Los Angeles to join
New York and 50 other U.S. cities with ban on feeding homeless people
As the number of homeless people in Los Angeles County
continues to rise, the City Council is weighing a ban on feeding homeless
people in public areas.
City Council members
Tom LaBonge and Mitch O'Farrell, both Democrats, introduced the resolution
after complaints from Los Angeles residents. Arguing that meal lines should be
moved indoors, the legislators said the proposal would benefit both the
homeless and residential neighborhoods.
Actor Alexander
Polinsky is one Los Angeles resident who complained about the number of
homeless people crowding his neighborhood.
"If you give out
free food on the street with no other services to deal with the collateral
damage, you get hundreds of people beginning to squat," Polinsky told The
New York Times. "They are living in my bushes and they are living in my
next door neighbor's crawl spaces. We have a neighborhood which now seems like
a mental ward."
"This has
overwhelmed what is a residential neighborhood," Council member LaBonge
said. "When dinner is served, everybody comes and it's kind of a
free-for-all."
But advocates for the
homeless say public officials are attempting to legislate the poor into invisibility
instead of helping those in need.
"It's a common
but misguided tactic to drive homeless people out of downtown areas,"
Jerry Jones, the executive director of the National Coalition of the Homeless,
said to The New York Times.
"This is an attempt to make difficult problems
disappear," said Jones. "It's both callous and ineffective."
While homelessness in
the U.S. has dropped for the fourth straight year, falling 4% in the past year,
some cities, including Los Angeles, have seen a spike in homelessness. The
homeless population in Los Angeles is the second highest in the country,
following New York City. Los Angeles County's homeless population rose 15% from
2011 to 2013, to nearly 53,800 individuals, according to a report from the
Department of Housing and Urban Development released last week.
Los Angeles would join "dozens of cities in recent
years" including Philadelphia, Raleigh, N.C., and Orlando, Fla. that have
either enacted or at least debated legislation aimed at regulating the public
feeding of the homeless. Over 50 cities have previously adopted some kind of
anti-camping or anti-food-sharing laws, according to the National Law Center on
Homelessness & Poverty.
In March of 2011,
Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter announced the ban on serving food in public
parks, he said moving such services indoors was part of an effort to raise
standards for the homeless. The ban was temporarily blocked by a federal court
in July 2012 after homeless advocacy groups sued the city.
"It hardly needs
to be said that plaintiffs' food-sharing programs benefit the public
interest," Federal Judge William Yohn Jr. wrote in his opinion.
"Despite [the city's] considerable efforts, many Philadelphians remain
homeless and hungry."
In Orlando, Fla. a
federal appeals court unanimously ruled in 2011 that the city can restrict the
feeding of the homeless in order to protect the parks. A spokesperson for the
city said that residents and business owners originally complained about trash
left after the food distribution, public urination and concerns about crime.
The court decision
states, "The City of Orlando enacted the ordinance to spread the burden
that feedings of large groups have on parks and their surrounding
neighborhoods."
City officials were
then allowed to enforce an ordinance restricting weekly feeding of the homeless
in downtown parks.
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