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Arrests of Miami-Dade's homeless residents skyrocket since new law

A person sits on the sidewalk behind a police officer.
Rebecca Blackwell
/
AP
FILE - An unsheltered person looks toward City of Miami Police Officer Shareka Lewis as she accompanies a team from the Miami-Dade County Homeless Trust to tally the number of unsheltered people in downtown Miami, late on Thursday, Jan. 25, 2024.

The number of people being arrested and booked into Miami-Dade jails on charges of illegal camping 鈥 a charge often associated with someone experiencing homelessness 鈥 have skyrocketed in recent months.

In fact, more people have been booked into jail for illegal camping so far in 2024 than in the previous eight years combined, according to a 港澳天下彩analysis.

Much of the increase is driven by a law passed late last year in Miami Beach, which let police make arrests of homeless residents who do not accept shelter. The city has of homeless residents so far this year under that law, although not all of those individuals were booked into jail.

Ron Book, the chairman of the Miami-Dade Homeless Trust, told 港澳天下彩he is 鈥渁ware鈥 of the sharp increase in arrests and jail bookings, and that he does not agree that it will help end homelessness.

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鈥淲e cannot turn the jail into a homeless shelter and think that that鈥檚 ending homelessness. It鈥檚 not gonna do it, it鈥檚 not gonna solve any problem. They鈥檙e gonna go to the jail. They鈥檙e gonna stay a day. They鈥檙e gonna stay three days. They鈥檙e gonna get time served and what have we gained out of that? They鈥檙e gonna be back somewhere and we鈥檙e gonna re-arrest them,鈥 warned Book.

Looming in the background is a state law set to go into effect on Oct. 1 that will make it illegal to sleep in public across the entire state of Florida.

Book as it was being debated in the Florida Legislature, saying that "it certainly begins to set a process in place to minimize [homeless] encampments."

But now he admits that it makes him nervous as timelines get closer. The bill allows residents to sue local governments for damages if homeless residents continue to sleep in public places, starting on Jan. 1st. Local governments could be forced to open camps for homeless residents under pressure from lawsuits.

鈥淲e cannot turn the jail into a homeless shelter and think that that鈥檚 ending homelessness. It鈥檚 not gonna do it, it鈥檚 not gonna solve any problem."
Ron Book, Chairman of the Homeless Trust

Book stressed that the Homeless Trust has significant money that it can use to acquire permanent housing for homeless residents. Yet those plans continually run into roadblocks and pushback from local governments and homeowners.

Last year the Homeless Trust to house 128 elderly residents experiencing homelessness. It is trying to buy a site close to Krome Avenue in Western Miami-Dade that can house 190 men experiencing homelessness. And for the Homeless Trust has been trying to get approval to buy a property in Cutler Bay, but it has faced on that project.

鈥淚 worry about how fast we can move, and facing penalties by the courts if the courts choose not to take an understanding approach,鈥 said Book. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to be facing local governments taking tax dollars to pay off litigation and settlements. You set up a cause of action 鈥 what is the plaintiff going to pursue? Financial damages.鈥

Miami Beach city workers joined Homeless Trust staff on twice annual homeless census.
Daniel Rivero
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港澳天下彩
Miami Beach city workers joined Homeless Trust staff on twice annual homeless census in the Lincoln Road area of South Beach.

After that law was passed in Miami Beach, jail bookings for charges of illegal camping immediately skyrocketed across Miami-Dade County, jail records show, even though the law has technically not gone into effect yet. Most arrests took place either in the City of Miami, which has stepped up sweeps of encampments, or Miami Beach.

Between May 2015 and March 2024, 57 individuals were booked into Miami-Dade jails on charges of illegal camping. Then, between April and August of this year, over 90 separate people have been booked into jail for illegal camping charges.

Twice annual head count

On a recent Thursday night, several Miami Beach police officers, city staff and employees of the Homeless Trust gathered to perform the twice annual 鈥淗omeless Census鈥 on Lincoln Road on Miami Beach in order to track the amount of homeless residents, as well as to track if they have been shifting geographic locations.

