Sunday, October 30, 2005

Councilmember Jan Perry: “Homeless Need Help, Not ACLU”


Let the debate begin… Los Angeles Councilmember Jan Perry represents most of downtown Los Angeles, including the much talked about Skid Row (or Central City East.) She begins the public debate over whether the ACLU should be on the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority commission.

Here is her commentary, published by the LA Times today:
__________

WHAT WAS Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa thinking last week when he nominated Ramona Ripston, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California, to the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority?

This is a city with 91,000 homeless people — the largest homeless population in the nation. Of these, 42% are chronically homeless and have lived on the street for many years. All of these people have complex problems and complicated life stories, ranging from poverty to mental illness and substance abuse. Some have simply cracked under extreme life experiences.

These are people who need practical solutions. They need jobs, shelters, treatment, permanent homes. They don't need excuses.

But the ACLU has offered them just that.

For instance, the ACLU has litigation pending against the city seeking to prevent police from arresting people who sleep on the streets at night, arguing that the homeless should be "protected" by what they call a "necessity defense" because they don't have the resources to sleep elsewhere.

But what good does that do? If we leave people on the streets and don't create ways to bring them in for treatment, the problem will continue. Homeless people don't need their right to die protected. They need help.

We do have ways of helping them. Creating a system of year-round, emergency homeless shelters, for instance, has provided many with an alternative to life on the street and has helped thousands into better living situations. Public investment of more than $12 million has created 4,000 units of permanent affordable housing for the homeless in downtown L.A., and more is coming on line.

I have worked with the ACLU in the past, and I have witnessed firsthand how the group's determination and zeal on behalf of the civil rights of the homeless often outweigh its efforts to find real-world solutions to a tragic and growing problem.

Is it truly in the best interest of a person who suffers from mental illness and substance abuse to be given the pseudo-freedom to do harm to himself or to live among people who want to do harm to them?

The highest incidence of crime in skid row is transient-on-transient crime. Is it really in the best interest of the community to allow continued drug dealing and open-air narcotic use in a community where others have recovered and are living a more stable life? Don't the people who work and live in skid row deserve the same benefits of a healthy and safe community that we all want?

I think the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority should be made up of people with expertise in policy and people with access to funding for housing and services for mental illness. The ACLU — which likes to waste time on symbolic issues such as removing the cross from the L.A. County seal — has no place on this authority.

7 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I live in a Rv in the valley I need the ACLU to stand up for me. Why do I need to hid for the COP I do not us durgs, My family can not pay 1,200 for rent we can not go on HUD. Why do COP wake us up at night I do not dump tanks on the street, We have a right to park our Rv like any other car Living in our RV in some time camping some people look down on us they see me going in and out of our RV sarting a chapter of Home on Wheeles in LA,
Mary

7:30 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

It is time to step up to the plate people. Let's stop making excuses for ingorning the homeless population. Most of them are mentally ill, or have had a touch break, so it is not their choice to be homeless. But it is easier to stay at home and watch TV or shop then to go down to the park and chat with them and bring them lunch. Take a moment every time you can to do your part. They are our family. Let's stop treating them like they don't exist. Please reach out and love....

9:04 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I am to be homeless in a few more days, with no job, no car, mo money and not a place to live.
Our current society a capitalist country such the United States, it does not care about the homeless population, citizens such us: who need mental medical attention, decent jobs, medical care, hosing, food, etc.
This long time epidemic stage, instead of decrease, just get bigger and larger every day.
What our goverment is doing anything about it?
The number one power in the world, and we can not even help to our citizens, just in the city of Los Angeles, California are about 100,000 homeless people, the largest in the entire country.
But in California with 33 State Prisons, not counting the city and county jails, those incarcerated have all the help need it.
With a cost of billions of dollars a year, however the people outside such myself and several thousands of others, state and nationwide, we do not have any choice.
Why the crime is going high?
We have a sociopathology, every time getting out of proportion, because we need to survive, families need to live, most of them are not criminals by nature, ONLY BY NECESITY.
It is not human to see the human civil rights of homeless people, being arrested and treated as animals or criminals, because our only fault: it is our displacement in society, long term unemployment, lack of transportation, medical and chronic conditions, lack of jobs, etc.
Mr: Bush since you are from a prominent oil and wealthy family, you would never get this issue, for a second, put yourself or your family, in the othe side of the coin.

12:05 PM  
Blogger Real facts about not having a future said...

I hope that this comment, reach the right sectors in the State and Federal Goverment as a wake-up call.

12:10 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

look the homeless people are still people..... I am about to be homeless i cant find a job or even help in the world.... they make it like we are the bad people... where not... people have hurt me...

8:44 AM  
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