State Senate bill would ban homeless camps near schools

State Senate bill would ban homeless camps near schools

Some call out supporters for stereotyping

  • By Sean Harding WNPA Olympia 
News Bureau
  • Thursday, February 21, 2019 12:11pm
  • News

By Sean Harding

WNPA Olympia News Bureau

OLYMPIA – A bipartisan bill introduced in the state Senate would ban homeless camps near schools and daycare facilities.

Senate Bill 5882, sponsored by Sen. Curtis King, R-Yakima, would make it illegal for municipalities to authorize, even through inaction, homeless encampments within 1,000 feet of a school or early learning facility.

“We have laws in this state that say you can’t have a marijuana store or liquor store within 1,000 feet of a school,” said King in a written statement.

“Homeless camps near schools put students in greater harm than marijuana or alcohol. Why should we allow that to happen? It puts the safety of students and teachers at risk.”

At the bill’s public hearing Monday, King described images he was shown of human waste leaking out of bags, and said he talked to workers describing how they carried away 5-gallon cans of needles from homeless camps.

He also said that some of the encampments’ residents could be pedophiles, sex offenders, mentally ill or high on drugs.

Michelle Thomas of the Washington Low Income Housing Alliance said that cities who support encampments should be “applauded,” because they not only offer residents safety, but also access to services and housing.

The proposed bill, “is all based on false notions that everybody experiencing unsheltered homelessness is dangerous,” she said. “In order to solve homelessness, we have to stop criminalizing and stigmatizing people.”

Another Republican senator agreed with the need to offer services to homeless individuals, but disagreed that they should be sanctioned near schools.

“So when various cities go in to clean up an encampment, they’re pulling up hundreds of needles and all this other stuff. So yes we can address those issues. Yes, we should address those issues. Yes we should provide a stabilizer for all the things that you just said,” said Sen. Phil Fortunato, R-Auburn. “We just should be doing it three blocks away. That’s all we’re saying.”

Said King: “I always cringe when somebody says, ‘well this is kind of a commonsense bill.’ But in some sense, I think it is.”

Not everyone agreed.

“It’s not strangers coming out of the woods to, like, kidnap a kid or something like that,” said Xochitl Maykovich with the Washington Community Action Network.

“So I think that we should really base legislation on facts and data and not on stereotypes.”

________

This story is part of a series of news reports from the Washington State Legislature provided through a reporting internship sponsored by the Washington Newspaper Publishers Association Foundation.

More in News

Joshua Wright, program director for the Legacy Forest Defense Coalition, stands in a forest plot named "Dungeness and Dragons," which is managed by the Department of Natural Resources (DNR). Currently, the DNR is evaluating Wright's claim that there is a rare plant community in one of the units, which would qualify the parcel for automatic protection from logging. Locating rare plant communities is just one of the methods environmental activists use to protect what they call "legacy forests." (Joshua Wright)
Activists answer call to protect forests

Advocacy continues beyond timber auctions

Port of Port Angeles talks project status

Marine Trade Center work close to completion

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
The Rayonier #4 logging locomotive on display at Chase Street and Lauridsen Boulevard in Port Angeles, is the focus of a fundraising drive to restore the engine and further develop the site.
Locomotive viewing event scheduled for Sunday

“Restore the 4” project underway

Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News
Port Townsend High School culinary arts student Jasper Ziese, left, watches as fellow students Emil Brown sauces the dish and Raivyn Johnson, right, waits to box it up. The students prepared and served a free lunch from the program's food truck, Culinary Cruiser, for a senior project on Saturday.
Culinary Cruiser delivers practical experience for Port Townsend students

Part of Career and Technical Education culinary arts program

PC’s enrollment rates show steady growth

Numbers reverse ten-year trend

Pink House will see repairs in 2025

Siding, deck planks, support beams on list

Clallam County gets Legislative update

Property tax bills still in play

Investigators find faulty fridge cause of trailer fire

A fire inside a fifth-wheel trailer that claimed the life… Continue reading

Danielle Fodor of Irondale cavorts as a dancing tree during Saturday’s World Water Day festivities at Hollywood Beach in Port Angeles. The international event served as a call to action to advocate for sustainable management of fresh water resources and environmental conservation. In Port Angeles, the celebration included a water blessing and guided hikes on local trails in the Elwha River watershed. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
World water day

Danielle Fodor of Irondale cavorts as a dancing tree during Saturday’s World… Continue reading

Opinions differ on cultural tax funds

Public engagement next step in process

Jefferson County team removes nearly 300 acres of noxious weeds

Scotch broom, poison hemlock, holly removed from various areas

Comment period open on Growler operations

Navy to host meetings on Whidbey Island