Panhandling: A real issue?

Moderated by Rick Badie

Atlanta City Councilman Michael Julian Bond wants to sweep the streets clean of aggressive panhandlers, though not necessarily the homeless. He has proposed an ordinance that calls for repeat offenders to serve a mandatory six-month incarceration after the third arrest. But homeless advocate Anita Beaty, who calls the law unnecessary and discriminatory, suggests the city should provide adequate services for the poor, not run them off.

By Michael Julian Bond

Just as Vine City, Inman Park, Polar Rock, Loring Heights and West End are communities that make up the diverse fabric of our great city, so does downtown. And just like all communities around Atlanta, downtown is also dealing with a variety of concerns.

I receive requests on a daily basis from citizens asking me to address myriad issues. Whether it is an abandoned and vacant property being used as a crack house, a broken sidewalk, a pothole or a high water bill, I am expected to respond, and I do.

Yet when I receive calls about aggressive panhandling and respond to the very real concerns being experienced by residents and small business owners who contact me about this issue, there is an immediate response from certain stakeholders who express shock and dismay that I am trying to address the problem.

Some advocates for the homeless believe that any attempt to curb aggressive panhandling criminalizes all homeless people. But not all aggressive panhandlers are homeless, and not all homeless are aggressive panhandlers. It’s a distinction illustrated every day.

Last Sunday as I was leaving City Hall, I saw a young mother with three small children crossing the street in front of me. They entered the back door of  Trinity United Methodist Church, a longtime provider of services for the homeless. Sadly, this scene repeats itself hundreds of times a day in Atlanta. With a 100 percent voting record in support of homeless issues, I can say that this mother and her children — and the many who share their plight — are not the subject of the proposed legislation.

This initiative is not about homelessness, it is about harassment.

There are other scenes that play out every day in Atlanta. They may involve a college student walking to her class, or a waitress leaving her job to catch a MARTA train, or a couple walking their dog in a city park. What they have in common is that each was followed for several blocks, verbally attacked or physically intimidated by a person who claimed to be homeless and asked for money.

I know this because in each case the accosted person contacted my office and expressed fear, anger and frustration with the city’s refusal to address this problem.

Since last July, Atlanta police officers have made 279 aggressive panhandling arrests. Seventy-eight people were responsible for over 200 of these arrests — which mean some 75 percent of aggressive panhandling violations are due to less than 80 individuals. And if you talk to our public safety officials — be they police, solicitors, public defenders, judges or corrections officers — they will concur that it is the same small group of individuals commit the vast number of aggressive panhandling offenses.

Atlanta’s homeless deserve access to every available resource that we as a society can provide. The community’s voices and pleas must be heard and addressed. And we must hold accountable those few individuals whose behavior is having such a profound and negative impact on the quality of life of our downtown residents.

Until we are willing to address and acknowledge these realities, it will be impossible to make sound and just public policy on this issue. It is my intention to start the conversation and see it through to its end, ensuring that all communities and constituencies are at the table, that their concerns are heard and all are treated fairly.

A public safety committee work session to discuss Bond’s proposed panhandling ordinance will be held at 10 a.m. Aug. 23 in committee room No. 2 at City Hall, 55 Trinity Ave., SW. The session will be broadcast live on Channel 26.

Atlanta City Councilman Michael Julian Bond, chair of the public safety-legal administration committee.

By Anita Beaty

Yogi Berra said it best: “This is déjà vu all over again.”

We have all been here before, many times. Central Atlanta Progress and the mayor and city council decide for us, year after year, that homelessness is a public safety issue, not a result of exclusionary public policy and discriminatory legislation.

So they focus on criminalizing homeless people by passing more thoughtless, even unconstitutional legislation in order to avoid addressing the housing and social issues.

If homeless individuals are the problem, and if we define their public behavior as pathological at best or criminal at worst, then we can incarcerate them and avoid living next door to them or having to acknowledge them. We can frighten each other into believing that they might mean us harm instead of educating each other that relationships lead to communities that can provide for all of us.

