Santa Cruz Freedom Sleepers Face Rough Treatment at Sleep-Out #10

2 Harassment Arrests, 2 “Standing in a Parking Spot” Cites at Freedom Sleepers Protest #10
by Robert Norse
Wednesday Sep 16th, 2015 3:21 AM 

The 10th Freedom Sleepers Sleep Out at City Hall attracted nearly 20 sleepers–even after two massive raids by the police, colder/wetter weather, and At least 4, perhaps 5, agendas were posted describing city government commission meetings happening in the next 48 hours, but police refused to allow anyone on the supposedly legal passways through the park to view the agendas. One woman, Christina Barnes, was brutally arrested by two (out of five) First Alarm Security guards for “touching” a First Alarm security thug who was insisting she leave at a time when the park was open; Food Not Bombs Abbi Samuels was arrested for crossing the street with a coffee container for the protest. Activists continued to sleep on sidewalks adjoining City Hall and the library afterwards.

CLOSED DOOR MEETINGS; CLOSED EARS COUNCIL; CLOSED TO PUBLIC CITY HALL GROUNDS
While a closed door City Council meeting excluding the public examined (for the third time in as many meetings) City Manager Martin Bernal’s “performance”, homeless folks and housed supporters gathered to set up tents in the courtyard area, share food, and prepare to bed down for the night. Bernal is the most highly paid and powerful city official, and has still refused to follow the law allowing access to city hall grounds at night as well as the right to sleep for homeless folks.PROVOCATIVE FIRST ALARM AND
An unusually high number of First Alarm Security guards gathered near several of the more volatile homeless folks prompted anger, cries of harassment, and demands that the 4 (ultimately 5) uniformed patrolers move away. When that didn’t happen, cries “go home”, “get away”, and the like filled the air.

Sanctuary Village supporter Brent Adams set up a display table, but provoked controversy by insisting on speaking at length about his project and attacking the Freedom Sleeper approach, denouncing activists by name, and ultimately becoming the recipient of threats and pranks. Adams did go to some lengths to video the First Alarm brutality that subsequently passed unchecked by police. (There was no apparent investigation of the Security Guard’s subsequent assault on Christina Barnes–see below–and certainly no arrest of the assailant).

BRUTALITY HITS BARNES
Before security guards arrested Christina Barnes, a thin African-American woman, short-circuiting the usual practice of calling the police department to take action. A violent security guard, reportedly angered at Barnes’ ignoring him earlier in the evening when he demanded she leave from a public area, harshly handcuffed her, dragged her across the lawn and bricks, and ultimately shoved her into an thorn-ridden agave plant while she screamed in pain.

The Security Guard (who later refused to give his name) kept replying to her screams with “stop resisting arrest”–a familiar litany for police agencies covering up brutality. A crowd quickly gathered–with photos and video likely to come. Police then arrived–7 vehicles strong at one point to “interview” witnesses. Christina was taken to jail, then released some hours latter on a charge of “battery”. She later noted an older “False Alarm” heavy (as some call them) had invaded her personal space, and she had brushed his arm.

FIRST ALARM THUGS COVER UP BADGES AND DUMMY UP
Several First Alarm security guards, covered their name tags when approached and refused to show them to me or others demanding to know who they were. They also declined to name their superior officer. When followed with video cameras, one called the police and stated I had grabbed him, seeking to have me arrested. Police ignored this lie, but the First Alarmettes continued to decline to show their name tags, covering them up when the cameras arrived.

Police then turned to clearing those in the park. Since most if not all in the group had decided previously to move and set up their sleeping gear on the sidewalk, this operation simply involved a line of police standing menacingly in a line across City Hall, an area many had thought was the primeval First Amendment-protected zone. But not, apparently, in Santa Cruz at night.

NO CARS ALLOWED–BUT NO PEOPLE EITHER–AT LEAST, NO PROTESTERS!
Police then moved to cite Louise Drummond and Rabbi Phil Posner for “standing in a parking space”. Ironically, it was one of the many spaces where vehicles were prohibited from parking–apparently to deter activists from parking their vehicles there. At about this time the noisy bright 30′ high klieg lights went on–another anti-activist measure.

Officer Rodreguez then apprehended Abbi Samuels, crossing the street with a container of coffee and detained her to write her a citation. When he demanded her ID, she told him he knew who she was, as did the cluster of officers including Sergeant Forbus, standing a few feet away. Samuels was taken away in handcuffs and reportedly has refused to sign out at the jail and demanded to be taken to a magistrate for a probably cause hearing, which is supposed to be happening later this morning.

PRESS CONFERENCE AND PROBLEM-SOLVING
Freedom Sleepers then held a second meeting and decided to hold a public press conference next Tuesday at 3 PM when there will simultaneously be a City Council meeting. Folks then returned to their tents and sleeping bags–now arrayed all along the sidewalk, and tried to sleep. The intensity of events did sufficiently upset and arouse an ongoing stream of shouts, speeches, and exclamations. One activist reported that police earlier threatened to arrest one man doing percussion by striking two rods together with “unreasonable noise” because the noise was “bothersome” to the group across the street (which had not complained).

Several folks stopped by with food, donations, and warm expressions of support. Some suggested moving the protest to discourage the disruptively loud; others were still determined to return to City Hall for Freedom SleepOut #11 next Tuesday on September 22nd.

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Photographic Coverage of Freedom Sleepout #9 in Santa Cruz; #10 Begins 6 PM Tuesday September 15th


NOTE BY NORSE:  For more photos and commentary, go to https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/09/12/18777538.php?show_comments=1#18777612.
Join the Freedom Sleepers Tuesday Night in front of Santa Cruz City Hall to challenge the City’s brutal policies criminalizing homeless sleep in a city with no emergency shelter space.

Santa Cruz Police Make More Arrests at City Hall Sleepout #9

by Alex Darocy ( alex [at] alexdarocy.com )
Saturday Sep 12th, 2015 8:42 PM

On September 8, community members protesting laws that criminalize homelessness held their ninth in a series of group sleepouts at Santa Cruz City Hall, which is closed to the public at night. At least three people were issued citations, and two others were reportedly arrested for participating in the latest protest. Despite that, a large group stayed through the night and slept at City Hall. They call themselves “Freedom Sleepers” and have planned their next sleepout for September 15. [Top photo: A person inside a small tent in the courtyard of Santa Cruz City Hall is issued a citation. Scroll down for more photos from the September 8 sleepout.]

