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Groups Compile 20 ‘Meanest’ Cities For
Homeless
America’s harsh streets may be tougher for the homeless than
they’ve ever been, according to two homeless-advocacy groups
that recently released their survey of the nation’s 20 “meanest”
cities for the poor.
The list, compiled by the National Coalition for the Homeless
and the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, places
Sarasota, Fla., at the top. But “mean” municipalities span the
nation—From New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles to smaller
cities like Flagstaff, AZ., and Little Rock, Arkansas.
Four of the cities are in Texas, two are in California and two
are in Arizona. All are locations that a report accompanying the
list reflect a growing willingness over the past 25 years “to
turn to the criminal justice system to respond to people living
in public spaces.”
Michael Stoops, acting executive director of the homeless
coalition, put it more bluntly: “There’s open war on the
homeless population.”
Sarasota was cited for its recent law banning lodging outdoors,
passed after state courts rejected two earlier laws as
unconstitutional. The report says that one of “the elements
necessary for arrest under the law is that the person ‘has no
other place to live.’”
Little Rock, which was No. 3, was cited for the police practice
of removing homeless people from bus stations, despite their
having legitimate travel plans. “Two homeless men reported that
officers of the Little Rock Police Department, in separate
incidents, had kicked them out of the Little Rock Bus Station,
even after showing police their tickets,” the report said.
The report, which surveyed 224 U.S. cities, paints a worsening
picture for America’s homeless, a problem made more dire by
Hurricane Katrina and other Gulf Coast storms last year.
Some of the report’s findings:
Criminalization of the homeless increasingly occurs in ways like
making it illegal to sit, sleep or place personal belongings in
a public space. Some police departments make more aggressive
sweeps of areas known to be populated by the homeless.
Twenty-seven percent of the cities surveyed prohibit sitting or
lying in certain public places, a 14 percent increase over the
number of cities surveyed in the groups’ last report, in 2002.
Forty-three percent of the cities surveyed bar begging in
certain public places, a 12 percent increase over 2002.
“These practices that criminalize homelessness do nothing to
address the underlying causes of homelessness. Instead, they
exacerbate the problem,” the report says. Stoops finds parallels
between the Reagan era and today. “The period we’re in is very
similar too the early 1980’s, in downtown America, throughout
the country, there’s a raging debate about what to do with the
homeless population.”
“Whether it’s the mayor of Little Rock or the mayor of Las
Vegas, they’re committed to throwing out broad-stroke myths
about the homeless: that they’re lazy, they’re criminals, that
they choose their lives.
Some cities have adopted the argument that the predatory aspect
of life on the streets makes isolating the homeless from the
general population necessary. Tulin Ozdeger, civil rights
attorney at National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty,
disagrees. “We think there are ways to protect homeless people
and those who aren’t homeless in ways other than making it
criminal to sleep outside on the sidewalk,” she said. “If the
goal is to protect homeless people, increased resources for
shelter space and day centers would be a good idea,” Ozdeger
said. “if a city can’t find that space immediately, certainly
having a police presence to make sure people aren’t preyed would
be valuable.”
Some positive things. For Stoops, some cities get at
least a B for effort. “people for the first time are talking
about ending homelessness and developing 10-year plans to do
so,” he said. “There’s no one city getting it right. There’s no
city sheltering all of its homeless, but there are cities that
are making progress. Key West, for example, made our rankings a
few years in a row but they’ve done some positive things in the
last two years.”
But cities aren’t getting any help from the federal government,
Stoops said, citing legislation passed in December by the House
and Senate that is meant to slash Medicaid funding by $4.8
billion and trim Supplemental Security Income assistance by more
than $700 million over the next five years.
20 Meanest Cities: 1) Sarasota Fl. 2) Lawrence KS. 3)
Little Rock AR. 4) Atlanta GA. 5) Las Vegas NV. 6) Dallas TX. 7)
Houston TX. 8) San Juan PR. 9) Santa Monica CA. 10) Flagstaff
AZ. 11) San Francisco CA. 12) Chicago IL. 13) San Antonio TX.
14) New York NY. 15) Austin TX. 16) Anchorage AK. 17) Phoenix
AZ. 18) Los Angeles CA. 19) St. Louis MO. 20) Pittsburgh PA.
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