The Day

Supreme Court divided over rights of the homeless

- By ANN E. MARIMOW and REIS THEBAULT

Supreme Court justices expressed concern on Monday about punishing homeless people for sleeping outside when they have nowhere else to go, while also struggling with how to ensure local and state leaders have the flexibilit­y to deal with the growing number of unhoused individual­s nationwide.

The court’s review of a set of Oregon anti-camping laws could lead to the most significan­t ruling on the rights of the unhoused in decades, with potentiall­y sweeping implicatio­ns for state capitals and city streets.

Throughout a more than two-hour argument, the justices seemed to divide along ideologica­l lines with conservati­ves who make up the court’s majority suggesting that policymake­rs, and not judges, should be setting local rules for dealing with homeless people.

Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. asked the Biden administra­tion’s lawyer: “Why would you think these nine people are the best people to judge and weigh those policy judgments?”

Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh also expressed concern about federal courts “micromanag­ing homeless policy.”

The court’s three liberal justices aggressive­ly questioned the lawyer for the city of Grants Pass, Ore., criticizin­g its laws for seeming to criminaliz­e the most basic of human needs.

“Sleeping is a biological necessity,” said Justice Elena Kagan. “And for a homeless person who has no place to go, sleeping in public is kind of like breathing in public.”

Justice Sonia Sotomayor asked where people are supposed to sleep in a city that lacks sufficient shelter beds.

“Where do we put them if every city, every village, every town lacks compassion?” Sotomayor pressed. “Are they supposed to kill themselves, not sleeping?”

The city’s lawyer, Theane Evangelis, defended the laws and emphasized the harm that can come from people living on the streets and in parks.

“When humans are living in those conditions, we think that that’s not compassion­ate and that there’s no dignity in that,” she said.

The Supreme Court agreed to intervene in the case after hearing pleas from an unlikely coalition that spanned the political spectrum, including liberal leaders like California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, and officials in Republican-led states like Montana and Alabama. Their legal briefs described government­s overwhelme­d by the severity of the problem: More than 600,000 people are homeless nationwide, according to federal data, and nearly half sleep outside.

The case began in Grants Pass, after officials started strictly enforcing a set of measures that outlawed sleeping or camping in public spaces like parks and in parked cars, imposing fines ranging from $75 to $295. The penalties increased substantia­lly when unpaid and could eventually result in jail time or a park ban.

Three homeless people — Debra Blake, Gloria Johnson and John Logan — sued Grants Pass in 2018, saying the city, with a population of 40,000 people, was punishing them unconstitu­tionally “based on their status of being involuntar­ily homeless.” They cited the Eighth Amendment’s protection­s against cruel and unusual punishment.

But a majority of justices on Monday seemed unlikely to extend Eighth Amendment protection­s to homeless individual­s without access to shelter. Several seemed to be looking for a more narrow middle ground, but it was not immediatel­y clear what that would look like — an uncertaint­y that reflects the national debate over tackling the thorny problem of homelessne­ss.

The one point that all of the justices and attorneys seemed to agree on: Solving homelessne­ss is complicate­d.

Outside the court, more than 500 demonstrat­ors crammed the sidewalk for a demonstrat­ion urging the justices to reject Grants Pass’ arguments. Waving signs such as “Housing Solves Homelessne­ss,” the crowd heard from the figures heading the leading national advocacy organizati­ons pushing for humane policy for the poor. Large groups from Philadelph­ia,

New York City and Baltimore had climbed into early morning buses to be at the court for the demonstrat­ion.

There are officially more than 600 unhoused residents of Grants Pass, with another 1,000 living on the edge, but local service providers say at least twice as many are homeless. Grants Pass does not have a homeless shelter. Its only major transition­al housing program, the Gospel Rescue Mission, is a privately run religious facility with 138 beds and stringent requiremen­ts for residents, such as regular chapel attendance and abstinence from substances and romantic relationsh­ips.

In 2020, a district court judge barred the city from enforcing its anti-camping ban in parks at night if no other shelter was available, saying the ban and penalties violated the Eighth Amendment.

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit, which covers Western states, including Oregon,

California and Washington, upheld the decision in 2022. A closely divided 9th Circuit refused to rehear the case sitting with a full complement of judges, drawing sharp dissents and warnings of “dire practical consequenc­es” for hundreds of cities and millions of people.

As a result of the 9th Circuit panel’s ruling, the attorney for Grants Pass told the Supreme Court, encampment­s have multiplied unchecked throughout the West because restrictio­ns on public camping no longer play their critical deterrent role, resulting in spikes in violent crime, drug overdoses, disease, fires and hazardous waste.

In response, lawyers for the homeless individual­s said state and local officials are still free to restrict tents in public spaces, to clear encampment­s, and even to fine homeless people who decline other shelter options. But the city cannot punish people with no alternativ­es, they argued.

“States have broad policing powers, but it does not include the power to push the burdens of social problems like poverty on to other communitie­s or the power to satisfy public demand by compromisi­ng individual constituti­onal rights,” attorney Kelsi Corkran said Monday.

The Biden administra­tion charted something of a middle path between the city and the unhoused plaintiffs. Deputy solicitor general Edwin Kneedler told the court that anti-camping laws are unconstitu­tional when they target people who have no access to indoor shelter.

“By prohibitin­g sleeping, the city is basically saying you cannot live in Grants Pass. It’s the equivalent of banishment,” Kneedler said.

But he urged the justices to return the case to the lower courts to ensure that the city’s laws are not blocked across the board. Such bans should still be allowable, he said, if an investigat­ion shows that a given person does in fact have access to shelter.

 ?? CLAIRE BESSETTE/THE DAY ?? A century-old segment of cast iron natural gas line recently removed from a Norwich street, left, and a high-density seamless plastic pipe that will replace the old lines were on display during a news conference Monday.
CLAIRE BESSETTE/THE DAY A century-old segment of cast iron natural gas line recently removed from a Norwich street, left, and a high-density seamless plastic pipe that will replace the old lines were on display during a news conference Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States