 

Since the sleepouts began on July 4, police have consistently attempted to disperse protesters away from City Hall and its garden courtyard by conducting raids. In the process, many participants have been issued citations, and several have been arrested.

One individual taken to jail on the evening of September 8/9 had been holding a protest sign and speaking loudly about the injustice of the police raids as people were being cited in the courtyard. She was arrested when she began to walk away from two police officers who were attempting to communicate with her. She had been standing on a flat, open section of the brick walkway that serves as the main entrance to the City Hall property. The area is only feet from the public sidewalk, but is considered by police to be part of the “no trespassing” zone.

To discourage individuals from sleeping at City Hall, portable stadium lighting units have been employed by police during the last two protests, and “no parking” hoods were placed over parking meters on Center and Church Streets to distance protesters from their cars.

The lighting units are placed in front of the courtyard where protesters have been setting up sleeping locations, and have been guarded all night by a team of First Alarm security guards who also watch over the protest.

Additionally, a no trespassing zone was established and maintained around council chambers while the September 8 city council meeting was in session. Food Not Bombs had previously been using the area to cook and share food.

During the police raids, protesters generally leave the courtyard area of City Hall and sleep on the sidewalk. The group decided early on at a general assembly that this would be the tactic used whenever the police arrived. This was a strategic decision, since the sidewalk around City Hall is exempt from the sit/lie ordinance, and sleeping there narrows the laws applicable to the protest. Many of the protesters want to be cited specifically for sleeping, while others have stated they are also concerned with issues more broadly related to the right to sleep or protest 24 hours a day at Santa Cruz City Hall, the center of local civic life.

For more information about the sleepouts, see:

Freedom Sleepers
http://freedomsleepers.org/
http://www.facebook.com/groups/380115462197408/

Alex Darocy
http://alexdarocy.blogspot.com/

§No trespassing zone around council chambers

by Alex Darocy Saturday Sep 12th, 2015 8:42 PM


§No parking on Church Street

by Alex Darocy Saturday Sep 12th, 2015 8:42 PM


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by Alex Darocy Saturday Sep 12th, 2015 8:42 PM


§The Santa Cruz City Hall courtyard

by Alex Darocy Saturday Sep 12th, 2015 8:42 PM


§City council meeting

by Alex Darocy Saturday Sep 12th, 2015 8:42 PM


§City Hall before the police raid

by Alex Darocy Saturday Sep 12th, 2015 8:42 PM


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by Alex Darocy Saturday Sep 12th, 2015 8:42 PM


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by Alex Darocy Saturday Sep 12th, 2015 8:42 PM


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by Alex Darocy Saturday Sep 12th, 2015 8:42 PM


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10th Homeless SleepOut to be Covered Live on Free Radio

 

Title: Free Radio to Cover 10th Homeless SleepOut at City Hall
START DATE: Tuesday September 15
TIME: 5:00 PM – 5:00 AM
Location Details:
City Hall Courtyard and then the Sidewalk at 809 Center St. next to City Hall. Parking available off of Church St. between Center and Chestnut, along the library side of Center, or the Civic Center Side of Church. Assuming police again put up obstructive barriors
Event Type: Protest
Contact Name Phil Posner (posting by Norse)
Email Address chatrabbi [at] aol.com
Phone Number
Address
BACK AGAIN FOR ROUND TEN
In a continuing challenge to the community to support new priorities in policing and restoration of rights for the poor, Freedom Sleepers will be back against with another Community Campout.

PUNISHMENT TO DRIVE AWAY THE PROTESTERS
There will be light PB and J snacks at mid-evening and coffee and bagels or pastries in the morning. City Manager Martin Bernal and Police Chief Kevin Vogel are likely to set up their protest-punishing klieg lights, no parking zones, and harsh ticketing at midnight policies. Nor have they agreed to let the public walk on the grounds to view city council agendas–as required by law, or to walk through along the accessways–as also mandated by law.

Lucero Luna, a vocal Spanish-speaking worker, was roughly grabbed last week without warning or charge by three police officers whose “compliance holds” left bruises on her body when she was released with an ‘interfering with an officer” type charge three hours later. Lucero’s response–she’ll be back Tuesday night.

WHY ARE WE THERE?
The Freedom Sleepers goal is to both change police practice, city law criminalizing homeless people at night if they fall asleep after 11 PM, and a safer space for homeless people to sleep. In spite of the police raids, many feel it is safer to sleep in groups with housed observers and some media nearby.

City hall is a place for the unhoused and the housed to meet and petition the government to recognize that the right to sleep is as elementary, as attorney Ed Frey once put it, as the right to breathe.

NO SHELTER, NO MERCY
The Paul Lee Loft– closure in June essentially left no Emergency Shelter in Santa Cruz. The Department of Justice has declared in an Idaho case that harassing homeless people at night if there’s no shelter is an unconstitutional form of cruel and unusual punishment. Neither Mayor Lane, nor Councilmember Posner, nor the eager “Drive the homeless RV’s out of town” crew that makes up the Council majority have put any remedy on the agenda.

Meanwhile homeless folks report getting ticketed multiple times at night, even at places where they had previoulsy been left alone–such as the Red Church at Lincoln and Cedar.

LIVE ON THE AIR
Free Radio Santa Cruz [FRSC] broadcaster Misty-eyed Merlin and his “Idle Hands” crew will be broadcasting at 101.3 FM throughout the evening playing old school rock ‘n roll and cracking jokes. He, Dolly, and Hans will be staying late to do a blow-by-blow coverage of any police attack on the protesters–which usually happens around midnight.

FRSC streams at freakradio.org . You can call in at 831-427-3772 or 831-469-3119. The FRSC collective is still offering a $500 reward for anyone who can find them a studio space for a year. Last radio broadcast will be September 21 if no one steps up.

Last week’s sleep out is described at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/09/10/18777446.php [“9th SleepOut Holds The Sidewalk…”]

For more info: follow the links at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/09/07/18777265.php [“At City Council and Under the Stars, Challenge the Crackdown…”]

http://freedomsleepers.org

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City escalates effort against camping-ban protestors, event attracts variety of supporters

by Zav Hershfield
Wednesday Sep 2nd, 2015 4:04 PM

Police arrest two, write 15 tickets at 8th community sleepout event, install floodlights. Community members discuss themselves, their history.