We can be persuaded that the disoriented man on the street who approaches us means us harm. Fear blocks our own responses to his circumstance and perhaps to his request. No one wants to be verbally threatened or physically aggressed walking down the street, parking a car, waiting in a line or at a stoplight. But we already have laws prohibiting threatening words and aggressive behavior.

Repeatedly using public humiliation, harassment, and the threat of incarceration as deterrents to poverty and homelessness is insanity. In recovery circles, folks learn that repeating the same behavior over and over and expecting different results is called “crazy.”

Responding to a housing and social service crisis by criminalizing the very people we are failing, even refusing, to serve also creates outcomes that prevent those same people from getting jobs they may want and housing they might even afford. Categorizing those individuals as service-resistant or chronically homeless puts the blame on them for our exclusion.

In the years leading up to the 1996 Olympics, local corporate and political developers gave us “quality of life” laws, ordinances criminalizing behavior that in some cases is absolutely necessary for people who live without housing: “urban camping,” which amounted to sleeping in public spaces; “remaining” in a parking lot without a car; public urination, though there are no accessible public toilets.

By 2005, city officials were persuaded to approve what was called a “commercial solicitation” ordinance in exchange for the Georgia Aquarium. That deal required the city to make the area safe for the newest tourist attraction by criminalizing people who asked for any kind of help in certain areas we call the “tourist triangle.”

Not even a year passed before the very creators and proponents of the ordinance blamed their own policy for failing to solve their problems. By 2010, complaints about the “social dysfunction of the streets” again prompted Central Atlanta Progress to focus on drafting still another anti-panhandling ordinance, and to complain that these ordinances were obviously not working to eliminate street homelessness; nor had the expensive Gateway Center ended homelessness.

Still, there was no acknowledgement of causes: that maybe the demolition of 3,200 units of Atlanta’s public housing in a city where the unmet housing need already exceeded a minimum of nearly 100,000 units could increase homelessness.

So here we go again, faced with yet another anti-panhandling proposal.

We are told this ordinance addresses only “aggressive” panhandling. Look at the definitions of “aggressive” panhandling. Any behavior that might be construed by a reasonable person as threatening, that might cause someone to be afraid, can be called “aggressive.”

A mandatory sentence of six months for poorly defined behavior in a city that refuses to address or even acknowledge its housing and social service needs, where housing is destroyed, public transportation systematically removed from “poor” neighborhoods and developers reign is deeply destructive.

Anita Beaty, executive director of Metro Atlanta Task Force the Homeless.

49 comments Add your comment

skipper

August 9th, 2012
10:32 am

Any time folks get fed up with this crap they are either deemed hateful, racist in many cases, or many other terms. People need to be able to walk down the d@mn street w/o being accosted by some of these maniacal a$$holes. And yes, that is what MANY of them are. Nobody in the world deserves to be hassled by these leeches.

Tammy

August 9th, 2012
10:31 am

It is embarrassing for people to come to our city and be accosted by beggars. Most other large cities in this country have dealt with this problem and it does not happen. I do not want to feel like I am walking through the streets of Bombay when I choose to go to the 5 points MARTA station.

K-Ster

August 9th, 2012
10:30 am

(by single, I mean alone, without a friend/family member)

K-Ster

August 9th, 2012
10:29 am

To “I LIVE ONE BLOCK FROM BOULEVARD”:
Amen to you! I’m a 20-something guy and I’ve also made it a point to casually approach single women who I see being harassed… As a way to be a true southern gentleman and provide her the safe feeling she’s most likely begging for internally.

Plus, it shows these aggressive adults that they’re NOT unseen.

