BOISE, Idaho — Mark Hennessy and Susan Pappas roll up their sleeping bags and hide them in the bushes. It’s a dusty summer morning along the Boise River greenbelt, and it’s legal for them to be here now. But if there’s evidence they slept on the riverbank last night, they’re in trouble.
Suddenly, they see a bike cop on his morning rounds. They try to look inconspicuous.
They say they’re fishing; luckily, Hennessy has a rod. Pappas, at least, is safe from a criminal citation because the women’s shelter was full. But Hennessy has been ticketed before, including recently for having a jar of pickles (no glass in public parks).
A few years ago, this conversation could have gone differently: Boise Police issued almost 300 citations for camping in a public place in 2015, but just 39 last year. Nixon let the couple go.
Things have changed here — and across the West — because of a lawsuit that started nearby. Seven homeless people took Boise to court, and a year ago this week, the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals issued a landmark ruling. It said that if a city doesn’t have enough shelter beds available, enforcing a camping ban like Boise’s violates the constitutional ban on cruel and unusual punishment.
Boise is contesting the ruling, which could end up before the Supreme Court. But for now, the ruling has roiled politics and upended policies across the nine states in the Ninth Circuit’s jurisdiction, from Arizona to Alaska.
Cities with little or no shelter have struggled to determine whether they’ll be sued for enforcing anti-camping laws under the Robert Martin v. City of Boise ruling. Boise officials believe the city’s hands are tied, said Theane Evangelis, whose high-powered law firm took the case for Boise for far below its usual rates.
“What we have as a result of the Ninth Circuit is effectively a constitutional right to camp in public places,” Evangelis said.
Sgt. Craig Nixon of the Boise Police Department’s Micro District Bike Patrol writes up a notice of clean-up and removal in Ann Morrison Park in Boise. (Otto Kitsinger / Special to The Seattle Times)
Back in the mid-2000s, when the seeds of the lawsuit were sown, it was even tougher to be homeless in Boise, said Pam Hawkes, one of the few plaintiffs who is still alive and still homeless today.
“I’d be in the park and if they felt like I had a blanket or a piece of clothing too much on the ground, they considered me ‘camping,’” Hawkes said. “They’d rouse me and make me pick everything up and move on and whatnot.”
Her original lawyer, Howard Belodoff, said there’s “no purpose” to that approach. “Why does Pam (Hawkes) have to take up a jail bed for criminals? To protect society? We don’t need to protect society from people sleeping.”
Sgt. Craig Nixon of the Boise Police Department’s Micro District Bike Patrol talks with a homeless man under the city’s Eighth Street pedestrian bridge. (Otto Kitsinger / Special to The Seattle Times)
But it was this aggressiveness, combined with the fact that Boise didn’t do much else to address homelessness, that led to the ruling, said Oskar Rey, a lawyer for Washington’s Municipal Research and Services Center, who briefs municipal attorneys on adhering to Martin v. Boise.
“If all you’re doing is enforcing criminal-code provisions against homeless individuals and you’re not providing outreach or shelter space,” Rey said, “you’re essentially just pushing the problem to other jurisdictions.”
One clear effect of Martin v. Boise: It’s going to be a lot harder for cities to do that — unless the ruling is overturned.
The ripple effect
The nine states in the Ninth Circuit hold almost two-thirds of the country’s unsheltered homeless — California alone holds almost half — and many cities in those states don’t have enough shelter beds for them. In many cities, enforcement was put on hold as a result of the ruling.
The Honolulu City Council passed anti-camping laws only to have the police say they were unenforceable. In Lacey, Thurston County, the city passed anti-camping laws but acknowledged it couldn’t enforce them until it opened a shelter. In Costa Mesa, California, the city waited to enforce the rules until it could open a 50-bed shelter at a church in April.
Other cities have found ways around the law. The Berkeley City Council backed away from a proposal to prohibit lying down and camping at a new public transit plaza downtown, but passed a law banning placement of “objects” that prevent use of “any portion” of sidewalks — a change advocates say was against the spirit of the ruling.
In Anchorage, Democrats in the state legislature told the mayor to clean up camps in the parks because there were other places outside for people to sleep.
“So long as Anchorage has some place individuals can sleep outside, case law does not limit removal of waste … left by drug addicts, thieves, and other squatters/campers,” said the letter.
The gate closed somewhat dramatically in Olympia. Olympia’s downtown homeless population had grown to 300 over the summer of 2018, and the city was planning what would’ve been one of its largest sweeps ever. But on the eve of the removal, the city attorney told Keith Stahley, the city’s community planning director, about the ruling.