He was听a white man in his late 40s, I’m guessing.听His hair was听greasy and unkempt, his听T-shirt and shorts torn听and soiled. I avoided looking at his feet.

I could not听avoid him otherwise, however, because he was听standing in the grass median next to the left-turn lane where听Vineyard Boulevard meets the Pali Highway as it melds into downtown Honolulu.

In his hands he held up a crude message on a piece of cardboard. It read, “Please help. God bless.”

Is this man engaging in a form of protected speech?

Hanlly Sam/flickr.com

It’s been awhile since I regularly saw this听man,听as I don’t frequent that intersection much anymore.

But there are always men听like him around town (and they always听seem to be men),听with the same worn-down demeanor and sad face, seeking my spare change. The only thing that varies is what’s written on the sign. “Will work for food,” maybe. “Vietnam Veteran.” I never give them money.

Don’t Sit, Don’t Lie, Don’t Relieve Yourself

It’s been a tough month for people who already hit hard times. The Honolulu City Council passed bills last week prohibiting sitting and lying on the sidewalks of Waikiki and using public places on Oahu to relieve oneself. A measure still pending would extend the sit-lie prohibition to other commercial districts.

“People can鈥檛 be sent to jail merely for holding a sign by the side of the road.” 鈥 ACLU of Hawaii

On Friday, the state Land Board听approved a city petition to lease state land for a temporary homeless encampment on Sand Island.

Earlier this year, the Hawaii Legislature extended a ban on urinating and defecating in downtown听Honolulu and made it illegal to partially obstruct sidewalks.

A third measure, prohibiting lying down at bus stops, was held.

Another aspect听of homelessness, however, has received听less attention: flat-out begging for money like the man at听the corner of Vineyard and Pali. But that is beginning to change, as Civil Beat reported last week.

Honolulu City Councilmember Ann Kobayashi sign waves with Gov. Abercrombie at the corner of South King and Ward before his last campaign rally of the Primary season on August 5, 2014.

Gov. Neil Abercrombie at the corner of South King Street and Ward Avenue just听before the primary. ACLU attorneys likened beggars with signs to political candidates waving signs at election time.

PF Bentley/Civil Beat

鈥淢any of the visitors would comment to us that they feel that the streets are not safe,鈥 Helene 鈥淪am鈥 Shenkus, marketing director for the Royal Hawaiian Center, told City Council members at a public hearing. 鈥淢any of the parents are troubled that they are having to explain to their children as they watch half-naked people, people who have cardboard signs that are begging for money.鈥

In a related听development, the听ACLU of Hawaii filed a lawsuit last week against Hawaii County challenging its panhandling ordinance.

It is on behalf of Justin Guy, a homeless man who in June听held a sign saying 鈥淗omeless Please Help鈥 while standing to the side of Kaiwi Street in Kailua-Kona.

Big Island cops told Guy that听panhandling was illegal, but Guy responded that he had a right to听hold a sign by the side of听the road. Guy received a citation.

听“No person shall solicit in an aggressive manner in any public place.” 鈥 Hawaii County Code

In its brief, the听ACLU says Hawaii County’s panhandling law violates the First Amendment that guarantees听freedom of speech 鈥 something that ACLU attorney Dan Gluck says听has听been upheld by the U.S. Supreme听Court.

In Guy’s case, the Fourth Amendment prohibiting听unreasonable searches and seizures and the 14th Amendment on equal protection have also been violated, the brief contends.听 The ACLU is asking the U.S. District Court on the Big Island听to invalidate the Hawaii County law, order the听county’s police department to听stop threatening Guy and to award him听damages.

Are Beggars Intimidating?

On Friday, Hawaii County filed its response听to the lawsuit.听(Both briefs are posted below.)

Attorneys for Corporation Counsel argue that the county’s law听is constitutional “and merely places reasonable restrictions on the manner and location of solicitation in order to prevent aggressive and dangerous solicitation practices.” They believe the Supreme Court has recognized that solicitation bans “are content-neutral,” adding, “Government has considerable latitude to regulate conduct, even where the conduct has an expressive component.”

“Not all roadways or sidewalks are deemed public forums.” 鈥斕鼿awaii County

The Big Island law was enacted in 1999 after several solicitation听complaints from members of the public who said they felt intimidated, including a County Council member who was an attorney.

“When the Council member left a movie with her two young children, an individual asked for money and then followed her to her car,” the county’s brief explains. “She feared for the safety of herself and her children. The public also felt intimidated and forced to give money to these individuals. There were concerns for the public鈥檚 safety raised by individuals, merchants and the police.”

