Disband homeless camps? Some cities rethink them instead.
People collect their belongings as Salt Lake County conducts a homeless camp cleanup of the Fleet Block area, April 14, 2021, in Salt Lake City. Utah聽is among the states considering bans on unsanctioned camping and instead creating government-sanctioned tent encampments as steppingstones for those without homes to find more permanent housing.
Rick Bowmer/AP/File
Savannah, Georgia
When Salt Lake City began enforcing an urban camping ban several years ago, hundreds of Utahns picked up their belongings and headed toward the Jordan River.
For centuries, the river has been a trading post, a border, and a nexus of nomadic activity. But most of all, it has been 鈥渁 place of refuge,鈥 says S酶ren Simonsen, executive director of the Jordan River Commission.
Today, growing numbers of encampments filled with Americans without permanent homes dot the banks of the river. And Mr. Simonsen is on the front line of what to do about it.
Why We Wrote This
Many cities are conducting sweeps of homeless encampments. But a new line of thinking suggests a different solution that maintains the dignity of those without homes and doesn't simply move the problem out of sight.
A decade ago, Utah claimed it had largely 鈥渟olved鈥 homelessness, reducing it by 91%. Now it is considering an idea,聽supported by Mr. Simonsen, that is聽gaining traction across the United States: outlawing unsanctioned camping and instead creating government-sanctioned tent encampments as steppingstones for those without homes to find more permanent housing.
For much of the recent past, one assumption in addressing homelessness has been that everyone wants a solid roof. The debate over encampments is shifting those assumptions. Increasingly, cities and states are exploring whether there can be a sense of dignity and agency in 鈥渟afe outside spaces鈥 as an end in themselves. As some carry out sweeps to clear out encampments, others are experimenting with the idea of making them more humane, hygienic, and livable as one potential part of the solution to the housing crisis.
鈥淚 get that civilization has progressed, and we鈥檝e become people that live in cities, but why does civilization have to be one way or one thing?鈥 says Mr. Simonsen. 鈥淐an鈥檛 we make space for people that aren鈥檛 ready, aren鈥檛 capable, aren鈥檛 interested in living such a fixed-address kind of lifestyle?鈥
鈥淲e can do better than that鈥
The situation is Utah is common across the country. Tent encampments have 鈥渄efinitely become more of a visible issue since the pandemic,鈥 exacerbated by a national housing shortage, says Courtney Anderson, an expert on social welfare law at Georgia State University College of Law in Atlanta. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a problem that people can see, so they need a solution where they can鈥檛 see it.鈥
Under pressure from voters, officials are taking action.
Authorities in Rhode Island cleared an encampment from the steps of the state capitol in December. Washington, D.C., conducts regular camp removals. New York City has conducted hundreds of 鈥渟weeps鈥 under Mayor Eric Adams. Residents have largely hailed the efforts, but the majority of those affected haven鈥檛 moved into more permanent housing.
The concern is that simply clearing camps can strip people of their agency and dignity.
鈥淭he raiding of camps is really tragic,鈥 says Professor Anderson. 鈥淭he more you dehumanize people, the easier it is to do that kind of thing.鈥
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled it is unconstitutional to ban sleeping in public if there are no other sleeping options available, and some municipal courts have made similar rulings. But this year, Tennessee made camping away from sanctioned areas a felony. Other states are following suit.
The Georgia Senate is considering a bill that would criminalize camping and force municipalities to comply. But the bill would also allow the state to designate areas for sanctioned camps.
In Savannah, Georgia, Shirley Walkowicz says the move to criminalize what she is doing 鈥 living in her car 鈥 鈥渏ust shows that people don鈥檛 [care] about me and people like me.鈥
But for Rachel Potter, a Savannah college student who also has no home, an option to move into semi-permanent housing 鈥 even tents 鈥 would be appealing. 鈥淎 lot of these people out here choose to live in tents. They like it. It鈥檚 a lifestyle.鈥
The Georgia bill is significantly based on the thinking of Judge Glock, a senior fellow at the nonpartisan Cicero Institute. Dr. Glock saw the early potential of 鈥渉ousing first鈥 鈥 an Obama-era policy that ended requirements such as drug testing for housing recipients. But he now says the policy has largely failed. An average of five homeless people die on the streets of Los Angeles every day, he says 鈥 more than twice as many as a decade ago.
鈥淭his is a crisis situation,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about what we can do this month, this year. We can鈥檛 just sit on our hands until the housing [shortage] is solved.鈥
He points to cities such as Austin, Texas, and Portland, Oregon, which are banning makeshift encampments but creating safe spaces for people without homes.
鈥淭he argument is, if cities are going to allow it, make sure they provide the things you need: sanitation, social services, security,鈥 says Dr. Glock. 鈥淚f the cities don鈥檛 make a conscious decision about where to put them, they are outsourcing that decision to wherever a camp happens to spring up and wherever people are yelling the loudest about it.鈥
Birmingham, Alabama, has just voted to erect a tiny house village to accomplish many of these goals. For City Council member Hunter Williams, the logic is clear.聽聽
鈥淧eople have thoughts whether the city should or shouldn鈥檛 [erect camps] 鈥 whether it鈥檚 outside the realm of municipal government,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut the reality is, our fire and rescue and our police and our city jail are already involved, at a much greater cost than this program.鈥
鈥淲e don鈥檛 have to have tent cities under every overpass in America, and we鈥檝e all seen some of that,鈥 he adds. 鈥淲e can do better than that.鈥
Athens鈥 answer
Residents in Athens, Georgia, faced that same decision 鈥撀爓hat to do with the residents of 鈥淐ooterville,鈥 a large camp under a railroad trestle.
Trash, sanitation, and drug use all became issues. But as authorities began to knock down the encampments, the Athens-Clarke County Commission looked at the flip side: If not Cooterville, then where? Two shelters were full. And there was a recognition that not everyone living under the trestle could cope with living in a shelter.
Mayor Kelly Girtz has spent most of his life in Athens, much of it as an educator, and he knew students who didn鈥檛 have a permanent residence. In recent years, he had seen students in line at one of the city鈥檚 homeless shelters.
The pandemic, to him, humanized their problems. 鈥淚 saw stories about alcohol abuse going up during the pandemic. Those same issues were hitting people with perfectly good roofs over their heads.鈥
After a polarized debate, the council deadlocked 4-4 on whether to give the residents of Cooterville a tent city to move into. Mayor Girtz broke the tie by voting yes.
Today, 55 tents are lined up neatly on wooden platforms. Trash is nowhere to be found. 鈥淚t looks a little like the TV show 鈥楳ASH,鈥欌 says Mayor Girtz. The $5 million investment includes adding crisis beds at a local mental health clinic.
鈥淭he point was to move people from unstructured camping to a more structured, clean, stable, and healthy environment,鈥 says Mayor Girtz.
Utah鈥檚 Mr. Simonsen, for one, senses a shift in focus toward a greater responsibility for those who make the banks of the Jordan River their home.
鈥淲e still have a large vision for鈥 an individualistic country, where dignity is earned by overcoming obstacles 鈥 natural, man-made, and personal, he says. 鈥淵et people being rugged and individual are often considered outcasts. It鈥檚 a complex and very fraught question that鈥檚 now in the forefront.鈥