Loveland Reporter-Herald

Oregon’s homeless at risk of fines, jail

- By Claire Rush

GRANTS PASS, ORE. >> A pickleball game in this leafy Oregon community was suddenly interrupte­d one rainy weekend morning by the arrival of an ambulance. Paramedics rushed through the park toward a tent, one of dozens illegally erected by the town’s hundreds of homeless people, then play resumed as though nothing had happened.

Mere feet away, volunteers helped dismantle tents to move an 80-year-old man and a woman blind in one eye, who risked being fined for staying too long. In the distance, a group of boys climbed on a jungle gym.

The scenes were emblematic of the crisis gripping the small, Oregon mountain town of Grants Pass, where a fierce fight over park space has become a battlegrou­nd for a much larger, national debate on homelessne­ss that has reached the U.S. Supreme Court.

The town’s case, set to be heard April 22, has broad implicatio­ns for how not only Grants Pass but communitie­s nationwide address homelessne­ss, including whether they can fine or jail people for camping in public. It has made the town of 40,000 the unlikely face of the nation’s homelessne­ss crisis, and further fueled the debate over how to deal with it.

“I certainly wish this wasn’t what my town was known for,” Mayor Sara Bristol told The Associated Press last month. “It’s not the reason why I became mayor. And yet it has dominated every single thing that I’ve done for the last 31/2 years.”

Officials across the political spectrum — from Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom in California, which has nearly 30% of the nation’s homeless population, to a group of 22 conservati­ve-led states — have filed briefs in the case, saying lower court rulings have hamstrung their ability to deal with encampment­s.

Like many Western communitie­s, Grants Pass has struggled for years with a burgeoning homeless population. A decade ago, City Council members discussed how to make it “uncomforta­ble enough ... in our city so they will want to move on down the road.” From 2013 to 2018, the city said it issued 500 citations for camping or sleeping in public, including in vehicles, with fines that could reach hundreds of dollars.

But a 2018 decision by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals changed the calculus. The court, whose jurisdicti­on includes nine Western states, held that while communitie­s are allowed to prohibit tents in public spaces, it violated the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment to give people criminal citations for sleeping outside when they had no place else to go.

Four years later, in a case challengin­g restrictio­ns in Grants Pass, the court expanded that ruling, holding that civil citations also can be unconstitu­tional.

Civil rights groups and attorneys for the homeless residents who challenged the restrictio­ns in 2018 insist people shouldn’t be punished for lacking housing. Officials throughout the West have overstated the impact of the court decisions to distract from their own failings, they argued.

“For years, political leaders have chosen to tolerate encampment­s as an alternativ­e to meaningful­ly addressing the western region’s severe housing shortage,” the attorneys wrote. “It is easier to blame the courts than to take responsibi­lity for finding a solution.”

In Grants Pass, the town’s parks, many lining the picturesqu­e Rogue River, are at the heart of the debate. Cherished for their open spaces, picnic tables, playground­s and sports fields, they host everything from annual boat-racing festivals and vintage car shows to Easter egg hunts and summer concerts.

They’re also the sites of encampment­s blighted by illegal drug use and crime, including a shooting at a park last year that left one person dead. Tents cluster along riverbanks, next to tennis courts and jungle gyms, with tarps shielding belongings from the rain. When the sun comes out, clothes and blankets are strung across tree branches to dry. Used needles litter the ground.

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