A separate part of the lawsuit which has to do with 4th Amendment questions and how the city can handle homeless people’s property will still be sorted out in local courts. Homeless residents are being represented by the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California and the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area.
“This will give our City more flexibility to provide services to unhoused people while keeping our streets healthy and safe,” said City Attorney David Chiu in a statement Monday. “It will help us address our most challenging encampments, where services are often refused and re-encampment is common.”
Nisha Kashyap, an attorney representing the Coalition on Homelessness, said there are still safeguards in place for the city’s homeless population.
“The city still has policies that require it to offer shelter,” said Kashyap, referring to Proposition Q, which passed in 2016 and requires the city to offer alternatives to people living on the street. “We expect the city to still follow the local law.”