Johnston is RI’s third city to stop enforcing aggressive panhandling law


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2015-12-16 RIACLU Press Criminalized Poverty 005Johnston is the third city in Rhode Island to stop enforcing its aggressive panhandling ordinance after the ACLU of Rhode Island sent the city a letter threatening a lawsuit. Providence and Cranston did so earlier this year.

“The police chief made the decision not to enforce that ordinance at this time,” said Pawtucket/East Providence Senator Bill Conley, who is also the city solicitor for Johnston. “We’re going to look at how these cases play out in court and revisit the issue.”

The city agreed via a letter not to enforce the anti-panhandling law after receiving a letter from the ACLU.

“We believe that the Town ordinance raises significant constitutional concerns by impinging on the First Amendment rights of the homeless and the poor,” said the letter from ACLU Executive Director Steven Brown dated May 10. “In the past year, in fact, at least three courts elsewhere have struck down laws very similar to the Town’s “aggressive begging” ban. See Thayer v. City of Worcester, 2015 WL 6872450 (D. Mass. 2015); Browne v. City of Grand Junction,2015 WL 5728755 (D. Colo. 2015); and McLaughlin v. City of Lowell, 2015 WL 6453144 (D.Mass. 2015). The unsuccessful defense of these laws has come at great financial expense to those cities.”

ACLU volunteer attorney Marc Gursky hailed the city’s quick decision to suspend the law. “I commend town officials for acting promptly in recognizing their constitutional obligations and in saving taxpayers from the expense of an unnecessary lawsuit,” he said.

“I am optimistic that as municipalities are compelled not to criminalize homelessness and poverty, they will instead collaborate with constituents and other advocates on solutions to these issues, including affordable housing and adequate income supports,” said Megan Smith, an outreach worker with House of Hope, an organization that helps homeless people.

Conley said it would be up to the city council to repeal the law. He doesn’t think Johnston police officers will still enforce it. “If that happened I think the chief would remind that officer that department policy is not to do that,” he said.

Providence agreed to stop enforcing its aggressive panhandling law in February – a move that drew the ire of downtown business interests. Courts have recently struck down laws targeting aggressive panhandling, saying panhandling is constitutionally protected speech and noting other laws cover aggressive behavior.

The ACLU, in its press release, said, it “is engaged in ongoing efforts to challenge and repeal laws that disproportionately affect the rights of the homeless” but said no further actions are planned at this time. RI Future is researching whether other communities have such laws.

Correction: An earlier version of this post neglected to mention that Cranston stopped enforcing its aggressive panhandling ordinance.

Froma Harrop, meet Randy Dolinger


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Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop

Froma Harrop paints a very powerful picture of panhandlers. “A projected $12 billion will have been invested in downtown Indianapolis between 1990 and 2017,” she writes. “Armies of panhandlers would make these efforts for naught.”

Wow, are homeless people tearing down new buildings in the Midwest? I think what she means is no matter how many nice things we surround ourselves with, we still can’t seem to shield ourselves from the affects of poverty, mental illness and abuse.

While simply turning a blind eye is bad enough, Harrop goes one step further and vilifies the beggars. “Few panhandlers are homeless, and the poorest, saddest people are not among them,” she writes. “Panhandlers tend to be aggressive hustlers.”

Imagine if beggars painted journalists with the same broad brush? Few journalists base their work on facts, and the most well-read columnists in the nation are not generally among the few that do, would be the corollary. Those journalists tend to be manipulative hustlers.

In my experience with beggars and journalists, the beggars seem to understand the journalists a lot better than the journalists understand the beggars. This isn’t good for beggars or journalists. And, by extension, it’s bad for the rest of us too.

In the interest of curbing this communication gap: Froma Harrop, meet Randy Dolinger. Randy Dolinger, meet Froma Harrop. You both write about homelessness, but do so from opposite ends of America as well as opposite ends of the social and economic spectrum.

Randy, Froma works for the Providence Journal, Rhode Island’s paper of record, and writes a syndicated column that runs in newspapers all over the country including your newspaper of record, the Ashland Daily Tidings. She sleeps in a house in a city. Froma, Randy authors this blog about being homeless in Ashland, Oregon and he’s done a lot of work to organize and empower the homeless community there. He sleeps in a tent in a forest.

Randy, Froma is considered a liberal by mainstream Rhode Island journalism standards. Froma, in Ashland, where both Randy and I have seen anti-aggressive panhandling campaigns devolve into police officers creating a “watch list” of homeless people for business owners, your column would be considered conservative propaganda.

Randy Dolinger
Randy Dolinger

Froma, Randy isn’t a beggar. By some definitions, he isn’t even unemployed or homeless. In many ways, he serves the same role in Ashland that John Joyce did here in Rhode Island – he is a liaison for those who are beggars, unemployed and/or homeless to the rest of society. He has run for city council, led various civic efforts and is a respected voice among Ashland’s establishment class and its anti-establishment.

Randy, Froma sometimes has opportunity to visit the newspapers her column appears in and I know she’d love to spend some time in Ashland. I’m hoping that next time she does you two can meet up for a latte or maybe even a game of chess. I think you two have more in common than maybe any of us expect.