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After Supreme Court ruling, California strengthens homeless camp enforcement

California, where a third of America’s homeless people now live, is trying to find its footing after the Supreme Court this summer gave localities more power to enforce anti-camping rules.

The high court’s ruling allows local governments to penalize people for sleeping and camping outdoors – even if there is no place to shelter them. 

Why We Wrote This

California, which has America’s largest homeless population, is taking a harder tack on enforcement – but some cities are pairing that with more support.

With that new authority, cities like San Francisco are taking a more “aggressive” approach, keeping in step with Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recent “no more excuses” executive order that directs state agencies to remove encampments on state property. He warned last week that he would direct money away from counties without “demonstrable results” by year’s end. 

The governor may be moving fast. But some jurisdictions are balking. The Board of Supervisors for Los Angeles County, for example, voted recently to reject fining or arresting people for sleeping in public spaces.

Instead, some localities are striving to find “the humane way and the effective way” to address homelessness in the wake of the Supreme Court decision, says Michael Webb, the point person for Redondo Beach, which has halved its homeless population since 2019.

“Everyone is in a ‘figure out where we are’ mode,” says Mr. Webb.

California, the epicenter of homelessness in the United States, is trying to find its footing after the Supreme Court this summer gave localities more power to enforce anti-camping rules.

The court’s ruling upholding the enforcement measures of the city of Grants Pass, Oregon, allows local governments to penalize people for sleeping and camping outdoors – even if there is no place to shelter them. 

With that new authority, cities like San Francisco are taking a more “aggressive” approach, as Mayor London Breed puts it. Police and street cleaners are instructed to prevent tents from popping back up after encampments are cleared; outreach workers must first offer people experiencing homelessness transportation out of town as city shelters near capacity.

Why We Wrote This

California, which has America’s largest homeless population, is taking a harder tack on enforcement – but some cities are pairing that with more support.

Mayor Breed is in step with California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s July 25 “no more excuses” executive order that directs state agencies to develop guidelines and move urgently toward removing encampments on state property. The order encourages local city and county governments to take similar action. While he can’t force local compliance, he warned last week that he would direct money away from counties if he did not see “demonstrable results” by year’s end. About a third of the nation’s homeless people live in California.

The governor may be moving fast, but some jurisdictions are balking. The Board of Supervisors for vast Los Angeles County, for example, the most populous county in the nation, where 75,000 people are homeless, voted recently to reject fining or arresting people for sitting, sleeping, or lying in public spaces, as the Supreme Court ruling now allows it to do.

Damian Dovarganes/AP

A commuter drives past a homeless camp by Interstate 105, July 26, 2024, in Los Angeles. After the Supreme Court ruled that cities could enforce bans on sleeping outside in public spaces, California Gov. Gavin Newsom directed state and local officials “to move urgently” to address homeless encampments.

Instead, the county board affirmed its “care first” approach, in which outreach workers encourage people to come indoors, get supportive services, and ultimately move to permanent housing. For the first time in years, the number of people living on the streets in the region declined this year – dropping 5.1% in the county overall, and 10.4% in Los Angeles.

One particular success in LA County is the coastal community of Redondo Beach, which since 2019 has halved its homeless population. That has come through innovations like individual tiny shelters, restricted camping hours, and a homeless court that convenes outdoors, according to Michael Webb, the city attorney and point person on homelessness. 

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