Maui News

Public Webinar Presents ACLU of Hawaiʻi Report on Alternatives to Criminalizing Homelessness

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Homelessness Maui. Maui Now File Photo.

The ACLU of Hawai‘i released a report today titled “Decriminalizing Houselessness in Hawai‘i,” which shows how criminalizing people’s status of being unsheltered causes irreparable harm to individuals, wastes public resources, dehumanizes those experiencing houselessness in the eyes of the public, and directly undermines the government’s investments in housing and supportive services.

The report also shows that criminalizing houselessness deepens racial and ethnic disparities, disproportionately harming houseless Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders.

“The report we’re releasing today documents what government has done wrong, but also charts a path forward for how taxpayer dollars can be better spent, with positive results, all without dehumanizing and violating the rights of people who are experiencing houselessness,” said ACLU of Hawaiʻi Executive Director Joshua Wisch.

A public webinar will be held Monday, Nov. 29 at 6 pm to present and discuss the report. The speakers for the webinar include report author Asha DuMonthier, former houseless Oʻahu resident Lindsay Pacheco, ACLU of Hawaiʻi Legal DIrector Wookie Kim and Shayna Lonoaea-Alexander, a hapa queer community organizer working as a consultant mobilizing for criminal legal policy change through legislative advocacy and political education. This virtual event is free and will include lived close-captioning and ASL interpretation. To register for the webinar and read the report, click here.

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The findings of the report are based in part on interviews with service providers, government employees, community organizers, academics, philanthropic organizations, and people who have experienced houselessness in Hawai‘i. Some of the topline recommendations resulting from the report include:

  • Repeal, defund and stop enforcing laws that criminalize houselessness
  • Prioritize community-building and cultural change
  • Create mobile crisis response services that are autonomous from police, accessible to the public and accountable to the community
  • Expand Housing First and wraparound services
  • Grow the inventory of housing that is affordable to extremely low-income residents
  • Strengthen tenant protections
  • Increase the minimum wage

Aura Reyes, an O‘ahu resident who experienced sweeps while she and her family were houseless, said: “The sweeps are not only disruptive, they are degrading to the people who are targeted as a result of them. They send these people a message that the city believes that they are worthless and considered trash. It also hurts the providers who are trying to build the trust and relationships needed in order to get people off of our streets and into housing.”

Pacheco, a formerly houseless O‘ahu resident who has experienced sweeps in the past and who contributed to the report findings, spends her weekends assisting houseless people who have been affected by sweeps. She helps people navigate the complex processes to secure forms of identification like drivers’ licenses and birth certificates, which are often confiscated and discarded by the City during sweeps, making it impossible for many unhoused people to even apply for housing assistance. After many years on the street, Lindsay got housed in May 2020, with the assistance of a Housing First voucher.

In Honolulu, administrators are rebranding sweeps as “sanitation efforts,” according to the ACLU of Hawaiʻi press release.

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“A sweep is a sweep no matter how you label it, or try to justify it, or how you conduct it,” Pacheco said. “When conducting a ‘sanitation outreach,’ how does one determine what is ‘trash’ and what is someone’s belongings, especially when houseless individuals are generally seen as trash in the eyes of society anyway? Treating houseless people like trash on the streets is in no way a solution to houselessness, nor criminalizing us either.”

The report’s author DuMonthier holds a Master of Public Policy degree from the University of California at Berkeley and has a background in community and labor organizing.

She said:  “Houselessness is driven by structural factors — lack of housing that is affordable to low-income people, stagnant wages and inadequate renter protections and social safety net supports. Yet the primary local government response to houselessness is punitive — using the police to sweep, cite, arrest and incarcerate unhoused people. This response is ineffective at addressing the root causes of houselessness and does incredible damage to unhoused people’s health and well-being. Why continue with a losing strategy, when public resources could instead be invested in creating safer, healthier and more equitable communities?”    

Looking at these new approaches is essential as it is increasingly clear that what we have been doing in Hawai‘i is not working. Policing costs the counties half a billion dollars a year, with each county spending 16 to 30 times on policing what it does on addressing houselessness, according to the press release.

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In fiscal year 2020 the City of Honolulu carried out 1,634 sweeps over the course of 320 days, an average of more than 5 sweeps per day. The ACLU of Hawai‘i estimates that sweeps alone cost Honolulu almost $5 million per year. Based on that, the county funds used to conduct sweeps in one year could instead be used to fund 192 Housing First vouchers and save taxpayers $2.2 Million per year in costs related to healthcare, arrests and incarceration.

“In 2016 the ACLU of Hawai‘i successfully sued the City and County of Honolulu over its treatment of houseless people’s property, which the City was seizing and destroying without due process,” said Legal Director Wookie Kim. “And on Oct. 20, 2021 the ACLU of Hawai‘i filed suit against Maui County for violations of the constitutional rights of people swept from Kanahā. While we can and will continue to bring such suits to protect peoples’ rights under the state and federal constitutions, we hope that instead government will look carefully at these recommendations as an alternative to criminalizing houselessness.”

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