HUFF's Five Top Issues
Homeless United for Friendship & Freedom lists its most pressing issues
- The Sleeping Ban -- our perennial top
issue. It severely impacts the ability of homeless people to survive
& exhibit mental clarity. Its paired punishment is the Blanket Ban
which ensures a homeless person can-not shiver thru the night under a
warm blanket without risking a criminal citation.
- The Ten-Minute Law -- this proposed
ordinance is a thinly disguised loitering law which was concocted
specifically to be able to drive homeless people out of parking
structures during rainy periods. Since the City is not proposing any
alternative to this attack on the poorest of the poor, and since it
severely impacts the ability of the public to use extensive public
spaces for innocuous and multi-faceted uses, we are not only opposed to
its enactment, but are planning civil disobedience around this issue.
- The Move-Along Law -- this law, which is
only used on activists, musicians, and homeless people, is an affront
to our rights to peaceably assemble, to redress govt. grievances, to
practice freedom of speech, and interact with members of our community
in public spaces. It is clearly unconstitutional (1st amendment rights
can't be limited to 1 hour out of 24) & selectively enforced.
- Change Machines & Benches downtown --
HUFF has documented the number of new change machines installed on
Pacific Ave. coupled with one of the most punitive ATM laws in the
state prohibiting sitting or begging withing FIFTY FEET of any machine
that dispense change other than a newspaper stand. City officials have
placed machines everywhere where young people gather to cleanse the
sidewalk of these people. We urge the machines be removed other than at
the Metro Bus Station where placement facilitates public use. We urge
that benches removed from the downtown area be returned. Even the bus
benches in front of the Vets Hall, where veterans must wait for the bus
to the hospital in Palo Alto to pick them up, have been removed.
- Stay Away orders from Pacific Ave. -- the
city has a pattern & practise of using stay-away orders from
Pacific Ave. on those they deem "undesirables." While an individual TRO
restraining an individual from a specific business where there has been
a problem are acceptable, banishment from the entire downtown or from
Pacific Ave. is medieval. Santa Cruz is an inclusive community, and
these banishment orders have no place in civilized society.
Other issues include: increasing the minimum wage, photo id cards at
the armory, police harassment of homeless people, restrictive
anti-homeless parking measures, towing of homeless vehicles, need for
more substance abuse treatment openings, bias against homeless medical
marijuana users, restrictive sitting laws, selective enforcement,
infraction vs misdemeanor shenanagins in the courtrooms, California
freed slave "anti-lodging" ordinance, passed in the 1880's (Cal PC
647J) prosecutions now being used against homeless people.
HUFF calls for an end to policies which treat young people,
counter-culture people, people of color, poor people, activists, bubble
blowers, magicians, musicians, hopscotchers, and hacky-sack players as
somehow not belonging to our diverse community, led by a
business-interests only city council.