I LIVE ONE BLOCK FROM BOULEVARD

August 9th, 2012
10:25 am

I live in the heart of this problem in the Old4thWard and frankly I have never seen a city that refuses to deal with a problem of this magnitude. It’s pathetic. There is a difference between having compassion for people and allowing regular citizens to be harrassed and fearful in their own communities: communities in which they certainly invest and deserve to feel safe. I will sit on my porch on Glen Iris and watch as women pushing strollers are panhandled. I listen as homeless men yell gibberish at random joggers. I am a well-travelled, able-bodied 25 year old male, but that is the ONLY reason that I feel safe walking around the neigborhood anytime after dusk. What I have not experienced in other cities is the brash and repetitive nature of these people. I’ve told a man “sorry I don’t have anything to give you” and he launched into a tirade about me “judging him” (I did nothing of the sort). Just last week I observed a panhandler leaning over a girl in her car with two hands on her car as she tried to get into her vehicle. I made a point of walking over and watched until he finally left after three or four “No’s”. THIS IS UNACCEPTABLE. It is height of ignorance to tell people we need to address the “social” causes of this: are you going to alleviate poverty, criminals, and bad parents, too? I’m not holding my breath. We can always do more to help these people but they should not be allowed to roam the streets menacing other people. I know many of these people are harmless, but that is not the effect they have. These people need help but they won’t get it wandering the streets. And you know what, I do feel sorry for the tragedy of a woman taking three babies into the shelter to feed them, but society at large should not bear the burden for her poor choices. This academic attempt to claim that these people are misunderstood and tragic may be valid in theory but in reality they are menacing the locals and that is unacceptable. I see and talk to these people all the time and they are in at least half the cases percieved rightly or wrongly as a threat: they prey on weak targets like young women and old ladies. These people deserve compassion but if they are repeat offenders they also deserve jail. Period.

K-Ster

August 9th, 2012
10:22 am

Ms. Beaty, simply housing poor/homeless people will NOT fix the situation. It will only GROW the situation. If ‘the govment’ [sic] provides it all, why will they make an effort to leave? To better themselves? To STOP? I live near Vine City (Washington Park area). I see public transit (rail and bus). I also see wanderers. I hate seeing our city full of hoodlums and problematic mental health urban campers.

If you, Ms. Beaty, want to fix anything, then create a successful program that educates, medicates, and transfers homeless people into areas that can be economically inclusive. We have metro areas where they can find work. We do not need to bunch these people together in a communal building. It’s synonymous to prison. Grouping the same will not change a dang thing.

Ms. Beaty: FIX THEM. Don’t cater to them. Mr. Bond’s plan will at least provide a reason for them to change (or at least not act adversely). You can write your poetic hymns all you want, but it has way too many holes in it. Way too many empty dead-end wishes, hopes, fantasies. You may mean well, but your lack of action-planning only hurts the situation…Essentially making you party to the problem, as you so accuse Mr. Bond.

WORD.

Meli

August 9th, 2012
10:13 am

The City needs to actually enforce the ordinaces it currently has on the books to control aggressive panhandling rather than passing new laws that simply make it look good but then do nothing. There are already aggressive pandhandling laws, ‘urban camping’ laws, etc. Yet I still cannot sit at my MARTA stop to wait for a bus because someone parked their shopping cart and pitched their tent at the stop at 7 AM and won’t be gone until after sundown. And the last time I said no to a panhandler, I had my purse snatched. I told the police this particular panhandler was normally seen at a particular homeless program. What happened? When the police went to the program, the employees told them they would not cooperate because to them, all criminal behavior is necessary for a homeless person to survive, and ‘ratting’ would discourage homeless people from coming in. I used to give money to homeless programs, Ms. Beaty, but not now.

Rick Badie

August 9th, 2012
10:07 am

Sara:You make a valid point. Thanks for the suggestion. Enjoy your day. Doug: I hung out around the Five Points area for a few hours Tuesday in hopes of capturing some scenes for a column on panhandling. I even walked up and down Peachtree, Trinity and other streets, but wasn’t accosted in any way, though they were groups of men sitting on the corner, etc. Guess I picked a bad day. Or maybe the cops have cracked down on the practice in that particular area.

Sara

August 9th, 2012
9:55 am

It would be really nice if you would allow one of the other many voices for the homeless to contribute their opinion. The Georgia Law Center for the Homeless comes to mind. Though they may say very similar things to Ms. Beaty, their opinion wouldn’t be automatically dismissd as hers is due to years of self-marginalization. Thanks.

Doug

August 9th, 2012
9:44 am

I’ve quit walking to lunch anywhere that takes me past the Five Points area, because I was being consistently yelled at and even followed by aggressive (and half-crazed) beggars. Getting rid of this behavior would be good for the downtown business district!