 

 

“Where are we supposed to go? After we’re run off somewhere, where do we go?” was the question asked by Lisa, a houseless person present in the city hall plaza at this week’s recurring Santa Cruz camping ban protest. Santa Cruz’s camping ban, present in the law since 1978, makes it illegal for someone to sleep outdoors in the city using any kind of sleeping gear. Blankets, tarps, sleeping bags, and tents are all included in this ban. The protestors here, now in their eighth week of the ongoing demonstration, say that the ban unfairly targets unhoused people and is used to make them unwelcome in Santa Cruz.And they do feel unwelcome. “It’s overwhelming,” said Lisa, “there are no basic services for us. I stopped going to work because can’t get a shower, don’t have anywhere to store my things.” It’s the loss of basic services like showers and simple meals that started these protests. Earlier this year, budget cuts to the Homeless Services Center on River Street led the to the organization’s choice to close down such services to people not living on site. The local chapter of Food Not Bombs – an international activist group that supplies free vegan food to protests and progressive causes – in partnership with the group Homeless United in Freedom and Friendship organized several breakfast servings at the corner of River and Highway 1 to draw public attention, but were unsuccessful in seeing the cuts reversed. Now folks like Lisa are crippled in their ability to work, store their belongings safely, and even keep themselves clean.

The city is certainly not making things easy for this current protest camp. There has been a regular police presence that arrives each night near midnight to ticket people sleeping in the plaza, generally for being in a park after hours or for blocking a sidewalk. This most recent campout saw a visit from fourteen officers of the Santa Cruz Police Department, who wrote out fifteen tickets and made two arrests of protestors who refused to sign their citations. The officers were more aggressive than they have so far been in these protests, yanking blankets and tarps off of sleepers and ticketing without warning. In addition, the city covered parking meters by the city hall plaza and set up three police-rented sets of floodlights that they trained on the protest site. The lights ran on smoky, roaring generators for the entire night. Local activist Steve Pleich recalled these same tactics used by the city during Peace Camp 2010, an earlier protest camp directed against the camping ban.

The protest draws a variety of people from the city. One sleeper, Fred, ticketed earlier in the night for playing amplified music from his own car “without a permit,” shared his story wholeheartedly. Fred is a 3 year veteran of the US Army who served in Panama City as an intelligence officer during the Vietnam era and currently lives out of his car with his three dogs. Corwyn is a Saint Bernard, Moustache a terrier mix, and Lukie a Chihuahua mix. Fred credited the dogs with being his best friends and said they save his life every day. He’s got an ingrained sense of humor and sarcasm that he said comes from his upbringing in New York, just outside of the Bronx. Fred made a little light of his ticket when told the name of the officer that wrote him up. “Winston,” he laughed,”tastes good like a cigarette should!” recalling the advertising slogan. He’s got a serious attitude towards the situation of houseless folks like himself though. Recounting his experiences being ticketed or shoved along from a sleep spot, he growled “I want to tell the judge, put on a homeless person’s clothes and go to downtown Santa Cruz and you will be absolutely appalled. The police treat you with absolute disrespect.”

Another sleeper present was Frank Lopez, who is registered with the housing facilities at the Homeless Services Center, but still came out in support of the protests. Frank has had a long history of involvement in social causes. He was a Brown Beret with the United Farmworkers through the 1960s and participated in protests against Safeway grocery stores, as well as a caravan drive through California to provide food, clothing, and medical supplies to undocumented farmworkers. Also present were a young couple, Adam and Rein, who were actually attracted to the site when they saw the enormous lights. They had no idea the protests had been going on, but stopped on a detour taken to avoid a one-way street. They expressed some concerns that the site was so out of the way, and would have liked to see more people present.

Perhaps all these people will be at the next sleepout, on Tuesday, September 8. The organizers are welcoming food, clothing, sleeping gear, and monetary donations, and encouraging folks to come out and learn more about the challenges facing unhoused people in Santa Cruz.

§the protest site, at sundown

by Zav Hershfield Wednesday Sep 2nd, 2015 4:04 PM

 

 

§police set up floodlight

by Zav Hershfield Wednesday Sep 2nd, 2015 4:04 PM

 

 

§Fred w his dog Corwyn

by Zav Hershfield Wednesday Sep 2nd, 2015 4:04 PM

 

 

§police ticket citizen journalist

by Zav Hershfield Wednesday Sep 2nd, 2015 4:04 PM

 

 

§cop stands over protesting sleeper

by Zav Hershfield Wednesday Sep 2nd, 2015 4:04 PM

 

 

§Max displays his citation

by Zav Hershfield Wednesday Sep 2nd, 2015 4:04 PM

 

 


Comments  (Hide Comments)

Repeatedly, explicitly, for years.”Where?”

“No where in California.” (I’d have to check the trial transcript(s) to get the exact quote(s), but that is very close to verbatim)

Judge Gallagher made that very clear. The Santa Cruz Appellate upheld that opinion, as did the California 6th Circuit Appellate. Repeatedly. This was all well known, well before the latest protest began, didn’t they tell y’all?!

Unless there are serious people planning a serious challenge via a higher court (the Federal 9th Circuit Appellate might disagree, given the oral arguments in Desertrain v. Los Angeles and the recent statement of interest from the DoJ), the judicial branch has been shown to be a dead end.

California bill SB-608 has been stalled in committee (http://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billStatusClient.xhtml?bill_id=201520160SB608) because it was DOA. The legislative branch, including the Federal Congress, appears to be a dead end.

Santa Cruz City Council is a dead end. It seems likely that the California AG and Governor are also a dead end.

Are we exhausted yet?

by Robert Norse

Wednesday Sep 2nd, 2015 9:37 PM

Moving and educational narrative account with photos that bring the people and situation more sharply into focus. Nice work, Zav.Though I missed some of the police action, after being arrested and jailed in the initial raid as I stood on the sidewalk, I was told that police came four times, giving out additional tickets.

Keith McHenry, who maintained a hot pot of coffee with his portable stove, got two citations, one as he unloaded equipment from his truck in the newly-declared “no parking corridor” around the City Hall Courtyard. The second he got while sleeping in one of the “no cars” spaces along with another activist.

Police refused to acknowledge the right of the public (including Freedom Sleepers) to have the legally required 24-hour access to City Council and associated committees and commissions under the Brown Act. The man I was arrested with–Kevin–was actually sitting next to the agendas.

