US: Los Angeles Criminalizes Unhoused People (2024)

  • Los Angeles systematically criminalizes unhoused people through arrests and citations for violations arising out of their unhoused status and by destroying their property through sanitation sweeps.
  • Criminalization drives unhoused people out of public spaces but does nothing to solve their lack of housing.
  • City government should stop its practice of criminalization and destructive sanitation sweeps and instead devote resources to preserving and providing affordable housing for all and services to those in need.

(Los Angeles, August 14, 2024) – The Los Angeles city government has pursued a cruel, expensive, and ineffective policy of criminalizing people’s unhoused status through arrests, tickets, and property destruction, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. On June 28, 2024, the US Supreme Court ruled that enforcing laws criminalizing unhoused people, even in the absence of available shelter, was constitutional. California Governor Gavin Newsom has since urged local jurisdictions to destroy unhoused encampments, risking increased use of these tactics in Los Angeles and across the state and country.

The 337-page report, “‘You Have to Move!’ The Cruel and Ineffective Criminalization of Unhoused People in Los Angeles,” documents the experiences of people living on the streets and in vehicles, temporary shelters, and parks in Los Angeles, as they struggle to survive while facing criminalization and governmental failures to prioritize eviction prevention or access to permanent housing. Law enforcement and sanitation “sweeps” force unhoused people out of public view, often wasting resources on temporary shelter and punishments that do not address the underlying needs. Tens of thousands of people are living in the streets of Los Angeles; death rates among the unhoused have skyrocketed.

“You Have to Move!”

The Cruel and Ineffective Criminalization of Unhoused People in Los Angeles

  • Download the full report in English

“Just because the Supreme Court allows a vicious and counterproductive strategy, doesn’t mean Los Angeles has to use it,” saidJohn Raphling, associate US program director at Human Rights Watch. “The proven way to end houselessness is not by arresting people and throwing away their belongings, but by keeping people in their homes and developing and preserving more permanent, affordable housing.”

From August 2021 through May 2024, Human Rights Watch researched houselessness in Los Angeles, including the history of housing policy and practices, interviewing about 150 experts—over 100 of whom have personal experience of houselessness—and analyzing data from the Los Angeles Police Department, Sanitation Department, and other relevant government agencies.

Unhoused residents gave accounts of being ticketed and arrested for crimes arising from their poverty, including violations of Los Angeles Municipal Code section 41.18, which forbids sitting or lying down in designated public places, and section 56.11, which forbids keeping personal property in public places. People described being taken to jail and receiving fines amounting to more than their monthly income.

LAPD data revealed that nearly all enforcement of low-level infraction offenses, like drinking in public, littering, and jaywalking, targets unhoused people. From 2016 through 2022, nearly 40 percent of all arrests and citations in the city, including for felony, misdemeanor, and infraction offenses, were of unhoused people, who make up less than 1 percent of the city’s population.

Nearly every unhoused person interviewed described Sanitation Department sweeps in which their possessions were removed and destroyed, almost always with police threatening to arrest anyone who objected. Those possessions include items that provide comfort and protection from the elements, like tents, chairs, bedding, and clothing; identification, medications, court papers, cash, and other survival essentials; and family photos, letters, heirlooms, and even the remains of loved ones. Human Rights Watch witnessed the brutality of the sweeps and described their impact.

Although shelters and interim housing, including temporary stays in hotel rooms, can provide welcome relief from the discomfort of the streets, they have not provided a reliable pathway to permanent housing, Human Rights Watch found. Conditions in shelters range from marginally comfortable to unlivable. Shelters limit independence and often impose degrading rules, including curfews, searches, and prohibitions on guests, which many compare to being in jail. A large percentage of people leave interim housing out of frustration or when their limited stay ends, after which they return to the streets.

City policymakers have used the existence of scarce interim housing as a justification for criminalization and sweeps, deflecting charges of cruelty through claims that they are placing people into “housing.” Sweeps have moved people from high-profile encampments into hotels and shelters, while forcing those in less visible locations to simply move to new spots on the streets. The Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority’s participation in the sweeps contradicts their stated values and best practices, damaging their ability to build the trust needed to help people, Human Rights Watch said.

Mayor Karen Bass has emphasized addressing houselessness and has worked to bring more resources to the challenge. However, her signature program, Inside Safe, which sweeps encampments and moves their residents to hotel rooms, is unsustainably expensive, plagued by inconsistent and inadequate support services, and stymied by the lack of permanent housing for people to move on to. Further, with only 1,500 rooms at its peak, Inside Safe lacks capacity to serve, even temporarily, the over 35,000 people living without shelter on the streets of Los Angeles.

