by James A. Bacon
The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule this week on a case that will determine if local governments can criminalize the homeless for sleeping in public, even when shelters are unavailable, reports The Virginian-Pilot. Citing National Alliance to End Homelessness (NAEH) figures, the newspaper notes that there were nearly 6,000 homeless people in Virginia on any given night in 2018, including nearly 1,500 in Hampton Roads.
Unsurprisingly, the Pilot devotes much of its story to quoting advocates of compassion for the homeless.
โWe cannot arrest and punish our way out of homelessness,โ said Isabel McLain, director of policy and advocacy for the Virginia Housing Alliance. โWe have to provide affordable housing and support services for people to be healthy and stable. Housing someone in a jail does nothing for improving their life and it cost the state a lot of money as well.โ
โI think itโs a tragedy that we have gotten to the point in this country that we want to criminalize people who are unable to pay for housing,โ said Antipas Harris, chief executive director of the Urban Renewal Center in Norfolk. โIt is a travesty for humanity.โ
Utter nonsense. It’s worth making two points regarding indiscriminate compassion for the homeless.














