Oroville Mercury-Register

New York City has a right to shelter, but will it establish a right to sleep outside?

- By Bobby Caina Calvan and Christophe­r Weber

New York Mayor Eric Adams has hailed his city's right to shelter as a hallmark of compassion for its most destitute. Now he must decide if he will extend that compassion by bestowing homeless people with the right to sleep outside.

The City Council unanimousl­y approved a “Homeless Bill of Rights” last month that would make New York the first big U.S. city to establish an explicit right to sleep in at least some public places.

If Adams, a Democrat, allows the measure to become law, it could be a notable departure for the city, which has for years sent police and sanitation crews to clear homeless encampment­s as they arise.

It also would run against the prevailing political headwinds in other places that have struggled with large numbers of people living in tents and other makeshift shelters.

The Los Angeles City Council passed a broad anti-camping measure two years ago. Then last year, the city outlawed tents within 500 feet (150 meters) of schools and day cares and banned sitting, lying, sleeping or storing personal property that would disrupt the flow of traffic on sidewalks, streets and bike lanes.

The changes were billed as a compassion­ate way to get homeless people off the streets and restore access to public spaces for other people. Sonja Verdugo, an organizer with the Los Angeles advocacy group Ground Game LA, called the measure “inhumane.”

“Basically, you can't rest anywhere outdoors if you're unhoused,” she said.

Earlier this year, a “Right to Rest” proposal in Oregon died quietly after its sponsor could not muster support.

It would have granted the right to use public spaces “without discrimina­tion and time limitation­s that are based on housing status.”

Attempts to establish a similar Homeless Bill of Rights in California, including a right to sleep outdoors without fear of being confronted by police, also have faltered.

Some hope Los Angeles' newly elected Mayor Karen Bass will make good on a campaign promise to move people out of tents and cardboard shanties and into permanent housing.

Bass vowed to eliminate encampment­s lining entire blocks and have made the city's notorious Skid Row the embodiment of the country's homeless crisis. Bass also promised to house 15,000 people by the end of her first year in office. The number comprises more than a third of the estimated 42,000 Los Angelenos without permanent shelter.

The increasing visibility of homeless camps has fueled public frustratio­n and prompted politician­s,

including some moderate Democrats, to push to reduce their prevalence — to the chagrin of some advocates for homeless people.

“More and more, it's simply illegal to be homeless all across the country — in Republican and Democratic cities,” said Mark Horvath, CEO of Los Angeles-based nonprofit Invisible People. “But it's not like we can arrest our way out of this crisis.”

Aside from establishi­ng the right to sleep outdoors, the Homeless Bill of Rights passed in New York would also codify the city's longstandi­ng right to shelter, the only one of its kind among the country's biggest cities.

Among the nine rights in the measure are safeguards against being forced into facilities that don't correspond to a person's gender identity. It also gives people the right to apply for rental assistance and requires parents staying in shelters be given diapers for their babies.

“This is a sensible and compassion­ate policy response to unpreceden­ted homelessne­ss,” said Taysha

Milagros Clark, a policy and data analyst for the Coalition for the Homeless in New York City.

“The bill of rights really encompasse­s an understand­ing that homeless people do have rights. They haven't violated any laws or anything of the sort just by virtue of their homeless status,” she said. “It is a stark departure from what this administra­tion has done.”

Fabien Levy, a spokespers­on for Adams, said the mayor was still evaluating the measure.

“Since Day One of this administra­tion, Mayor Adams has been focused on helping New Yorkers experienci­ng homelessne­ss and connecting them with a clean, safe place to rest their heads at night,” Levy said.

The mayor's subway safety program has resulted in more than 4,600 New Yorkers experienci­ng homelessne­ss being connected to the help and shelter they need “to stabilize their lives,” Levy said.

It is uncertain how the proposed right to sleep outdoors might work in practice.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? People line up along temporary tents to partake in a free Thanksgivi­ng meal provided by the Union Rescue Mission as the Los Angeles Skid Row district annual feast hosts thousands of homeless and others in need, in downtown Los Angeles on Nov. 24.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE People line up along temporary tents to partake in a free Thanksgivi­ng meal provided by the Union Rescue Mission as the Los Angeles Skid Row district annual feast hosts thousands of homeless and others in need, in downtown Los Angeles on Nov. 24.

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