Max Green, pictured above, goes to court tomorrow morning (8:30 AM, Dept. 1). Promised some legal help from a local public defender that has not materialized, Max will ask Judge Burdick for a second continuance to find a lawyer. Freedom Sleepers is still looking for an attorney as well. He was ticketed as he stood next to the agendas. Three of the agendas (City Commission for the Prevention of Violence Against Women, Planning Commission, and Zoning Administrator) were for meetings to be held in the next two days. [Gov. Code § 54954.2(a)(1) requires 24-hour access for a 72-hour period.

A recent up date of the Public Meetings Act [http://www.cacities.org/Resources-Documents/Member-Engagement/Professional-Departments/City-Attorneys/Publications/OP-IV-Supplement_Final_2013-09-16.aspx ] suggests that the state Attorney General’s office supports this position [78 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 327 (1995)].

This would indicate that not only I was falsely arrested and taken to jail, but so was Max Green and anyone else who got a citation for MC 13.04.011 (being in a “closed area”)–since it was improper to close the area where the agendas were posted. Since virtually every citation given since the first protest on July 4 was for MC 13.04.011, police and the city attorney have a lot of explaining to do.

Police and rangers, while generous with Sleeping Ban citations elsewhere in the city (as well as “stay-away” orders), have been driving protesters to the sidewalk with “closed area” citations. Perhaps cops are shy to showcase how abusive they are to those without shelter. Harassing, citing, and jailing homeless people for sleeping when all emergency shelter has been abandoned as a matter of policy–at least until the winter? Not good PR or sound financial policy considering the Department of Justice’s recent support of the homeless in Boise, Idaho. Bearcats, yes; basic human rights, no.

by Robert Norse

Wednesday Sep 2nd, 2015 9:56 PM

I was arrested after a Sgt. Rodreguez approached me on the sidewalk–the narrow “legal” area–and told me he’d seen me “in the park after closing hours”. He ignored my pointing out that the entire City Hall Courtyard was required by law to be open because of the agenda posting issue (as well as the fact that it’s the seat of government, the most important of all public forums).In his eagerness to ticket me, as I stood in the legal area on the sidewalk, Rodreguez ignored others still actually in the park, suggested he was especially interested in giving me a ticket (which would be my second). Somewhat disgusted at being targeted, I suggested he had no probable cause to cite any of us and asked to be taken to a magistrate for a hearing.

If you request this during the day when the courts are open, police are supposedly required to take you to a court in a timely manner prior to jail booking or requiring you to sign a ticket. However it was around midnight, so he took me to jail, where I got various stories that I’d be held for anywhere from 3 to 72 hours before being taken to court. Not wishing to miss my weekly meeting of HUFF (Homeless United for Friendship & Freedom), I subsequently gritted my teeth and signed a promise to appear in court for an October arraignment.

Police also continued to ignore the clear wording of MC 13.04.011c which states “No one shall enter or remain in any park, building, facility, grounds or park road (EXCEPT A SPECIFICALLY DESIGNATED AND CLEARLY MARKED PUBLIC ACCESS WAY THROUGH A PARK), during those hours that the place or facility is closed to the general public.” [EMPHASIS mine]

And, of course, most importantly, Police Chief Vogel, City Manager Martin Bernal, and Mayor Don Lane have offered no legal place for those outside to sleep between 11 PM and 8:30 AM at night. Hence such anti-homeless closures and bans are “cruel and unusual punishment”. We’ve heard nothing of our local ACLU–fast asleep as ever–hiking up their briefs and filing some lawsuits. Freedom Sleepers, however, intends to be back next Tuesday. Hope you’ll join us.

I’ll be playing some audio from the 8th SleepOut last Tuesday on Free Radio at 101.3 FM (streams at http://www.freakradio.org) between 6 and 8 PM tomorrow night. It’ll be archived at http://radiolibre.org/brb/brb150903.mp3 .

So what about all the other protests—like the Boston Tea Party. The people who protested and got assaulted, arrested that brought you a free and independent America, the 40 hour week, the eight hour day, overtime pay, paid sick days, paid vacation days, the women’s right to vote, desegregation, civil rights for minority, justice against racism, etc. If you enjoy any of these benefits that were achieved by protests but still think the right to protest isn’t important or a right —than you are a hypocrite!Gotta Love those FALSE “Obstructing the Sidewalk” Tickets that SCPD gives out. They need to be held accountable for them. It only proves SCPD good officers will taint themselves by easily lying as ordered by superiors, break laws themselves on duty and violate people’s civil rights—and we are supposed to trust and respect them!

Get POLITICS out of SCPD!

https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/09/02/18776978.php

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Pushback in Laguna Beach; Repression in Santa Cruz

NOTES BY NORSE:  Some HUFF activists have successfully pressed former Santa Cruz City Attorney John Barisone for exemption from some provisions of the Downtown Ordinance for disabled people.

Specifically “Push Back” Pat Colby has secured verbal (but not written) assurance that she will not be hassled under the hourly “Move Along” law.  This unique burdensome ordinance (MC 5.43.020(2) has the effect if not the intention of discouraging and burdening vendors, performers, panhandlers,and political tablers by requiring them to move 100′ every hour (to one of the increasingly few “legal” spots) and not to return for 24 hours.  Fines for violation are more than $300 and the ordinance has never been challenged beyond the trial court level.

In Santa Cruz, there’s been no acknowledgment of the needs of disabled folks around MC 6.36 (the Camping Ordinance which includes broad Sleeping, Blanket, and Camping bans).  Fines of $157 and Stay-Away orders are regularly levied against homeless people with no consideration of their possible disabled status.   To make matters worse, even the sketchy protection given by the “dismiss if on waiting lists of shelters” provisions of MC 6.36.055 have become inapplicable.

Giving private agencies like the Paul Lee Loft and River St. Shelter broad power to pick and choose who they’ll spare from the punishment of the Sleeping Ban has itself been a discriminatory problem. I have been unsuccessful in getting clear data from the City Attorney’s office as to how many homeless people are still ending up punished and prosecuted in spite of the obvious shelter deficiency.

However recently, in search of federal and state money, the Homeless (Lack of)Services Center has completely closed down all broader services to the general homeless population including meals, laundry, showers, and bathrooms.  Those without a “pathway to housing” may not be able to get on the River St. Shelter waiting list, and the Paul Lee list no longer exists.  Hence the whole homeless population of 1500-2000 in the City face the ticketing whim of cops and rangers urged on by right-wing bigots in the Santa Cruz Neighbors, Marlin Granlund’s Public Works Parking Dept., the Downtown Association, Take Back Santa Cruz, and other homeless-aphobic groups public and private.

