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Supreme Court Passes On Boise Camping Ban Case, Opening Up Austin's Rules To Lawsuits

A view of an encampment outside the Austin Resource Center for the Homeless from September. The city now bans camping outside the shelter.
Julia Reihs
/
KUT
A view of an encampment outside the Austin Resource Center for the Homeless from September. The city now bans camping outside the shelter.

The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a challenge to a ruling that found a ban against camping in public in Boise, Idaho, is unconstitutional. 

The case against that city's ban on camping inspired, in part, Austin's decision to scale back its bans on camping and resting in public earlier this year. The justices' nondecision could open up Austin to lawsuits over its ordinances.

The Boise suit was first filed in 2009 by a handful of homeless people, who alleged the city's ticketing them for sleeping outdoors when it didn't have enough shelter space was unconstitutional. In 2014, city retooled its rules to prohibit ticketing when shelters were full. But the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals said that wasn't enough and that the ban on sleeping outdoors was unconstitutional.

The Supreme Court's decision Monday leaves the lower court ruling in place and effectively prohibits camping bans in the Ninth Circuit, which includes Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon and Washington.

Mayor Steve Adler said the decision is in line with the city's overall strategy on homelessness. 

"Today’s Supreme Court action in the Boise case supports the City’s focus on housing vulnerable people rather than criminalizing their activity," he said in a statement to KUT. "It’s hard work we’re doing to provide housing and services for those experiencing homelessness but it’s the right, and required, thing to do and we’ll get there.”

In June, the Austin City Council decriminalized camping and resting in public unless doing so presented a threat to public health or safety. City attorneys, council members and advocates supporting the move cited the Boise case as reasoning to rescind the bans because Austin doesn't have enough shelter beds.

That decision led to more visible encampments throughout the city, which, opponents say, led to an increase in public drug use and unsafe behavior. The city maintains the rules merely made Austinites sleeping on the street more visible, though, it did reinstate some bans in October after Gov. Greg Abbott threatened state intervention.

Ultimately, that wasn't enough for Abbott, who directed state officials to clean up underpasses with encampments.

Austin attorney Angelica Cogliano unsuccessfully challenged the city over its ordinances on behalf of a homeless client last year. She says the high court's decision to pass on hearing the case is an endorsement, of sorts. 

"Because, historically, the Supreme Court [upholds] local laws and local ordinances, the fact that they aren't choosing to review it at this time is kind of more than an endorsement than it would have been otherwise," she said.

The ACLU of Texas filed a  similar lawsuit against Houston's camping ban in 2017. As the case was winding its way through the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, the  ACLU withdrew its complaint after Houston rewrote its ordinances to require police to direct homeless people toward housing resources if shelters are full. 

Cogliano says Austin's ordinances, which were revised in October, provide similar direction, but it's not expressly written into the city code. That lack of specificity could open up Austin to a lawsuit.

"Theoretically, they could be challenged as unconstitutional now," she said. "So it kind of gives a little more permission to judges to say that ... these ordinances are unconstitutional until the housing is actually set up and created for the people here in Austin that are experiencing homelessness."

Earlier this year, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton signed  a friend of the court brief in support of Boise's ban. The brief argued the decision against it "swung a wrecking ball through states' rights under the Tenth Amendment to protect public health and safety and to fashion their criminal laws."

KUT reached out to the Texas attorney general's office for this story, but has not yet heard back.

This story has been updated.

Got a tip? Email Andrew at aweber@kut.org. Follow him on Twitter @England_Weber .

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Andrew Weber is a freelance reporter and associate editor for KUT News. A graduate of St. Edward's University with a degree in English, Andrew has previously interned with The Texas Tribune, The Austin American-Statesman and KOOP Radio.