Concerns about legal vulnerabilities led a Honolulu City Council committee to defer two of three bills to expand聽the city鈥檚 ban on sitting or lying on public sidewalks.
Councilman Ernie Martin introduced both measures that were deferred at Tuesday’s meeting of the聽Executive Affairs and Legal Matters Committee. would have extended the ban along all public sidewalks on Oahu. 聽would have extended it along all sidewalks in front of businesses.
The committee also voted to gut and replace a聽聽calling for safe zones where homeless people could legally pitch tents. Instead, Councilman Ron Menor, chair of the committee, said the city should create temporary villages of tiny homes.
The perceived legal threat to an islandwide sit-lie ban stemmed in part from a 2006 case in which the 9th U.S. Court of Appeals struck down a citywide ban in Los Angeles because there weren鈥檛 enough shelter beds for the city鈥檚 homeless.
The found about 4,959 homeless people on Oahu. City housing director Marc Alexander said at the meeting that Oahu鈥檚 shelter capacity is under 3,000 and 2,600 shelter beds are occupied.
The committee approved a proposed by Councilwoman Ann Kobayashi that would prohibit sitting or lying down on public sidewalks within 800 feet of schools or public libraries from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. The full City Council will consider that measure in November, but Menor said it is a work in progress and will be amended.聽
鈥淭his is the one bill that may be salvageable from a legal standpoint,鈥 Menor said. 鈥淟et鈥檚 give it a shot and see what happens.鈥
An assistant superintendent for the and Stacy Kaneshige of the 聽voiced support for the intent of the bill.
The resolution on safe zones, also introduced by Martin, envisioned city-sanctioned homeless encampments聽where people could 鈥渆rect a tent without fear of eviction鈥 and access 鈥渞estroom facilities, social services, and security.鈥
But the committee members said they preferred shelters of tiny homes similar to Hale Mauliola, the Sand Island facility where shipping containers have been converted to housing units.
Menor said he, Kobayashi and Councilwoman Carol Fukunaga visited in Seattle, and many of the encampments had small wooden houses.
鈥淲e all came away very impressed,鈥 Menor said. 鈥淲e need more of these kinds of shelters.鈥
Menor plans to introduce an amended resolution before the November council meeting.
In August, Big Island Mayor Harry Kim created Hawaii’s only safe zone, Camp Kikaha in Kona.
Eventually, Kim plans to establish a safe zone for up to 100 people on a 5-acre parcel just outside of Kona鈥檚 business district. Hawaii County officials are considering purchasing fiberglass domes to house people there.
Honolulu housing director Alexander said Mayor Kirk Caldwell’s administration opposes safe zones, but would consider the committee鈥檚 new proposal for shelters with modular homes.
He warned the committee that in other cities, the modular homes that are supposed to be a stepping stone to permanent housing often end up as permanent housing themselves.
Akua Campanella is a social worker for but testified as an individual. She said she supports tiny homes for the homeless because affordable housing units aren鈥檛 available.
鈥淚鈥檝e had clients on a housing wait list for three years,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he reason why I support the little village is, what else is there?鈥
Oahu had a housing shortfall of 24,000 units as of 2016 and the highest need comes from people making less than 80 percent of the area median income, according to published last month
An individual earning 80 percent AMI in Honolulu has an annual salary of $58,600, a family of four would make $83,700, according to the .
The city issued an average of 2,080 building permits each year for the last five years and most of homes constructed on Oahu were only affordable for higher-income households, the audit said.
Alexander said affordable units are available. He noted that service providers create lists of property managers willing to accept homeless people as tenants.聽
鈥淲e know we have units,鈥 Alexander said. 鈥淲e have an 8.6 percent rental vacancy rate.鈥
Councilman Brandon Elefante opposed both the resolution and all three sit-lie ban bills.
鈥淲hat it comes down to is providing housing and resources,鈥 he said.
Some state lawmakers have expressed interest in safe zones.
In the last legislative session lawmakers passed , which requires members of the to study the concept and create a report with recommendations, including state-owned land parcels that could be used for legal homeless encampments.
The group held a public meeting earlier this month and must submit its recommendations by January.
GET IN-DEPTH REPORTING ON HAWAII鈥橲 BIGGEST ISSUES
Support Independent, Unbiased News
Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.