Newsom defends ‘paralyzed’ California officials in asking Supreme Court to intervene on homeless encampments
Fox News
Democrat California Gov. Gavin Newsom has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to intervene in a case he blames for having “paralyzed” California officials in addressing homeless encampments.
In an amicus brief filing to grant review in the case of City of Grants Pass v. Johnson, Newsom urged the Supreme Court to clarify that state and local governments can take reasonable actions to address the homelessness crisis creating health and safety dangers to individuals living in encampments and communities.
A ruling in Grants Pass, Oregon, invalidating a local anti-camping ordinance that would have barred people from sleeping on public property was recently upheld in the Ninth Circuit. The case expanded upon the prior case of Martin v. City of Boise, which prevented criminalizing people sleeping in public spaces if cities couldn’t supply sufficient beds to accommodate them.
“These courts have stretched Martin’s reasonable limit into an unsurmountable roadblock, preventing cities and towns from imposing commonsense time and place restrictions to keep streets safe and to move those experiencing homelessness into shelter,” Newsom’s amicus brief says. “California’s elected officials who seek in good faith to improve what often appears to be an intractable crisis have found themselves without options, forced to abandon efforts to make the spaces occupied by unhoused people safer.”
“In short, Martin’s distortions have paralyzed communities and blunted the force of even the most commonsense and good-faith laws to limit the impacts of encampments,” the filing says.
“Our government officials are trapped, at risk of suit for taking action but also accountable for the consequences of inaction,” Newsom’s lawyers wrote. “Our communities will suffer for it.”
As governor, Newsom has allocated “more than $15 billion toward housing and homelessness and its root causes, and launched programs to reward local governments that reduce barriers to affordable housing while holding accountable those cities and counties that refuse to do their fair share to address the affordable housing crisis,” according to the filing, which also claims, “The crisis of homelessness will never be solved without solving the crisis of housing, as the two issues are inextricably linked.”
Newsom’s office said restraining orders blocking anti-camping ordinances are granted “not by policymakers or democratically elected officials, but federal judges.”
In San Francisco, for example, Newsom’s amicus brief claims a “collaborative” policy between local officials and police officers to clear and clean the most dangerous encampment within 24 to 72 hours was instead delayed by nine months when a court intervened. The city was required first to evaluate whether there were enough shelter beds for each homeless person.
In Los Angeles, a district court said shelters must meet a long list of requirements, including for nursing staff, to test for communicable diseases and on-site security, before the city could enforce “commonsense” anti-camping laws, according to the filing.
“As California invests billions to address housing and homelessness, the courts have tied the hands of state and local governments that seek to use commonsense approaches to clean our streets and provide help for unhoused Californians living in inhumane conditions,” Newsom said in a statement, announcing the filing.
“While I agree with the basic principle that a city shouldn’t criminalize homeless individuals for sleeping outside when they have nowhere else to go within that city’s boundaries, courts continue to reach well beyond that narrow limit to block any number of reasonable efforts to protect homeless individuals and the broader public from the harms of uncontrolled encampments,” the governor added. “It’s time for the courts to stop these confusing, impractical and costly rulings that only serve to worsen this humanitarian crisis.”