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San Diego Union-Tribune - Disappointed but not deterred. Advocacy groups respond to Supreme Court decision on homelessness

SAN DIEGO, California - You can’t sleep here, you can’t sit over there, you can’t eat in that spot, panhandling isn’t allowed in this area — there have been a growing number of rules and policies dictating what kinds of “acts of living” people can do in public spaces and the U.S. Supreme Court recently ruled against sleeping in public.

In Grants Pass v. Oregon, the court found that the city’s ordinance against sleeping or camping on public property did not qualify as “cruel and unusual punishment” under the Eighth Amendment. For people experiencing homelessness, advocacy groups, and the three dissenting justices, it was a missed opportunity to focus on responses that uphold the humanity and dignity of America’s homeless population. Nationally, more than 650,000 people were experiencing homelessness in 2023, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development; in the San Diego region, the 2024 point-in-time survey found 10,605 people locally were experiencing homelessness, according to the Regional Task Force on Homelessness San Diego.

Yesenia Miranda Meza is a member of the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment (ACCE), a planning commissioner for the City of Pomona, and a co-founder and board member for Pomona United for Stable Housing (PUSH), who was assisted by ACCE in 2017 when she found herself facing a significant rent increase that she couldn’t afford.

Eric Tars is the senior policy director at the National Homelessness Law Center, whose father was born into and grew up in refugee camps during World War II, motivating his work and his desire that “I wouldn’t want anything less for anyone than I would have wanted for my own father.” Miranda Meza and Tars each took some time to discuss their thoughts about this ruling and their experience with the most effective responses to homelessness. (These interviews have been edited for length and clarity. )

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