Panhandling pressure downtown

Moderated by Tom Sabulis

Failure has marked the city of Atlanta’s attempts to curb panhandling, particularly aggressive begging from repeat offenders. The latest proposal calls for stiffer penalties such as mandated jail time for a third conviction. Homeless activists say the measures criminalize poverty; proponents add that tougher laws are aimed at a small group of incorrigible mendicants. Below, a business leader writes how panhandling affects commercial life and civic pride, while an activist says laws don’t get at the root of the problem.

Commenting is open below Joe Beasley’s column.

By William “Chick” Ciccaglione

Underground Atlanta is a major attraction, welcoming millions of tourists, convention goers, residents and office workers annually. The property sits on 12 acres and spans six blocks in the heart of downtown Atlanta and was acquired by O’Leary Partners, Inc. in 1999.

The panhandling “issue” existed then and still exists today, with more frequency and aggression.

Over time, aggressive panhandling has become a citywide issue, but it does seem as though the Five Points area is most plagued by the act.

The MARTA station is the nucleus of our transit system, flanked by one of the city’s most historic landmarks, city, state, county and federal offices, Georgia State University and residential buildings.

This area including Underground Atlanta is weighed down by things like quality-of-life issues, loitering, irresponsible property owners, unregulated vending and aggressive panhandling.

A number of laws, policies and procedures, task forces and awareness campaigns have been implemented over the years. Unfortunately, none have resulted in long-term effectiveness and, as a result, panhandling has become increasingly worse.

Responsible property owners are frustrated. Residents are frustrated. Law enforcement is frustrated.

At present there is no glue holding up the current panhandling ordinance in court, making it extremely hard to enforce any repercussions for participating in aggressive panhandling.

Underground Atlanta has its own policies and procedures in place that we enforce internally, but battling the issue is extremely challenging and creates additional expenses for the property: security, housekeeping and building maintenance.

Multiple real estate deals have fallen through based on these experiences and, depending on the economics of each deal, have resulted in loss of potential income from $10,000 to $1 million, which means less taxes collected and jobs created for the city, state and county.

We have issued approximately 350 criminal trespasses year-to-date and 50 to 60 percent of those were issued to aggressive panhandlers. That’s approximately one per day, and those are panhandlers who would not leave the property peacefully, many of whom are repeat offenders.

Earlier this year a group of Underground Atlanta business owners and a few allies in the district approached Mayor Kasim Reed on the subject.

In response, Mayor Reed spent an afternoon observing. As a result, a new task force was formed, spearheaded by Central Atlanta Progress (CAP), called Operation Best Foot Forward.

The group includes us at Underground Atlanta, a number of properties and business owners including Fairfield Inn & Suites, CAP staff members, the Atlanta Downtown Neighborhood Association, Atlanta Police Department, GSU police, MARTA police, the mayor’s office, as well as other invested stakeholders.

This task force is addressing a number of things: panhandling, quality-of-life issues, aesthetics and beautification, code enforcement and unified law enforcement.

We are pleased and optimistic the public safety committee chaired by Councilman Michael Bond, Mayor Reed and the City Council are taking a serious look at strengthening panhandling legislation and that this is a priority for more than those of us living through it daily.

We know things will not change overnight, but we are encouraged by the recent interest taken in this issue and glad to be heard that we need help.

The Five Points MARTA Station is the busiest in the system with 800,000 people passing through per month.

Therefore this entire area should be beautiful, clean, vibrant; a destination for our residents and visitors. An area that we are proud of.

Something has to be done.

William “Chick” Ciccaglione is general manager of Underground Atlanta.

By Joe Beasley

Panhandlers give downtown Atlanta a “black eye,” critics say.

They’re too pushy.

They frighten people when they beg.

They’re a threat to the city’s multibillion dollar convention and tourism industry because the very sight of beggars, the majority of whom are African-American men, appear to be threatening.

Panhandlers must be stopped to protect public safety, critics argue, even if it means locking them up in overcrowded jails for what some perceive as criminal behavior.

Atlanta has a long history of trying to criminalize homelessness that dates back to the early ’70s. Georgia State University professor Charles G. Steffen documents it in a study he published recently in the Journal of Social History called “The Corporate Campaign against Homelessness: Class Power and Urban Governance in Neoliberal Atlanta, 1973-1988.”

