Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Supreme Court Declines Review of Homeless Anti-Camping Laws
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 5 years ago on
December 17, 2019

Share

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court will not review an appellate decision that makes it harder for cities to keep homeless people from sleeping on the streets.
The justices on Monday did not comment as they left in place a ruling that struck down a Boise, Idaho, ordinance. The ruling by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals applies across several Western states where cities are struggling with homelessness. Many, including Fresno, have similar restrictions that aim to keep homeless people from sleeping on sidewalks or other outdoor spaces.

The decision the justices refused to review found that the Boise ordinance violated the constitutional ban on “cruel and unusual punishment.”
The appeals court held that Boise could not make it a crime for homeless people to sleep on the streets when no alternative shelter is available. The decision the justices refused to review found that the Boise ordinance violated the constitutional ban on “cruel and unusual punishment.”

Fresno County Joined Effort to Overturn Ruling

Fresno County joined one of 20 “friend of the court” briefs filed in the Boise case asking the Supreme Court to overturn the 9th Circuit’s ruling. The reasoning in the briefs varied, but many municipalities indicated they feared the ruling would lead to public health issues if homeless camps were allowed to proliferate.
The 9th Circuit and other regional courts have made similar rulings: In 2007, the circuit ruled in favor of homeless residents of Los Angeles, finding that as long as there are more homeless residents than there are shelter beds, a law outlawing sleeping outside was unconstitutional. The entire lawsuit was later thrown out after both sides reached an agreement.
In 2009, a federal judge said a Portland, Oregon, rule designed to prevent people from sitting or lying on public sidewalks was unconstitutional. A Washington state judge rejected a similar anti-camping law in Everett, Washington.

Laws Allowed Ticketing Homeless ‘Campers’

Boise Mayor Dave Bieter, who has pushed for the city’s policy of ticketing homeless “campers,” was defeated in the November election. His spokesman Mike Journee said it’s now up to Mayor-elect Lauren McLean’s administration to decide what to do next.

“The net result, in my opinion, is that local officials and municipalities will have to address the issues surrounding homelessness, and not just make it a crime to sleep.” — Attorney Howard Belodoff
In a statement, McLean didn’t say how her administration would address the 9th Circuity ruling. Instead, she said the city would continue working with “key community partners in housing and homelessness, and believe we have effective, humane and constitutionally sound solutions in our grasp.”
Howard Belodoff, the Idaho Legal Aid attorney who represented the Boise homeless residents in the case, said he and his clients were grateful for the high court’s decision.
“Which I’m sure they didn’t expect when they got a citation, were arrested and taken to jail and were sentenced to pay court costs they couldn’t possibly afford, all because shelter wasn’t available to them,” Belodoff said.
He said he was gratified his clients stuck with the case for many years, and said the decision means a lot for homeless individuals throughout the West.
“The net result, in my opinion, is that local officials and municipalities will have to address the issues surrounding homelessness, and not just make it a crime to sleep,” he said.

Officials Say Ruling Ties Their Hands

Los Angeles County was among the municipalities to support Boise in the lawsuit. County supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas said the county’s effort was not to criminalize the homeless but rather, “a pursuit of a legal framework that is clear — in comparison to a status quo that is ambiguous and confusing.”
He said the current law makes it hard for cities and counties to act nimbly to aid people who may be dying on the street.
Belodoff said cities like Boise and Los Angeles have plenty of tools available to address homelessness without resorting to handcuffs.
“They should take the hundreds of thousands of dollars they were going to spend on attorneys and put it into planning to address the issues so people don’t have to sleep on the streets,” Belodoff said.

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Scientists Find Strongest Evidence yet of Life on an Alien Planet

DON'T MISS

Ohtani Hits 448-Foot Homer in 7-Run 1st Inning, Dodgers Sweep Rockies

DON'T MISS

Ursula Is Beautiful, Athletic, and Seeking Your Companionship

DON'T MISS

EU Announces $1.8 Billion Aid Package for Palestinian Authority

DON'T MISS

How Trump Might Unwittingly Cut Emissions From Online Shopping

DON'T MISS

Trump Slams Fed’s Powell Over Rates, Saying Termination Can’t ‘Come Fast Enough’

DON'T MISS

Dollar, US Stocks Find Some Stability as Trade Talks Help the Mood

DON'T MISS

Merced’s Own Super Bloom Is Here. How This Grassland Reserve Protects Endangered Species

DON'T MISS

ICE Smashes Car Window to Detain Asylum Seeker, Family Says

DON'T MISS

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Seeks Two-Month Delay of May 5 Trial

UP NEXT

Commercial Salmon Season Is Shut Down Again. Will CA’s Iconic Fish Ever Recover?