The federal government has recently weighed legally–noting sleeping bans in cities with inadequate shelter are cruel and unusual punishments in the Bell v. Boise case.  This has tongues wagging, but no lawyers writing briefs here yet.

Meanwhile Freedom Sleepers, the group now planning its 8th challenge to the Sleeping Ban with a mass sleep-out on the City Hall grounds on September 1st, continues to face considerable police harassment.

Police removedtwo key Freedom Sleeper activists  in handcuffs charging them with felony “conspiracy” and “vandalism” charges, punishable by years in prison.   Their “crime”=-unrelated to the Freedom Sleeper protests is satirizing and exposing the City’s illegal constriction of public free expression space downtown through its demeaning and unconstitutional “blue boxes”.   After city officials illegally reduced the number of boxes, someone added additional blue marks creating more boxes on the sidewalk designated “free speech zones” where artists, activists, and street folks generally are allowed to socialize, rest, and table.  This apparently was done without concealment under the video surveillance of numerous cameras on Pacific Avenue.

City officials had earlier violated MC 5.43.005 (c) and (d) by proceeding to create new smaller “allowed” areas without City Council Resolution.  Police harassed, then arrested artists who used the older areas sandblasted away by the city officials.  See “Unpermitted Blue Boxes Appear Overnight on Pacific Avenue” at https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/08/24/18776595.php .                       The officials however were not taken into custody and required to pay $5000 bail to get out.  Keith McHenry goes to his initial hearing August 31 at 8:15 AM where Food Not Bombs will be serving a meal.  Freedom Sleepers  will return to City Hall grounds for their 8th sleepout on the evening of September 1st .

                          Meanwhile we’re still awaiting some movement from the local ACLU to take legal action on behalf of homeless people here–or at least those who are disabled–regarding the right to sleep–not anywhere and everywhere, but somewhere.  And to defend McHenry and others being punished for exposing the City’s crackdown on street performers.

 

ACLU Sues Laguna Beach Over Treatment of Homeless People

By jgallego August 20, 2015 at 12:43 PM

http://voiceofoc.org/2015/08/aclu-sues-laguna-beach-for-discriminating-against-the-homeless/

Nearly a decade after ACLU Foundation of Southern California sued Laguna Beach over the city’s and police department’s handling of homeless residents, the organization has again sued the city for failing to provide adequate facilities for  homeless people with mental and physical disabilities.

In a Thursday press release, ACLU SoCal said it seeks to require city officials to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) by providing supported housing appropriate for the chronically homeless with disabilities. Following is the press release and a link to the suit:

Laguna Beach, CA – The ACLU Foundation of Southern California (ACLU SoCal) and the law firm of Paul Hastings LLP today sued the City of Laguna Beach for discriminating against homeless individuals with disabilities.
 
Currently, the city’s homelessness program provides only limited emergency shelter – often inaccessible to persons with disabilities – yet mandates strict enforcement of laws prohibiting sleeping in public, even against those who cannot access this shelter. 
 
The lawsuit, brought on behalf of five chronically homeless individuals with mental and physical disabilities, including a homeless veteran, seeks to require Laguna Beach officials to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) by providing needed supportive housing – that is housing with wrap-around services such as mental health care and case management – appropriate for chronically homeless persons with disabilities.   
 
“Laguna Beach is best known as an affluent, idyllic seaside art colony, but a small, yet significant portion of the population suffers from mental and physical disabilities that leave them unable to access housing,” said Kristopher Wood, an attorney with Paul Hastings. “The City refuses to provide permanent supportive housing that would alleviate the problem; yet continues to cite physically and mentally disabled homeless individuals who have no other option for sleeping outdoors.  That conduct is simply illegal under the ADA and the Constitution.”

The lawsuit also challenges the city’s practice of ticketing disabled, homeless persons who cannot access this shelter for sleeping or lodging in public as cruel and unusual punishment. 
 
“The city has adopted a strategy that punishes homeless individuals with disabilities,” said Heather Maria Johnson, a staff attorney with the ACLU SoCal’s Dignity for All Project. “Unfortunately, the tactics are not new and what is happening in Laguna Beach is all too commonplace. But the difference in this case is the city has chosen to ignore the issue despite being put on notice years ago.”

In 2008, the ACLU SoCal challenged a Laguna Beach ordinance that allowed police to ticket homeless individuals who had no other place to sleep. That case was quickly settled, with the city agreeing to repeal sections of the ordinance that prohibited sleeping or camping in public places. Following that lawsuit, a shelter was established.
 
However, after the end of the settlement period, Laguna Beach officials reinstated the old prohibitions and police resumed ticketing homeless individuals, the vast majority of whom have mental or physical disabilities and often have difficulty accessing the shelter. The current lawsuit challenges the city’s new strategy. 
 
“With a population of just over 23,000, Laguna Beach is a very welcoming place for some.” said Belinda Escobosa Helzer, director of ACLU SoCal’s Orange County office.  “But if you happen to be a homeless resident with disabilities, the city makes sure to let you know you are not welcome. This is a city with the resources to address the issue as required by law.” Continue reading

Round 6: Freedom Sleepers Resume Protest at City Hall

Title: Round 6: Freedom Sleepers Resume Protest at City Hall
START DATE: Tuesday August 18
TIME: 5:00 PM – 5:00 PM
Location Details:
In the courtyard at Santa Cruz City Hall at 809 Center St.

The event will run from 5 PM on Tuesday to 8 AM on Wednesday. Santa Cruz City Hall It’s across from the Main Library and the Civic Auditorium.

Event Type: Other
Contact Name Phil Posner (commentary by Norse)
Email Address chatrabbi [at] aol.com
Phone Number
Address
For the fifth night this summer, a Coalition of Camp of Last Resort/Homeless Dept, HUFF, Food Not Bombs, & Homeless Persons Legal Assistance Project as well as others will be trying to spend a night near City Hall.

City Hall is where Santa Cruz City Council meets, where the offices of the Mayor and City Councilmembers are. The staff who runs the City;s anti-homeless programs also work in buildings nearby. Activists will be protesting MC 6.36.010a–the City’s Sleeping Ban.

EMERGENCY SERVICES SHUT DOWN
The Homeless (Lack of) Services Center has formally acknowledged the wholesale, conscious, and systematic shutdown of all emergency services from the City-County “Shelter Provider”

This eliminates all meals, showers, laundry, and toilet access except for clients in programs, aborting the original purpose of 115 Coral St. The County’s report can be seen at http://sccounty01.co.santa-cruz.ca.us/BDS/Govstream2/Bdsvdata/non_legacy_2.0/agendas/2015/20150818-666/PDF/013.pdf

There is no provision for opening up walk-in campgrounds or legal places for overnight survival sleeping in cars.

