Homelessness at the Supreme Court: A Chance for Legal Sanity | Elizabeth Mitchell & Stephen Eide

The U.S. Supreme Court's decision to hear the case of Grants Pass v. Johnson has brought homelessness back into the national legal spotlight. The case revolves around the question of whether the homeless have a constitutional right to camp on public property, and its outcome could overturn prior lower court rulings that have contributed to the West Coast's homelessness crisis.
Six years ago, the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco first ruled in Martin v. Boise that imposing criminal penalties for sleeping and camping in public violated the constitution. Since that decision, the amount of recorded homeless and deaths among homeless people has increased dramatically in affected states. Moreover, lawsuits brought by residents frustrated with homeless encampments in their neighborhoods have forced some cities to keep streets clear of camps, further complicating adherence to the Ninth Circuit's judgments.
The Supreme Court's ruling, expected later this year, will shape how cities address the challenge of homelessness in America.
Manhattan Institute senior fellow Stephen Eide discusses the potential impact on homelessness policies with Liz Mitchell, a partner at Umhoffer, Mitchell and King and lead attorney for the LA Alliance for Human Rights in a historic lawsuit forcing the City and County of Los Angeles to address homelessness. She was formerly an attorney with the LA City Attorney’s Office in the Police Litigation Unit and was a prosecutor where she handled criminal cases focusing on violent and sexual crimes.
**Related reading & links**
LA Alliance for Human Rights
www.la-alliance.org/
A Chance for Legal Sanity on Homelessness | by Judge Glock for City Journal
www.city-journal.org/article/...
Pursue an Orderly Streets Agenda | by Stephen Eide for City Journal
www.city-journal.org/article/...
Profile page: Elizabeth Mitchell, Umhofer, Mitchell & King LLP
www.umklaw.com/elizabeth-mitc...

Пікірлер: 7

  • @youtubetroll6620
    @youtubetroll66202 ай бұрын

    people are not slaves, no-one owns anyone, roam the earth as you please, sleep where you want, eat what you want, drink what you want.and fyi!!! drug addiction is a disability. help them and house them period...

  • @carlosalenduran4630
    @carlosalenduran4630Ай бұрын

    Enforcing somebody to go to a shelter is not civilized

  • @user-uq2rr4xt9g
    @user-uq2rr4xt9g2 ай бұрын

    Some shelters or food service places impose very strict rules even on volunteers helping out at them. A catholic organization supplied sandwiches once a week but were prohibited from offering the prayer before the meal because the shelter was evangelical. So, we just found another place to partner with.

  • @youtubetroll6620
    @youtubetroll66202 ай бұрын

    the best solution, place all homeless in military bootcamp base, the base had all logistical services already in place, housing, food, medical, dental, legal, and you can just add housing specialist, job specialist, rehab specialist, benefits specialist, the base also has mental health services and facilities. and just simply process the people accordingly, in theory that would be the fastest way to get instant results, then you could use this model for other countries to help them end homelessness.

  • @youtubetroll6620
    @youtubetroll66202 ай бұрын

    imagine if Philippines, outlawed homeless.... they don't have enough housing even if everyone had a job...

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