SECTION 1.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) According to the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development’s report to Congress, 115,738 people were estimated to be homeless in California in 2014, a rate that is unprecedented following a deep and prolonged economic recession, a severe shortage of safe and affordable housing, a failed veteran and civilian mental health system, and a diminished social safety net.
(b) According to the United States Department of Education, 284,086 schoolchildren were known to have experienced homelessness in the
2013–14 school year.
(c) Homelessness is an independent risk factor for a number of illnesses, making people more susceptible to increased health problems due to high stress, sleep deprivation, unsanitary surroundings, lack of access to hygiene facilities, and a myriad of other situational stressors experienced by people without stable housing. Subsequently, people who are chronically homeless are more medically frail and three to four times more likely to die prematurely than their housed counterparts.
(d) Throughout California, local governments have enacted ordinances that make it illegal to rest or receive nourishment in public spaces.
(e) Ending homelessness in California will require significant state
and federal resources and there is ample evidence that policies that invest in ending homelessness, rather than criminalizing and marginalizing people who are experiencing homelessness,
adequately balance the needs of all parties: community residents, government agencies, businesses, and men and women who are experiencing homelessness.
(f) Passing this act will not reduce homelessness, but neither will local ordinances that criminalize homelessness. Instead, ordinances that criminalize homelessness result in increased incarceration rates and financial indebtedness of people who simply have no means of support and prolong homelessness by making it more difficult for people to secure housing, employment, and medical care. Criminalization policies further marginalize men and women who are experiencing homelessness, fuel inflammatory attitudes, and may even unduly restrict constitutionally protected liberties.
(g) That is why, on September 18, 2015, the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development included in the annual Notice of Funding Availability for the 2015 Continuum of Care Program funding competition, Competition provisions that would award additional points to any application that could include steps the community is taking to reduce criminalization of homelessness.
(h) It is also why, on August 6, 2015, the United States Department of Justice submitted a rare statement of interest in a United States District Court in opposition to the criminalization of people who are homeless, calling it cruel and unusual punishment to punish
someone for a crime with the potential for imprisonment and a violation of constitutional rights.
(i) While these ordinances apply to all residents, they disproportionately impact people without homes, who have no private place to rest or seek nourishment, and are often selectively applied by law enforcement to people based upon their appearance or an assumption of homelessness.
(j) In practice, these ordinances deprive persons experiencing homelessness and those who may be perceived as homeless of a safe and legal place to rest and seek nourishment, which adversely impacts their health and well-being.
(k) Sleep deprivation impairs cognitive processes and puts one at
risk for obesity, heart disease, heart attack, heart failure, irregular heartbeat, high blood pressure, stroke, diabetes, and depression. People who are homeless suffer from sleep deprivation and, absent a place to rest, they suffer it more frequently.
(l) Because current practices have denied the right to adequate legal representation to people cited or arrested while resting or sharing food, homeless persons are often denied relief or damages through the courts.
(m) Both the federal government, through its Interagency Council on Homelessness, and the United Nations have recognized that discrimination and criminalization violate a homeless person’s human rights and have called upon state and local governments to cease enactment and
enforcement of those laws.
(n) Homelessness and the increasing criminalization of homelessness and discrimination against those experiencing homelessness are widespread throughout California and are matters of statewide concern.
(o) Section 1 of Article I of the California Constitution provides that “[a]ll people are by nature free and independent and have inalienable rights. Among these are enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring, possessing, and protecting property, and pursuing and obtaining safety, happiness, and privacy,” without qualification as to whether or not a person is, or appears to be, homeless.
(p) Subdivision (a) of Section 7 of
Article I of the California Constitution provides that “[a] person may not be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law or denied equal protection of the laws ... .”
(q) Concordant with this fundamental belief, a person should not be subject to discrimination based on his or her income, housing status, or ability or desire to appear housed. Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this legislation to protect the rights of all Californians, regardless of their housing status, and ameliorate the adverse effects caused by the criminalization of homelessness on our communities and our citizens.
(r) Decriminalization of rest allows municipal governments to redirect resources from local enforcement
activities to activities that address the root causes of homelessness and poverty.