LAST COUNCIL MEETING SHUTS OFF COMMENT
Many speakers were cut off by Mayor Lane–and no Councilmember offered to extend the Oral Communications time.

There’ll be a mid-evening snack later, and morning coffee at 7 AM after the sleep-in.

“PUNISHMENT FOR SLEEP” LAW ENFORCEMENT CONTINUES
1500-2000 homeless people in Santa Cruz for the general population face $157 citations and harassment for sleeping in parks–but have no legal place to go.

In addition they most avoid the safety of groups and well-lighted areas. They have no real option to call police for problems because they face citations themselves.

COUNCIL STAFF PLOTS FUTURE ATTACKS ON POOR
Last Tuesday’s City Council had no restoration of services nor providing of any moderation of the harsh anti-homeless laws.

In fact, new laws have been proposed by the City Manager for next week involving the banning RV parking 2 AM – 6 AM city-wide and elimination of “ovedrsized” parking spots. See http://www.cityofsantacruz.com/home/showdocument?id=44947

WAITING LIST UNCERTAINTY
Up to now, city law (MC 6.36.055) has required dismissal of all camping tickets for those on the Waiting Lists of the Paul Lee loft and the River St. Shelter. HLOSC Director Jannan Thomas met with Freedom Sleepers today and announced there is no longer a Paul Lee Loft Waiting List.

The status of the River St. Shelter Waiting List continues to be unclear. Prior word from the River St. Shelter indicates they only provide beds for people with a social worker, a referral, or out of the hospital. On Sunday night, Alexi, a disabled woman, was reportedly denied a bed there.

With no waiting list for the Paul Lee Loft and a highly restricted list for the River St. Shelter, sleepers will no longer have the protection of those lists and will have a harder task confronting these cruel “drive the homeless out of town” tickets.

This essentially means the end of all Emergency Services in Santa Cruz–other than those with religious requirements or the limited help provided by Food Not Bombs and other samaritans.

POLICE APPARENTLY TARGET PHOTOGRAPHERS; IGNORE LAW
Police intensified their crackdown last Tuesday with citations for four journalist/photographers there for “being in a park after hours”.

Israel Dawson was arrested for not getting his ID quickly enough and charged with “resisting arrest”. Lauren Dawson and Robert Norse both received 24-hour Stay-Away orders as well as $198 citations for being in a park after dark.

All four of the journalists cited or arrested are slated to return to report on the struggle to restore basic human rights at City Hall and for the homeless community all around the City.

Police ignored the clear wording of MC 13.04.011 which holds you can be on an access pathway through the closed area.

They also ignored the more fundamental right to be outside City Hall at night to petition for a redress of grievanceds as guaranteed by the First Amendment to the U.S. and California Constitutions.

How City officials can allow police to ban people from reading publicly posted city agendas at night is still a mystery to many of us. Particularly since state lazw requires the agendas be publicly available 24-hours-a-day for 72 hours before any public meeting.

GET READY TO BED DOWN!
Join us in pajamas and bathrobes (teddy bears optional) if you wish to support the Right to Rest.

For die-hards and a third round of coffee, HUFF (Homeless United for Friendship & Freedom) will be meeting at 703 Pacific at the Sub Rosa Cafe (next to the Bike Church) 11 AM Wednesday morning the 19th.

To review last Tuesday’s protest, see “Santa Cruz Police Arrest Journalist and Issue Stay Away Orders at Community Sleepout #5” at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/08/16/18776253.php

This posting reflects my perspective and hopefully that of other activists. Living it is better than reading about it. Come and do your part.

Continue reading

Santa Cruz Police Arrest Journalist and Issue Stay Away Orders at Community Sleepout #5

Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

On August 11, community members in Santa Cruz held their fifth in a series of sleepouts organized at City Hall to protest local laws that make it illegal for homeless people to sleep in public. Police arrived at midnight and citations were issued to many in the group of demonstrators who were attempting to sleep in the courtyard as an act of civil disobedience. 24-hour stay away orders were issued to at least two of those present, and a journalist who has been documenting the whole series of protests was arrested and taken to jail. After police left, most of the protesters remained and slept on the sidewalk until the next morning. They have announced their next action is planned for the evening of Tuesday, August 18, again to be located at Santa Cruz City Hall. [Top photo: Police issue citations at Santa Cruz City Hall on August 11. Scroll down for more photos.]

 

 

The courtyard area of Santa Cruz City Hall is closed to the public at night, which is one of the issues homeless rights demonstrators have been targeting. Their desire is to see city parks opened at night so that people without homes will have a place to go where they are not targeted by law enforcement.Another focus of the protests has been the local Sleeping/Camping Ban, which prohibits sleeping in public (with or without setting up bedding) in the city between the hours of 11pm and 8:30am. The ordinance also criminalizes sleeping in cars.

The sleepout on August 11 may have been the first time the city’s parks stay away ordinance has been used against political protesters and journalists.

Many of those participating in the campouts are now calling themselves, “Freedom Sleepers.”

They first arrived at City Hall at 3pm. The weather was warm and some individuals took advantage of the solar shower booth organizers set-up in the courtyard. A duo played music in the courtyard through the campers’ PA system as the city council meeting began inside. Adjacent to council chambers, snacks were provided on a Food Not Bombs table, which also displayed crates marked, “Free Produce & Groceries.”

Later in the afternoon, the campers made their first appearance at a city council meeting. They have been holding the sleepouts at City Hall since July, but the council had been out of session for summer vacation.

During the public oral communications period, they each used their two-minute turn at the city council podium to read sections from a recent statement of interest filed by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) in a legal case involving an ordinance which bans sleeping and camping in public places in Boise, Idaho.

Activists in Santa Cruz, as well as those opposing sleeping bans in other cities across the country, have applauded the DOJ’s involvement in the case, and hope this will lead to the repeal of the ordinances.

The DOJ is taking the position that laws that criminalize homelessness violate the “Cruel and Unusual Punishments” Clause of the Eighth amendment of the U.S Constitution.

“Pursuant to that clause, the Supreme Court has held that laws that criminalize an individual’s status, rather than specific conduct, are unconstitutional,” the statement of interest states.

