Civil liberties advocates fight Hawaii law targetting homeless
Wednesday, September 8, 2004 at 03:08AM
TheSpook
A new law targeting the homeless in Hawaii is under attack by housing
and civil liberties advocates. The law, which went into effect in May,
allows police to arrest homeless people who return within a year to a
location where police previously asked them to leave. Despite its
reputation as a carefree and prosperous state, the number of homeless
in Hawaii has almost doubled in the past four years, reports theBoston
Globe. Critics say state and local governments are trying to hide the
homeless in an effort to maintain the lucrative tourism industry. The
police have conducted sweeps of beaches and parks, removed benches
where homeless people slept in Waikiki and downtown Honolulu, and
installed razor wire under viaducts. "Obviously if visitors go to the
beach and see homeless people, it just doesn't suggest the image of
Hawaii and aloha," Darlene Hein, a homeless advocate, told the Boston
Globe. [more ]
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