The most recent proposal, introduced by City Councilman Michael J. Bond, to jail aggressive panhandlers for a minimum of six months after a third conviction, is based on convoluted logic.

Criminalizing panhandling is like putting a Band-Aid on cancer.

It doesn’t heal the fact that we have a lot of desperate, needy people in Atlanta, particularly African-American men who have never really had a place in this country.

As descendants of slaves and sharecroppers, black men have been pushed off the land and into urban areas where they have never had a home.

But the city too busy to hate just doesn’t get it.

The formal leaders – Mayor Kasim Reed and Bond – and the informal, behind-the-scenes power brokers such as Central Atlanta Progress, the chamber of commerce, Coca-Cola and the Convention and Visitors Bureau, refuse to deal with the root causes of poverty and panhandling.

People are being marginalized in our society.

There are no jobs.

Social services are scarce and the needy continue to be locked out.

The systemic problem is racism and an unequal justice system where black males make up more than 50 percent of the jail and prison populations.

When they get out, they have a scarlet letter on their foreheads that makes them less likely to succeed in a capitalistic society.

Advocates for Bond’s proposal say they are targeting the “professional” beggar who is aggressive and who really wants the money for drugs or alcohol.

I’ve heard businessmen claim there are only about 60 who meet that criteria. If that’s the case, and Atlanta police know who they are, why not deal with them directly instead of adopting an ordinance that penalizes everyone?

I would be more than willing to work on such a project.

There are about 50,000 vacant homes and buildings in Atlanta.

The $78 a day it takes to keep a person in jail could be used to provide social services and housing for the homeless.

City leaders need to stop this habit of blaming the homeless, the real victims in this debate.

If something is damaged, you fix it.

We have a lot of damaged people in society who need to be repaired.

As long as we are in denial about that, the problem will not go away.

Joe Beasley is is vice chair of the Task Force for the Homeless, and Human Services director for Antioch Baptist Church North.


43 comments Add your comment

shelly patos

September 6th, 2012
9:39 pm

Im sorry but Ive worked downtown for 10years and see the SAME faces over and over! They(most of them) do NOT want “help” they want MONEY.If you offer them food or work they come up with some B?S excuse.There are many jobs they would qualify for but they chose to live the lifestyle they lead.Ask any officer.If they wanted off the streets they would easily be able to do so. Go ask one next time theyre harrassing you for money if they want to come and rake your yard or help you do something.

Meli

September 6th, 2012
9:39 pm

The simple truth is the reason there has been little to no effect on panhandling in Atlanta is all the previous laws that have been passed on the matter are NEVER enforced. We have laws on Aggressive Panhandling, Public Nusicances, Urban Camping, etc. When was the last time any resident, vistior, or employee can actually say they’ve seen the Atlanta Police arrest anyone on those violations, other than an effort to drive Occupy Atlanta out of Woodruff Park? The ordinances that have been passed by the City Council and signed into law by three mayors now, are just a dog-and-pony show meant to show the people they’re ‘getting tough’, when they have absolutely no intention of actually following through. If the APD were to simply sweep through Five Points and Woodruff Park with a battalion of officers and 10 Paddy Wagons every other week, arresting people under the existing laws, you’ll clean up the area in no time.

Bernie

September 6th, 2012
9:31 pm

The Pan handling issue is just another symptom of our societies many Ills. There is no easy solution or just one answer to resolve all of them at once. It will have to take the involvement of all involved to make it better. That will be the only way we come to a compromise with this ongoing problem. This is not a new issue for City Hall and those who work there. They are just as frustrated too! and sure exactly what to do.
It is going to take more action from the community as a whole to help reduce this problem. Without that approach we are just putting our sunglasses on leaving the problem to someone else to solve and keep on walking by. Just as many
do everyday!

SAWB

September 6th, 2012
9:08 pm

While I am well aware of these individuals I personally don’t see it as much of a problem. When they start harassing me I very firmly tell them to” leave me the _____ alone” and they “leave me the ____alone”. The answer is really quiet simply just stop giving them anything and they’ll go away.

