In the United States, 21 cities have
restricted sharing food with homeless people through legislation or
community pressure since January 2013, and about 10 other cities are in
the process of doing so, the National Coalition for the Homeless (NCH)
said in a report released Monday.
“One of the most narrow-minded ideas when it
comes to homelessness and food-sharing is that sharing food with people
in need enables them to remain homeless,” the report said.
The report was released a day before Fort
Lauderdale, Florida, was set to vote “on the city’s third ordinance this
year that will target the life-sustaining activities of people
experiencing homelessness,” the NCH said in a news release.
“If the biggest crimes we had to worry about
in this country were sitting, sleeping (in public places) and eating and
sharing food, we would be in a freaking good state,” said Paul Boden,
director of Western Regional Advocacy Project, the organization that
launched the Homeless Bill of Rights campaign, an ongoing movement to introduce legislation in California and Oregon to “overturn local laws targeted to remove people from public space.”
The NCH report outlines different means by which various
jurisdictions allegedly restrict food-sharing. One is the passage of
laws requiring a permit to distribute food in public places such as
parks. Another is a requirement to “comply with stringent food-safety
regulations,” the report said.
A third means — the “most difficult to
measure,” according to NCH — involves community-level restrictions
imposed by home-owners and businesses that do not want homeless people
“in their backyard.” This takes the form of pressuring food-distributing
organizations to either stop their activities or to relocate their
programs to other areas so that homeless people are not “attracted to
their communities.”
“Regardless of income and housing status,
people are going to perform these activities (like sharing and eating
food), but only a homeless person is going to see the inside of a jail
cell for performing these activities,” Boden said, adding that local
governments are passing laws that they know people are going to break.
One in six people struggle to get enough to
eat in the United States, according to Feeding America, an organization
that works toward hunger relief.
In a December 2013 Hunger and Homelessness
Survey conducted by the United States Conference of Mayors, all but four
of the 25 surveyed cities reported an increase in requests for
emergency food assistance over the past year. Unemployment, low wages,
poverty and housing costs were the leading reasons for hunger, according
to the survey.
“In all of the responding cities, emergency
kitchens and food pantries had to reduce the quantity of food persons
could receive at each food pantry visit or the amount of food offered
per-meal at emergency kitchens,” the survey said. “In 78 percent of
these cities, they had to reduce the number of times a person or family
could visit a food pantry each month.”
In its report, the NCH recommends that protections for the homeless be added to city, county or state anti-discrimination laws.
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