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Indybay Feature

ACLU Santa Cruz County Adopts Landmark Statement of Principle

by ACLU Santa Cruz (aclusantacruz.org)
ACLU Board Supports Camping Ban Moratorium
At its June, 2014 Board Meeting, ACLU Santa Cruz County adopted a Statement of Principle in support of a proposed moratorium on camping ban laws and ordinances within the City and County of Santa Cruz. Discussion of the statement was preceded by testimony from several local homeless persons and homeless advocates. Among the questions discussed prior to the vote was the belief by some members that laws and ordinances that prohibit “camping” have been wholly ineffective in addressing the perceived problem of homelessness in our community. Proponents argued that both the City and County of Santa Cruz have incurred, and continue to incur, many tens of thousands of dollars of costs in both enforcement and administration and that criminalizing homelessness, and particularly the essential right to sleep, is a failed policy and one that must be revisited if the community is ever to move forward and create truly positive outcomes for our resident homeless community.

It was further the position of proponents that a One Year Moratorium on the enforcement of camping ban laws and ordinances between the hours of 10:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. would allow the Santa Cruz City Council and the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors to conduct a fiscal review of the cost savings of the proposed moratorium as well as provide an opportunity to assess the impact of such a moratorium on both the homeless community and the community at large.

Although the vote was not unanimous, it does reflect a renewed commitment and willingness on the part of the local ACLU to be more engaged on issues of local interest and importance and particularly those issues that impact basic civil liberties. It is the intention of the Board that the Statement be read publicly before both the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors and the Santa Cruz City Council at their next meetings.

The Statement of Principle reads as follows:


STATEMENT OF PRINCIPLE

THE SANTA CRUZ COUNTY CHAPTER OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION SUPPORTS IN PRINCIPLE A LIMITED TIME MORATORIUM ON ENFORCEMENT OF CAMPING BAN LAWS AND ORDINANCES WITHIN THE CITY AND COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ ON THE GROUNDS THAT SUCH LAWS AND ORDINANCES SELECTIVELY CRIMINALIZE THE HOMELESS COMMUNITY.

WHILE THE CHAPTER IS MINDFUL THAT SUCH A MORATORIUM RAISES PRACTICAL PROBLEMS WITHIN THE COMMUNITY AT LARGE, WE BELIEVE THAT THE BENEFITS OF SUCH AN APPROACH IN TERMS OF THE OPPORTUNITY FOR CIVIC LEADERS, POLICY MAKERS AND STAKEHOLDERS TO REASSESS THE EFFICACY OF THESE LAWS AND ORDINANCES OUTWEIGHS ANY TEMPORARY ADVERSE IMPACT.

THE RELEVANT LAWS AND ORDINANCES AS PRESENTLY PROMULGATED AND WHOSE ENFORCEMENT IS THE SUBJECT OF THE PROPOSED MORATORIUM IN THE CITY AND COUNTY OF SANTA CRUZ ARE AS FOLLOWS:

Santa Cruz Municipal Code 636.010, et. seq.
Santa Cruz County Code Section 10.16.060, et. seq.
City of Capitola Municipal Code Section 9.48.030, et.seq.
City of Scots Valley Municipal Code Section 7.12.140, et. seq.
Watsonville Municpal Code Section 5-36.01, et. seq.
California Penal Code Section 647e

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Comments (Hide Comments)
by Pat Colby
Hopefully the savings to the taxpayers will be reported without city staff sabotaging the numbers. From what I have gotten trying to pin down how much each homeless nuisance citation costs the taxpayer—I had gotten it is between $400-$1000 each. Since most of Santa Cruz's Crime Wave that the SCPD resources are wasted on is singling homeless instead of real crimes and criminals, it would be great to show how much money is really saved for the taxpayer accurately!
Check that savior complex!

"move forward and create truly positive outcomes for our resident homeless community"

Why not take some credit for helping creating negative outcomes, ACLU?! Own your appeasement!

Someone sleeps. Someone else declares it a crime and directs .gov to persecute, the ACLU _knowingly_ stands by and doesn't DO anything, and now hand waves about "create truly positive outcomes".

Perhaps ACLU membership should be declared a crime against humanity.
by Razer Ray
what_flexible_labor_market_means_in_santa_cruz.jpg
A study group has proposed turning their shitty yet still far superior to local facilities institutionalized Shelter into transitional housing.

http://www.dailycamera.com/news/boulder/ci_26278776

http://www.dailycamera.com/news/boulder/ci_26281982/

Personally, I don't know what the job market in the Boulder area looks like, but around here, unless the local gubmint gets 'on the stick' and does some serious job development, and development of some kind of housing that can be afforded with those jobs, I suspect ANYTHING done to 'help the homeless' will simply result in more institutionalized gubmint check bearing people sought out to be, for want of a better word, 'warehoused and milked/bilked' to prop up the fixed income rental market property owners (Those owners are typically NOT individuals and NOT local residents) yet still vilified, until the property owner's contract with the social agencies involved run out and the recipient of the housing finds themself houseless again

Ps. I don't want to hear any whining from politicians, including wannabes Like Steve Pleich, that it's not government's job to develop jobs and define housing policy. The city gubmint seem to have developed a plethora of police state security guard jobs, and overpriced housing not available at local job incomes, AND THEY MOST CERTAINLY SET THE POLICIES THAT ALLOWED THAT TO OCCUR.
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