A Fed Up Downtown Worker

September 6th, 2012
8:42 pm

For individuals like myself who have a business or work downtown every day, people like Joe Beasley just make me sick. We work hard every day to try to put food on the table to feed our families in a tough economic climate and downtown workers are confronted by the same silliness every day. The drunks, the drug addicts and even able bodied men demanding you give them money to feed their sick habits or help them to maintain their lazy lifestyle. Women being verbally abused by nasty men showing their dirty underwear thinking they are cool. In all the years working downtown, I have never seen a person from Latin America ever beg me for money. They are usually seen on MARTA covered with dirt after working on a construction job or cleaning someone’s bathroom. If they were willing to crawl across the desert to find work in America, why can’t the panhandlers of downtown Atlanta at least try and do the same?

Daphne

September 6th, 2012
7:45 pm

A co-worker and New Jersey native came down to our satellite office to drop off her daughter, who is attending a school in the Atlanta University Complex. When she got to Five Points station from the airport, she said she immediately knew the area wasn’t safe, and she was surprised by it all as an out-of-towner.

IMO, there are too many “personalities,” Atlanta “characters” who, suffering from the legacy of racism, are panhandling with an implied understanding that they are here to make society suffer back for its wounds.

A small racially mixed group of people recently toured the MLK district, learning some of the history of the Old Fourth Ward from a native here. As day waned toward evening, the group was treated to a heckling along its way to see the John Wesley Dobbs sculpture on Auburn Ave. The man sang loudly, as if to taunt, “Somebody’s gonna hurt someone, before the night is through.”

There are some sins that can never be expiated. So too with shameless behavior. Historical context is no refuge.

Bernie

September 6th, 2012
7:31 pm

Downtowner @ 6:58 pm – LOL! oh yes, as with any thing in life you will have the Liars and the dishonest ….such is life. However, there are many that have had a bad turn life. Some by happenstance and many by their own makings and creations. Many are there due to mental illness as well. We cannot just throw them ALL behind bars and close our eyes and hope the disappear. That is a Fools game. In time they will return, because there is no other place for them to go. A portion of your statement is a gross exaggeration as well, just as they too will overstate the situation. but I understand what you mean. :)

George

September 6th, 2012
7:29 pm

As a slightly OTP resident, I seldom go downtown for the reasons mentioned above. I would like to visit the city more often to try new restaurants, sports, culture, etc. but it is not worth the hassle or the “hustle”. It makes me uncomfortable. I do not want to take friends down from out of town to check out the Underground entertainment for fear of embarrasment, and that is too bad. The businesses could use the money and the city the tax revenue. This is not a complex issue as some suggest . It just takes leadership and some political guts. Atlanta will stagnate until issues like this are addressed.

Downtowner

September 6th, 2012
6:58 pm

As a downtown resident and homeowner for the last 14 years, I have a different opinion that is rarely mentioned. My experience and observation is that most of the panhandlers are NOT homeless. They are professional and in many respects they are entrepreneurs, plying their trade without permits or paying any taxes.

They also make life worse for the truly homeless, who are ill prepared to out-hustle these professionals.

It’s also foolish to give any of these people your money. Once you do it, they know what pocket your money or wallet is in. They can probably estimate, very closely, exactly how much cash you have. Plus, you’ll be remembered by this panhandler and his “associates” or “competitors” in the future.

Bernie

September 6th, 2012
6:11 pm

Chick ,This is not a NEW Problem. It has been here for many years and unlike you I have no faith and confidence in Mayor Reed or Councilman BOND to provide you with a workable or reliable solution long term. I can share with you that they will smile, laugh and talk with you and provide you with the same false sense of security that so many past Mayors and councilpersons have done over the years. All who have very limited and short lived success. there is no easy answer to be found here. the solutions will involve many movable parts with a lot of hands on attention.

Do not be lulled in to a sense of false hope for you and your associates to only be disappointed and disheartened. when their Failure knocks at your door. Knock it surely will, just after their next election or planned political campaign.

I personally do not have a complete solution for you to take home. But if you are told
that incarceration is the key and answer. The final results will only be short termed and short lived. It will cost the city far too much in policing and incarceration costs to keep up with the pace of arrests.

I would suggest that you seriously consider opening up channels of communications
with Joe Beasley and other community organizations and local social services if you
really want to find a longer lasting and more humane solution. From my experience these groups will not fill your ears with false hope and promises. They will openly and honestly share with you potential avenues to be taken, to put most of these issues in a workable and containable box. This issue will always be a work in process because of its location. Pan handling has always has been a problem at that location and surrounding area, since the late 1960’s. Long before the MARTA five points train station was even on the drawing table. That is the Truth my friend.