In the June incident听involving Justin Guy, the county states that he was impeding traffic and creating a hazard, and听that he refused to听follow a听police officer鈥檚 order.

“Not all roadways or sidewalks are deemed public forums,” says Corporation Counsel.

Asked about the county’s response, Gluck said, “They said they听are fully entitled听to regulate听solicitation in the听way they have done.听We disagree, and we will be filing our response Monday.”

Are Sign-Waving Politicians Beggars?

The sections of the cited by the ACLU concern听solicitation (section 14-75) and begging in public parks (section 15-20). Section 14-75 lists 12 prohibited听acts, including, “No person shall solicit in an aggressive manner in any public place” and “No person shall solicit an operator or other occupant of a motor vehicle while such vehicle is located on any street, for the purpose of performing or offering to perform a service in connection with such vehicle or otherwise soliciting the sale of goods or services.”

Section 15-20 (a) states simply, “Begging is prohibited.”

In its complaint, the ACLU said Guy’s actions do not appear to be applicable under the code’s solicitation violation, and that both laws are unconstitutional. In an interesting analogy, ACLU attorneys likened beggars with signs to political candidates waving signs at election time.

“The courts have consistently held that the homeless have the same free speech rights as everyone else.” 鈥 ACLU of Hawaii

鈥淟aws limiting free expression often wind up being used to stop speech with which the government disagrees,” said Matthew Winter, an attorney with , in the ACLU’s press release announcing听its听complaint. “Here, the law allows political candidates to hold signs by the side of the road, but prohibits the poor from holding signs asking for help.”

Winter added, “The First Amendment does not allow the government to pick and choose which messages it likes and which ones it will allow in public spaces. That is why we need this law off the books.鈥

Gluck states in the press release, 鈥淭he courts have consistently held that the homeless have the same free speech rights as everyone else. People can鈥檛 be sent to jail merely for holding a sign by the side of the road.”

Int'l Campus Ministries

Soliciting donations for mission work 鈥 do the same principles apply?

Chad Blair/Civil Beat

Gluck told Civil Beat he didn’t think Honolulu had a similar ordinance regarding begging and said he did not know whether other island counties have similar restrictions on begging.

My听search听of the , the Kauai County Charter, the 听and a 听did not turn up results for “begging” or “panhandling,” nor definitions of “solicitation” as found in the Hawaii County Code. (I did not search for “alms for the poor.”)

The June 2014 incident involving Guy and Hawaii County cops, which was dismissed in August, is not the first. The ACLU says there have been “multiple occasions,” including one this spring听near the intersection of Luhia and Kaiwi streets in Kailua-Kona.

Playing the Guitar for Tips

In 2012,听Guy was sitting on a concrete wall听near the Hulihee Palace in听Alii Drive, between the sidewalk and the听beach. He was playing guitar and had his guitar case open on the sidewalk with a sign that read, “Tips.”

A police officer told Guy he could not display any sign, even one that said “Donations.” Guy gave up playing the guitar for cash.

But here is how the county views Guy’s musical ambitions:听“Plaintiff wants to be professional musician. In his quest for stardom, Plaintiff practices his music ‘all the time’. He chose not to have a job because it takes times away from his practicing. As a result, except for the times he stays with his girlfriend, he is homeless.”

听“The First Amendment does not guarantee the right to communicate one’s views at all times and places or in any manner that may be desired.” 鈥 Hawaii County

The county听also notes that the ACLU waited 15 years to complain about its ordinance.

What does听Guy听want? “Plaintiff Guy would like to stand on a public sidewalk, or along public听roadways, and hold a sign telling the public that he is homeless and that he would听like their help,” the ACLU’s brief explains. “He would like people to know how difficult it is to be homeless.”

What does the county think about that? “The First Amendment does not guarantee the right to communicate one’s views at all times and places or in any manner that may be desired.”

Another Roadside听Distraction

After I finished a draft of this column, I drove along Beretania听Street and stopped at a red light at McCully Street. A pleasant young woman with a nice smile extended a basket to me.

I rolled down the window, thinking it was the Hawaii Food Bank or kids raising money for some cause.听I put a dollar in the basket and asked if I could take her picture. She said yes, I snapped the shot, and then she handed me a flyer. The light turned green and I drove off.

At the next red light, I looked at the flyer. It was a promotion for International Campus Ministries. “This voucher entitles you to receive a FREE Bible!!!” the flyer explained听鈥 as long as I redeemed it at a Sunday service in Manoa. My reaction? God bless the First Amendment.

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