Opinion | Gavin Newsom No Longer Has an Excuse for Tent Cities
As tent cities filled with homeless people proliferated in West Coast communities in recent years, elected Democrats dealt with the problem by passing the buck. California Gov. Gavin Newsom argued that his hands—and those of other state and local officials—were tied by a Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that prohibitions on homeless encampments amounted to “cruel and unusual punishment.” In City of Grants Pass v. Johnson, the Supreme Court has taken that excuse away.
In 2018, the judges of the Ninth Circuit essentially OK’d the idea of pitching a tent on a sidewalk or in a park. The ordinances at issue in that case levied fines for public camping. Repeated noncompliance could lead to being banned from local parks and jailed for short periods. The ordinances applied, Justice Neil Gorsuch made clear in his Grants Pass majority opinion, with equal force to homeless people, backpackers and student protesters. They wouldn’t strike most Americans as cruel.
In generations past, courts invoked the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment as indicating the framers’ commitment to what Chief Justice Earl Warren described in 1958 as “the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society.” It’s therefore rich that the same constitutional provision has been used to force communities to accommodate street homelessness and related harms such as retail theft, sidewalks strewn with human waste, sexual violence and overdose deaths.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/opinion-gavin-newsom-no-longer-has-an-excuse-for-tent-cities/ar-BB1p5o07?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=HCTS&cvid=9415d1d562e54f3b8cb5edf2d81d77a5&ei=74