Saturday, March 7, 2015

Homeless Bill Of Rights

Indianapolis became the first U.S. city to pass a Homeless Bill of Rights measure this week — the latest success for a national campaign to end criminalization of the homeless.

Indianapolis' proposal, passed on Monday and awaiting a signature from the mayor, would protect the rights of homeless people to move freely in public spaces, to receive equal treatment from city agencies, to obtain emergency medical care, to vote and to maintain privacy for personal property, Indy Star, a local newspaper, reported.

The bill would also require the city to give a homeless person 15 days notice before requiring them to leave a camp, the newspaper said. Authorities would be required to store any displaced person’s property for 60 days as well as refer them to nonprofit organizations that could provide services and transitional housing.

"It is much more cost-effective to provide support services and assistance to those experiencing homelessness in our city than to arrest them," Indianapolis councilman LeRoy Robinson said.

http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/3/6/us-cities-consider-homeless-rights-legislation.html

Many of the homeless wound up there because of the crimes of bankgangsters, corporations, and their collaborators in the one percent, and virtually none of those criminals have been punished. To have criminalized their victims instead is the height of insanity.

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