Human Rights Watch found that historic and present-day racially discriminatory policies and practices, including restrictive covenants, redlining, single-family zoning, policing, and defunding of schools and health care, have converged to make houselessness dramatically worse among Black people in Los Angeles. Black people are under 8 percent of the city’s population, but over one-third of all of those who lack housing.

Houselessness is part of a systemic housing crisis, Human Rights Watch said. Los Angeles leads the United States in people paying too much of their income for housing, as well as in overcrowding. Studies show a shortage of 500,000 units of affordable housing in the city. These conditions mean a large percentage of the city’s population is at imminent risk of losing their homes and facing criminalization on the streets.

While each individual has their own circ*mstances that led them to live on the streets, it is the overall shortage of affordable housing, in the context of a market economy geared toward the development of expensive homes and government failure to ensure access to permanent housing for all, that causes mass houselessness.

International human rights law upholds a right to housing for everyone, including homes that are habitable, have security of tenure, and are accessible, among other qualities that differentiate them from shelter. Human Rights Watch found that US governments at all levels have failed to devote adequate resources to attaining this right. Interviewed experts almost invariably agree that building, maintaining, and keeping people in permanent housing is the solution. Human Rights Watch described successful housing programs in the report and the positive experiences of individuals who have obtained housing after having lived on the streets.

“Criminalization may drive unhoused people into the shadows and out of sight, but it only makes the situation worse,” Raphling said. “We know getting people into housing or keeping them in their housing is the only way to end houselessness. We need to stop hurting people and focus on housing them.”

US: Los Angeles Criminalizes Unhoused People (2024)
Top Articles
Bruno Caruso Al-Cantara etichette Poesie da bere Lu veru piaciri Rarissimo • EUR 24,00
Libro Les tetards futures femmes Gustave Guitton 1904 prima edizione • EUR 12,90
Netronline Taxes
It’s Time to Answer Your Questions About Super Bowl LVII (Published 2023)
Truist Bank Near Here
Shoe Game Lit Svg
Maria Dolores Franziska Kolowrat Krakowská
Jeremy Corbell Twitter
Southeast Iowa Buy Sell Trade
Dr Klabzuba Okc
Erskine Plus Portal
Bbc 5Live Schedule
Where's The Nearest Wendy's
Clairememory Scam
Red Heeler Dog Breed Info, Pictures, Facts, Puppy Price & FAQs
Craigslist Heavy Equipment Knoxville Tennessee
How Much Is Tj Maxx Starting Pay
Radio Aleluya Dialogo Pastoral
Overton Funeral Home Waterloo Iowa
Suffix With Pent Crossword Clue
Palm Springs Ca Craigslist
Promiseb Discontinued
Shopmonsterus Reviews
Cbssports Rankings
Bella Bodhi [Model] - Bio, Height, Body Stats, Family, Career and Net Worth 
Everything To Know About N Scale Model Trains - My Hobby Models
Sorrento Gourmet Pizza Goshen Photos
Vera Bradley Factory Outlet Sunbury Products
How do you get noble pursuit?
Cylinder Head Bolt Torque Values
*!Good Night (2024) 𝙵ull𝙼ovie Downl𝚘ad Fr𝚎e 1080𝚙, 720𝚙, 480𝚙 H𝙳 HI𝙽DI Dub𝚋ed Fil𝙼yz𝚒lla Isaidub
Amazing Lash Bay Colony
Workboy Kennel
Games R Us Dallas
Game8 Silver Wolf
Tiny Pains When Giving Blood Nyt Crossword
Koninklijk Theater Tuschinski
Craigslist Pets Plattsburgh Ny
Tedit Calamity
Pokemon Reborn Gyms
Wilson Tire And Auto Service Gambrills Photos
Silicone Spray Advance Auto
Hk Jockey Club Result
Pixel Gun 3D Unblocked Games
Star Sessions Snapcamz
1990 cold case: Who killed Cheryl Henry and Andy Atkinson on Lovers Lane in west Houston?
Shannon Sharpe Pointing Gif
Wrentham Outlets Hours Sunday
Black Adam Showtimes Near Kerasotes Showplace 14
Spongebob Meme Pic
Myhrkohls.con
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Margart Wisoky

Last Updated:

Views: 5606

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (78 voted)

Reviews: 85% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Margart Wisoky

Birthday: 1993-05-13

Address: 2113 Abernathy Knoll, New Tamerafurt, CT 66893-2169

Phone: +25815234346805

Job: Central Developer

Hobby: Machining, Pottery, Rafting, Cosplaying, Jogging, Taekwondo, Scouting

Introduction: My name is Margart Wisoky, I am a gorgeous, shiny, successful, beautiful, adventurous, excited, pleasant person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.