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New York|Is It Legal to Sleep Outside in New York? Yes and No.

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IS IT LEGAL TO SLEEP OUTSIDE IN NEW YORK? YES AND NO.

A “Homeless Bill of Rights” that could become law on Saturday aims to clarify
legal issues for homeless people, including whether they can camp outdoors. But
the rules are anything but clear.

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There is no law that bans sleeping outdoors in New York City. But there are
plenty of rules that limit what’s allowed.Credit...Hilary Swift for The New York
Times


By Andy Newman

May 26, 2023Updated 9:48 a.m. ET

The five words tucked into a bill listing the rights of homeless people in New
York City seem straightforward enough:

“The right to sleep outside.”

The bill is sitting on the desk of Mayor Eric Adams. If it becomes law, it would
seem to answer a question that has become a point of contention in big cities
trying to cope with rising homelessness, including New York, where Mr. Adams’s
administration takes down dozens of urban campsites each week: Do homeless
people really have a right to sleep outside here?

The bill’s sponsor, Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, said that his “Homeless
Bill of Rights” does not create any new rights; it just compiles existing ones
in one easy-to-find place. He said that while there are rules against sleeping
in certain places or in ways that create obstructions, sleeping outside on
public property, in and of itself, is legal in New York City simply because
there is no law against it.

The bill breezed through the City Council last month by a vote of 47-0,
including all six of the Council’s Republican members.

But the question of whether, and when, and where, sleeping outside in New York
is legal turns out to be a complicated one — and one that gets to the heart of
Mr. Adams’s efforts to restore order in what he says has become a disorderly
city. The question also took on new significance this week when the city, its
shelter system overwhelmed by migrants, went to court to seek a waiver from a
decades-old requirement that it offer a shelter bed to everyone who wants one.



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Mr. Adams had 30 days to take action on the bill. If he does not approve or veto
it by Saturday, it automatically becomes law.

On any given night, several thousand people bed down in New York City’s streets
and subways, but the city has a relatively small street homelessness problem
compared with many cities in the Western United States that have extensive tent
cities and shantytowns.

A 2018 decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, which covers
nine Western states, effectively bars cities from enforcing camping bans if they
do not have enough shelter beds available for everyone who needs them. Cities
including Portland, Ore., and Culver City, Calif., are trying to address the
crisis by opening municipally run campsites while restricting camping elsewhere.
Los Angeles has outlawed tents within 500 feet of schools and banned lying down
or storing belongings in places that block the sidewalk.


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In New York City, there are many rules on the books that have been used to
restrict sleeping rough.

One is a piece of sanitation code that makes it unlawful to leave “any box,
barrel, bale or merchandise or other movable property” or to erect “any shed,
building or other obstruction” on “any public place.”

The rule was created to address “the ever increasing number of abandoned cars in
the City of New York” and “punish those persons who abandon and/or remove
component parts of motor vehicles on public streets.” But a federal judge in
2000 upheld the city’s right to apply it to homeless people sleeping in
cardboard boxes.



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In city parks, it is illegal to “engage in camping, or erect or maintain a tent,
shelter or camp” without a permit, or to be in a park at all between 1 a.m. and
6 a.m. unless posted rules state otherwise.



And on the property of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, both
underground and in outdoor elevated subway stations, it is a form of banned
disorderly conduct to “sleep or doze” in any manner that “may interfere” with
the comfort of passengers. Nor may subway riders “lie down or place feet on the
seat of a train, bus or platform bench or occupy more than one seat” or “place
bags or personal items on seats” in ways that “impede the comfort of other
passengers.”

Beth Haroules, a lawyer for the New York Civil Liberties Union, said that
someone who did not violate any of those rules — say, someone who set a sleeping
bag in an out-of-the-way spot under a highway overpass and did not put up any
kind of shelter — was legally in the clear, at least in theory.

“Assuming that you’re not creating any obstruction in that public space, there
is no bar against your being there and sleeping there,” she said.

But mayors have interpreted the rules against obstructing public spaces broadly,
Ms. Haroules said. Mr. Adams has continued his predecessor Bill de Blasio’s
policy of conducting frequent “sweeps” of sleeping spots, in which sanitation
workers dismantle camps and trash people’s belongings.



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Last year, the city conducted over 5,000 such sweeps — averaging more than a
dozen a day, according to city statistics obtained by the Safety Net Project of
the Urban Justice Center. Usually, the people who are swept set up camp again
elsewhere.

Crystal Vails, 54, said she had lived on the streets for 13 years, the last year
or so in an unused doorway in the West Village. She said that city outreach
workers and the police had come 20 or 30 times and made her move her current
encampment, but had never explained what was illegal about it.

“They don’t say, that’s the thing,” said Ms. Vails, a Safety Net Project client
whose setup includes a tent, two bags, a shopping cart and a camping mat.

“They say it’s against the law to sleep here,” she added. “No, it’s not — if
that’s the case I would have gotten arrested a long time ago and I didn’t.”

The city’s Law Department declined to answer questions about what is and is not
legal in the realm of sleeping outdoors.



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“Our primary obligation is to advise client officials and agencies,” a Law
Department spokesman said in a statement. “Providing legal advice to the media
on these topics would not be consistent with that obligation.”

To Mr. Williams, the public advocate, “abuses that are happening all throughout
the system” created the need for his bill, which requires the city’s Department
of Homeless Services to inform homeless people of 10 rights. They also include
the right to complain about shelter conditions without being retaliated against,
the right to apply for housing vouchers and the right to be placed in a shelter
consistent with a person’s gender identity.

“We are just giving an empowerment tool to homeless New Yorkers so they can
self-advocate,” he said.

New York City has always had enough shelter beds, but the migrant crisis has
strained the system nearly to its limits. The city’s homeless population has
jumped by nearly 80 percent since last May, prompting the city to ask a judge on
Tuesday for an exemption from the requirement to shelter single adults and adult
families when it “lacks the resources and capacity to establish and maintain
sufficient shelter sites.”

Steven Banks, the social services commissioner under Mr. de Blasio, was critical
of the city’s request.



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“It is hard to see how asking a court to suspend the right to shelter that is
secured by the New York State Constitution is a winning strategy,” he said,
“because there will be far more people sleeping on the streets if the city’s
request is granted, and that is in no one’s interest.”

At a briefing on the city’s plans on Wednesday, Mr. Adams’s chief counsel,
Brendan McGuire, said that the city’s intention was “not to get a court order so
that we can shut the door and have thousands of people living on the street.”

But when a reporter asked what would happen if the requirement were lifted and a
person came to a shelter seeking a bed, Mr. McGuire declined to answer.

The question, he said, was “a hypothetical that depends on how the court case
plays out.”



Andy Newman writes about social services and poverty in New York City and its
environs. He has covered the region for The Times for 25 years. @andylocal

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