The statement of interest also notes that under the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, the federal government may enforce the rights of individuals to be free from, “unconstitutional and abusive policing.”

The DOJ also mentioned in its conclusion that the lack of available space in homeless shelters should be a measure of whether camping ordinances can be enforced:

“For the reasons stated above, the Court should adopt the analysis in Jones to evaluate Boise’s anti-camping and disorderly conduct ordinances as applied to Plaintiffs in this case. If the Court finds that it is impossible for homeless individuals to secure shelter space on some nights because no beds are available, no shelter meets their disability needs, or they have exceeded the maximum stay limitations, then the Court should also find that enforcement of the ordinances under those circumstances criminalizes the status of being homeless and violates the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution.”

The public was only allowed 30 minutes to speak, and some of the sleep activists were not given the chance to address the council. The meeting eventually adjourned at 10pm. Shortly after that the campers began to spread out in the courtyard and turn in for the night. Some of the protesters have houses of their own to go to, while others in the group are houseless and live on the street.

Police conducted a raid on the sleepout at around midnight.

When they arrived, one man was sleeping next to his wheelchair, which he parked on the walkway near the entrance to council chambers. He was cited, but he maintained his ground and slept in the same location until morning.

About ten officers with the Santa Cruz Police Department, lead by Sgt. Forbus, arrived during the raid. Forbus appeared to be video recording protesters with an Apple iPad device. Several sheriff’s deputies responded as well, but not until after the courtyard had already been cleared by the SCPD.

Many were issued citations for being in the courtyard after-hours and were told to move to the narrow portion of the sidewalk in front of City Hall. The sidewalk, however, was not a safe zone either, and individuals were issued citations for obstructing the sidewalk.

During the raid, videographer Israel Dawson was abruptly arrested while in the act of recording and documenting the protest. As they handcuffed his wrists together from behind, police accused him of walking away from them when they were trying to get his name. He was booked into county jail on the charge of resisting arrest. His assistant, Lauren Benson, was holding a boom microphone that was wired to Dawson’s video camera at the time of the arrest. She was issued a citation for being in the City Hall courtyard after hours, in addition to a 24-hour stay away order. Dawson and Benson have been documenting the series of sleepouts for Dawson’s final project in the Social Documentation Master of Arts program at UC Santa Cruz.

Homeless rights advocate Robert Norse was also issued a 24-hour stay away order by police after he entered the courtyard area and walked along the main pathway to council chambers. He argued it was the public’s right to use the pathway to access the city council agenda, but was issued a citation by police regardless.

The parks stay away ordinance was adopted by the city council in 2013 as a method of eliminating “problem” behavior in public parks. Under the ordinance, a park user can potentially be banned for 24 hours after receiving one citation of any type in a city park. Repeated citations can lead to a person being banned from a park for up to a year, and a violation of a stay away order can result in a misdemeanor arrest, which is punishable by jail time.

After the police finished the raid and left, several individuals did return to the courtyard area, but most in the group decided to sleep on the sidewalk in front of City Hall that evening, where they stayed until the morning.

For more information about the Freedom Sleepers, see:
http://www.facebook.com/groups/380115462197408/

To read the DOJ statement of interest filed in the Boise case, see:
http://www.justice.gov/opa/file/643766/download

Alex Darocy
http://alexdarocy.blogspot.com/

Author’s Note: In the course of photographing and reporting on this event during the evening of August 11/12, I was also issued a citation by police for being in the City Hall courtyard after hours.

§Santa Cruz City Hall

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

§City Hall courtyard

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

§City Hall courtyard hours

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

 

 

To read the DOJ statement of interest filed in the Boise case, see:
http://www.justice.gov/opa/file/643766/download

§Freedom Sleeper Rabbi Philip Posner speaks to the city council

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

On the left, Israel Dawson and Lauren Benson can be seen documenting the meeting.

§Santa Cruz Food Not Bombs

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

§Free Produce & Groceries

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

§Solar shower booth in use in the City Hall courtyard

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

§City Hall courtyard after the council meeting adjourned

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

§Man sleeps next to his wheelchair next to council chambers

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

§Police arrive

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

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by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

§Police issue citations

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

§

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

§

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

 

 

§Police force demonstrators to move the free produce tables

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

§Moving everyone to the sidewalk

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

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by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:52 PM

 

 

§Individual who said he was being cited for obstructing the sidewalk

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:54 PM

 

 

Individual who said he was being cited for obstructing the sidewalk

§Sgt. Forbus, Santa Cruz Police (on the right)

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:56 PM

 

 

Sgt. Forbus, Santa Cruz Police (on the right)

§Israel Dawson being arrested

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 6:58 PM

 

 

Israel Dawson being arrested

 

 

Police surround Lauren Benson, whi is holding all the video equipment after Dawson was arrested

 

 

Demonstrators chant, “shame” and approach police car as Dawson is prepared for transport

 

 

Sleepers line the sidewalk in front of City Hall in the pre-dawn hour

§Sleepers in front of City Hall in the pre-dawn hour

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 7:03 PM

 

 

Sleepers in front of City Hall in the pre-dawn hour

§Sleeper in front of City Hall

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 7:04 PM

 

 

Sleeper in front of City Hall

§Sleeper in front of City Hall

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 7:04 PM

 

 

Sleeper in front of City Hall

§Sleeper in City Hall courtyard and an early riser

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 7:05 PM

 

 

Sleeper in City Hall courtyard and an early riser

§Sleepers in front of City Hall

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 7:06 PM

 

 

Sleepers in front of City Hall

§Sleepers in front of City Hall

by Alex Darocy Sunday Aug 16th, 2015 7:07 PM

 

Sleepers in front of City Hall Continue reading

Sleep-Out #5 to Greet Council on Tuesday August 11th

Title: Freedom Sleepers Outside and Inside City Council
START DATE: Tuesday August 11
TIME: 3:00 PM – 3:00 AM
Location Details:
The event will run from 3 PM on Tuesday to 8 AM on Wednesday. Santa Cruz City Hall Courtyard festivities begin around 3 PM, outside the first City Council meeting of the fall (well, late summer). It’s across from the Main Library and the Civic Auditorium. in the Council courtyard area
Event Type: Protest
BACK FROM VACATION AND STILL EMPTY-HANDED
The City Council is back after its six weeks of sunny summer vacation. During the Budget hearings, the Council did nothing about the “Homeless Services Center” [HLOSC] Shelter Shutdown and cut-off of all Emergency Servces (meals, laundry, showers, bathrooms).

