Saturday, February 15, 2014

'Exile The Homeless' City Now Requires Permits And Large Fees To Feed The Homeless | ThinkProgress

As I mentioned in the previous postings, this apparent attack on the homeless is not just a Florida thing. Florida just happens to be in the news this week (along with South Carolina). Numerous states and cities, over the course of the last few years, seem to be under the impression that they can simply make being homeless illegal and it will go away.

The list is large: Atlanta, Phoenix, San Diego Los Angeles, Miami, Oklahoma City and more than 50 other cities have previously adopted some kind of anti-camping or anti-food-sharing laws, according to the National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty.

But lets take a look at what South Carolina has done:
Last August, the city of Columbia, South Carolina approved a new plan to give its homeless population an impossible choice: leave downtown or be arrested.

The city is now taking even more steps to criminalize homelessness. On Saturday, it will begin to strictly enforce an old and seldom-used ordinance requiring groups of 25 or more to obtain a permit and pay a hefty fee before congregating in a public park.

One impacted charity that was interviewed by the Free Times, Food Not Bombs, has been serving food to the homeless in Finlay Park every Sunday for 12 years. The group’s organizer, Judith Turnipseed, noted that the group has an impeccable track record and always tidies up after the meal. But with the new crackdown, Food Not Bombs will have to pay at least $120 per week for the right to feed the homeless, an extremely tall order for a group that’s not even an official 501(c)(3) organization but just serves out of the goodness of its heart.
'Exile The Homeless' City Now Requires Permits And Large Fees To Feed The Homeless | ThinkProgress

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