UP NEXT

What To Know About California Reparations: Is State’s Apology the Beginning or the End?

UP NEXT

Zoom Down for Thousands of Users, Downdetector Shows

UP NEXT

Puerto Rico Goes Dark After Widespread Power Plant Failure

UP NEXT

Butler, Curry Lead Warriors Past Grizzlies to Secure Seventh Seed in West Playoffs

UP NEXT

Harper and Realmuto Homer to Help Lead the Phillies to a Win Over the Giants

UP NEXT

Will Smith’s 3-Run Homer Sends Dodgers Over Major League-Worst Rockies

UP NEXT

California Is Preparing to Take Trump to Court to Stop His Tariffs

UP NEXT

Retail Sales Rise 1.4% in March as Shoppers Stock Up on Big Ticket Items Ahead of Tariffs

UP NEXT

7 Takeaways: How the DMV Allows Dangerous Drivers to Stay on the Road

EU Announces $1.8 Billion Aid Package for Palestinian Authority

24 minutes ago

How Trump Might Unwittingly Cut Emissions From Online Shopping

28 minutes ago

Trump Slams Fed’s Powell Over Rates, Saying Termination Can’t ‘Come Fast Enough’

34 minutes ago

Dollar, US Stocks Find Some Stability as Trade Talks Help the Mood

37 minutes ago

Merced’s Own Super Bloom Is Here. How This Grassland Reserve Protects Endangered Species

1 hour ago

ICE Smashes Car Window to Detain Asylum Seeker, Family Says

16 hours ago

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Seeks Two-Month Delay of May 5 Trial

16 hours ago

Temu and Shein Say They’re Raising Prices Due to Tariffs

16 hours ago

Actor Michelle Trachtenberg Died of Complications From Diabetes, Says NYC Medical Examiner

16 hours ago

AI Action Figures Flood Social Media (Accessories Included)

16 hours ago

Scientists Find Strongest Evidence yet of Life on an Alien Planet

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – In a potential landmark discovery, scientists using the James Webb Space Telescope have obtained what they call...

3 minutes ago

An illustration shows a hycean world – an exoplanet with a liquid water ocean beneath a hydrogen-rich atmosphere - orbiting a red dwarf star. Based on observations by the James Webb Space Telescope, the exoplanet K2-18 b might fit in this category. This illustration was obtained by Reuters on April 16, 2025. (A. Smith, N. Madhusudhan/University of Cambridge/Handout via REUTERS)
3 minutes ago

Scientists Find Strongest Evidence yet of Life on an Alien Planet

Los Angeles Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani watches his ball go out for a solo home run during the first inning of a baseball game against the Colorado Rockies Wednesday, April 16, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP/Mark J. Terrill)
8 minutes ago

Ohtani Hits 448-Foot Homer in 7-Run 1st Inning, Dodgers Sweep Rockies

Ursula, GV Wire's Adoptable Pet of the Week, April 17, 2025
12 minutes ago

Ursula Is Beautiful, Athletic, and Seeking Your Companionship

24 minutes ago

EU Announces $1.8 Billion Aid Package for Palestinian Authority

Shein packages ready to be shipped from a factory in Guangzhou, China, in Feb. 12, 2025. Fast fashion retailers rely heavily on shipping by air. The president’s tariffs could change that. (Gilles Sabrié/The New York Times)
28 minutes ago

How Trump Might Unwittingly Cut Emissions From Online Shopping

President Donald Trump looks on as Jerome Powell, his nominee to become chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve, speaks at the White House in Washington, U.S., November 2, 2017. (REUTERS File)
34 minutes ago

Trump Slams Fed’s Powell Over Rates, Saying Termination Can’t ‘Come Fast Enough’

Pedestrians are reflected on a stock quotation board showing a graph of Nikkei share average outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan April 14, 2025. (REUTERS File)
37 minutes ago

Dollar, US Stocks Find Some Stability as Trade Talks Help the Mood

1 hour ago

Merced’s Own Super Bloom Is Here. How This Grassland Reserve Protects Endangered Species

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend