.

They say it's wrong to prohibit camping everywhere in a city if a person has nowhere else to sleep. But they also want cities to have more freedom to clear camps and enforce camping bans.

Gov. Gavin Newsom: Local courts are blocking “common-sense” efforts to clear encampment­s. “There is no compassion in stepping over people in the streets, and there is no dignity in allowing people to die in dangerous, fire-prone encampment­s. Hindering cities' efforts to help their unhoused population­s is as inhumane as it is unworkable.”

City of Los Angeles: “The city does not support efforts to criminaliz­e people who are experienci­ng involuntar­y homelessne­ss. However, the City does have a paramount interest in its ability to protect public health and safety.”

City of San Francisco and Mayor London Breed: The Supreme Court should not allow cities to ban camping everywhere, at all times, in all public spaces. “Doing so could not only be cruel and unusual, but it would also create perverse incentives to force unhoused individual­s to migrate to jurisdicti­ons like San Francisco that do not do so.” San Francisco is currently under a court order that prevents the city from enforcing its anti-camping ordinances.

President Joe Biden's administra­tion: A person should not be criminaliz­ed because they are homeless. But “broad and burdensome” injunction­s issued by some district courts limit cities' abilities to respond to encampment­s.

“There is no compassion in stepping over people in the streets, and there is no dignity in allowing people to die in dangerous, fire-prone encampment­s. Hindering cities' efforts to help their unhoused population­s is as inhumane as it is unworkable.”

— Gov. Gavin Newsom

 ?? KRISTIAN CARREON — FOR CALMATTERS ?? A homeless encampment along the riverbed in San Diego on March 23.
KRISTIAN CARREON — FOR CALMATTERS A homeless encampment along the riverbed in San Diego on March 23.

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