Arrests Made during Protests against Las Vegas Homeless Ordinances (+Video)
TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Twelve people were arrested during a protest aimed at new ordinances to address homelessness in Las Vegas and at least one person was hurt Monday evening.
A new law allowing Las Vegas to designate sidewalk cleaning periods and criminalizing camping in those areas during cleaning time takes effect Sunday, allowing police to arrest anyone sitting, sleeping, or camping in those public spaces.
Anyone caught doing so could face a $1,000 fine, six months in jail or some combination of the two, according to reports.
The legislation, Bill No. 2019-44 sponsored by Mayor Carolyn G. Goodman, says in part: During such designated and noticed hours of cleaning, no person shall sit, lie, sleep, camp or otherwise obstruct the cleaning of the designated public sidewalks by the Department of Operations and Maintenance.
Protesters were present outside City Hall as the council passed the measure in a 5-2 vote on Wednesday. A man held a sign that read "Jesus was homeless" and someone painted "poverty is not a crime" on the ground.
The 5 councilpersons who voted in favor are: Mayor Carolyn Goodman, Mayor Pro Tem Michele Fiore, Victoria Seaman, Stavros Anthony and Cedric Crear. Olivia Diaz voted against. Brian Knudsen was not present at the meeting.
After the vote, as the council attempted to move to the next item on the agenda, protesters disrupted the reading of the next bill by loudly chanting, "Houses not handcuffs!"
During the meeting Mayor Goodman told the crowd, "On every aspect of this we are absolutely about helping the homeless."
The ACLU of Nevada responded to the decision with the following statement from Executive Director Tod Story: Las Vegas City officials cannot declare their "good intentions" when they continue passing policies that hurt our most marginalized communities.
We’re going to keep fighting against laws that criminalize homelessness and for evidence-based policies and best practices. It’s time for every Nevadan who believes that people struggling with homelessness need housing, rather than jail time, to speak up and join our coalition.
Wednesday's decision comes after the city passed a controversial ordinance back in November making it illegal to camp or sleep on sidewalks if there is space at a homeless shelter in the valley.
That ordinance gained national attention, with the opposition saying it criminalizes homelessness.
"Criminalizing homeless is not what we're doing; we're making sure people are getting the help we need," Mayor Pro Tem Michele Fiore previously said during an appearance on Fox News after it passed.
Although it went into effect on Nov. 10, 2019, enforcement will begin on Feb. 1.