Nothing is on their Tuesday agenda to lift the Sleeping Ban, modify that law or any of the other anti-homeless laws. Nor is there any provision for opening up walk-in campgrounds or legal places for overnight survival sleeping in cars.

1500-2000 homeless people in Santa Cruz for the general population face $157 citations and harassment for sleeping in parks–but have no legal place to go.

U.S DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE TAKES THE LEAD
This week, the U.S. Dept. of Justice for the first time filed a supporting Statement of Interest in a long-fought Boise, Idaho case. [See http://www.examiner.com/article/u-s-department-of-justice-supports-homeless-rights-lawsuit ]

There homeless advocates sued cops and their bosses to end police harassment of sleepers and secure restitution for past injuries and amnesty for past false convictions. The federal government’s intervention is a historic action and one we will urge them to do in Santa Cruz as well in future lawsuits.

SOAP-BOX AND SIP SOUP
Homeless folks are invited to speak out on the green outside City Council and inside at 5 PM during Oral Communications.
The Council only allows 3 minutes, but we intend to restore free speech outside. Bring your soapbox.

Advocates also plan a Press Conference (probably after the City Council’s Oral Communications period at 5 PM). There we’ll update folks on the current situation and announce future plans for actions to educate and activate the community.

There’ll be coffee and soup in the mid-afternoon, a mid-evening snack later, and morning coffee at 7 AM after the sleep-in.

Activists will be gathering information on sleep deprivation cites, medical turnaways, and other discriminatory behavior throughout the afternoon and evening.

NO MORE WALK-IN SERVICES AT CORAL ST.– NO DISMISSAL OF TICKETS FOR “BEING ON THE WAITING LIST”
Up to now, city law (MC 6.36.055) has required dismissal of all camping tickets for those on the Waiting Lists of the Paul Lee loft and the River St. Shelter. HLOSC Director Jannan Thomas met with Freedom Sleepers today and announced there is no longer a Paul Lee Loft Waiting List.

Further the HLOSC will not be providing walk-in services at all to any homeless folks, except those referred by other agencies. Prior word from the River St. Shelter indicates they only take people with a social worker, a referral, or out of the hospital.

With no waiting list for the Paul Lee Loft and a highly restricted list for the River St. Shelter, sleepers will no longer have the protection of those lists and will have a harder task confronting these cruel “drive the homeless out of town” tickets.

This essentially means the end of all Emergency Services in Santa Cruz–other than those with religious requirements or the limited help provided by Food Not Bombs and other samaritans.

LAST SUNDAY
Last Sunday’s Sleep-Out resulted in no citations for the 20-30 people at City Hall during the night in spite of the angry demands of a zealous First Alarm security guard.

Nor did policed ticket activists reading posted agendas outside City Council though they were standing “in a closed area”. Instead they drove them away with threats.

How City officials can allow police to ban people from reading publicly posted city agendas at night is still a mystery to many of us. Particularly since state lazw requires the agendas be publicly available 24-hours-a-day for 72 hours before any public meeting.

GET READY TO BED DOWN!
Join us in pajamas and bathrobes (teddy bears optional) if you wish to support the Right to Rest.

For die-hards and a third round of coffee, HUFF (Homeless United for Friendship & Freedom) will be meeting at 703 Pacific at the Sub Rosa Cafe (next to the Bike Church).

More info at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/08/01/18775639.php .

This description reflects my perspective and hopefully that of other activists. Living it is better than reading about it. Come and do your part.

The Federal Government Says Being Homeless Should Not Be A Crime

NOTE BY NORSE:  Tip of the hat to Peggy Lee Kennedy down L.A.-way for passing on this encouraging “Statement of Interest” brief filed by the federal government against a Boise, Idaho Sleeping Ban.

Article: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/homeless-crime-sleeping_55c3742ee4b0923c12bbb772
Meanwhile in Santa Cruz, we are preparing our next daytime/nighttime Sleep Protest at City Hall for Tuesday August 11th–when the City Council returns from its restful vacation.   Folks are invited to wear Sleepware and cast a few yawns of wisdom at the Council during the 5 PM Oral Communications period.  More info on the SleepOut (#5 in a continuing series) on www.indybay.org/santacruz  shortly.
Homeless people–even an elderly disabled woman with a service dog–continue to be harassed and ticketed for Sleepcrime when Santa Cruz has no shelter for 95% of its homeless.  Food services at the Homeless (Lack of) Services Center continue to be a preserve of those “in programs” with “a pathway to housing”  (whatever that means).
Additionally HUFF was told this week that so-called emergency medical providers like Dominican Hospital, Emeline, and Planned Parenthood turned away a homeless woman recently raped in search of medical examination, advice, and treatment.  Please report difficulties you or homeless friends are having obtaining services–the more specific the information, the better.

 

Grab Your Blankets and Join Us–4th SleepOut at City Hall 7 PM 8-2 Main Post Office

 

Title:  Freedom Sleepers Resume Protest at City Hall
START DATE:  Sunday August 02
TIME:  7:00 PM – 7:00 AM

Chow down at Food Not Bombs 4-6 PM, then gather in front of the Main Post Office for final preparations, followed by a parade to City Hall, a modest meal there, and a night outside City Hall. We encourage the community to join us in a night of peaceful petitioning and protest to end the City-wide Sleeping Ban.
Event Type: Protest
We continue this conscience-raising solidarity with homeless people outside who have no legal place to sleep (1500-2000 of them).

Claudia Brown, speaking for the Homeless (Lack of) Services Center declared recently that the HLOSC will not be serving people who don’t have a funding stream (such as SSI or Section 8 Vouchers)–as a “path to housing”.

Meanwhile police and rangers continue harassment ticketing with additional “stay-away” orders for the “crime” of sleeping after 11 PM outside. City Council’s response has been to increase penalties, add more police, and create more “closed” areas.

For more background on the protest as well as the latest flier, go to “3rd Sleep-in at City Hall” at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/07/23/18775300.php .

For the saga of that 3rd Sleepout (or part of it anyway), check out “Community Sleep-ins Continue at Santa Cruz City Hall” at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/07/31/18775606.php

See also “Freedom Sleepers” at http://www.facebook.com/search/str/Freedom%20Sleepers/keywords_top .

NOTE: This posting reflects my views specifically, though I believe they are shared by many of the Freedom Sleepers.

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Posted by: Robert <rnorse3@hotmail.com