Book speculated that the arrests on Miami Beach have played a role in shifting the population 鈥渙ver to the mainland in hopes that they stay on the mainland.鈥

David Peery is the executive director of the Miami Coalition to Advance Racial Equity
Daniel Rivero
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港澳天下彩
David Peery, the executive director of the Miami Coalition to Advance Racial Equity, led a recent protest against the arrest of homeless residents of Miami Beach. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e involuntarily homeless, you have no other choice but to sleep on public property. You have no other alternatives,鈥 he said.

鈥淭hat certainly has the people in Miami Springs awake, that certainly has the people in Miami awake, it certainly has the people in Hialeah awake 鈥 because they鈥檙e watching those, if you will, pop-ups happening,鈥 said Book.

Miami Beach city manager Eric Carpenter (right) and Ron Book, the chairman of the Miami-Dade Homeless Trust. Carpenter akcnowledged the city and the Homeless Trust have a difference of opinion when it comes to whether homeless residents should be arrested or not.
Daniel Rivero
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港澳天下彩
Miami Beach city manager Eric Carpenter (right) and Ron Book, the chairman of the Miami-Dade Homeless Trust.

Existing homeless shelters are 鈥渂ursting at the seams,鈥 and cannot house more people, said Book. More than 2,700 homeless residents sleep in county shelters every night, according to a recent memo.

Miami Beach city manager Eric Carpenter joined the team doing the homeless census on Lincoln Road. He acknowledged that the city and the Homeless Trust see things differently, but he stressed that the city is doing the right thing by making arrests.

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to do what we think is best for both the constituents that are homeless as well as the rest of the city. And we鈥檙e trying to constantly strike that balance. We are giving people every opportunity to choose to accept our services and hopefully get themselves in a better place in life,鈥 said Carpenter.

Close to midnight, Book and a city staffer spoke to an 83-year-old woman experiencing homelessness. She sat with her head hanging low on a bench along Lincoln Road and told them that she has been homeless since May. Her rent was increased so high that she could not afford it on a fixed income, she said, and she was evicted.

The interaction left a deep impression on Book. He called staffers of the Homeless Trust to try to assist her in getting into a shelter and hopefully, to get her into permanent housing.

鈥淭hat lady can鈥檛 freakin鈥 walk. And 鈥 I don鈥檛 want to say this 鈥 and she鈥檚 afraid she鈥檚 gonna get arrested,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hose are her words not mine.鈥

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to do what we think is best for both the constituents that are homeless as well as the rest of the city. And we鈥檙e trying to constantly strike that balance."
Miami Beach City Manager Eric Carpenter

Compared to last August, the homeless population of Miami Beach decreased by 13%, down to 132 from 152 residents, according to the results of the annual census. At the same time, the homeless population of the City of Miami increased by 16%, from 534 people to 619.

Across Miami-Dade County, the overall number went up 2%, a growth that has been entirely driven by new homeless residents in the City of Miami.

'House keys not handcuffs'

On another night recently, a Saturday, a few dozen activists and locals gathered in front of the Versace Mansion on Ocean Drive to protest the sharp uptick in homeless residents getting arrested.

On a recent Saturday night, activists held a protest against the arrests of homeless residents of Miami Beach under a city ordinance that passed late last year. The protest took place directly in front of the Versace Mansion on Ocean Drive.
Daniel Rivero
/
港澳天下彩
On a recent Saturday night, activists held a protest against the arrests of homeless residents of Miami Beach under a city ordinance that passed late last year. The protest took place directly in front of the Versace Mansion on Ocean Drive.

They noted that Miami Beach does not legally allow any homeless shelters within city limits. As a result, anyone who accepts a shelter bed offered by the city by definition has to leave the city to the mainland. And if not, they could be arrested.

Karina Sibata is a resident of South Beach who felt a moral obligation to show up. She鈥檚 helped write signs that read 鈥淗ouse keys, not handcuffs.鈥

鈥淚 think a lot of people just want them out of their sight,鈥 said Sibata. 鈥淢aybe that鈥檚 why this law passed. Because so many people just don鈥檛 want to be bothered by it. They don鈥檛 want to see 鈥 they don鈥檛 want to be inconvenienced by it. And I think seeing people on the street, it makes them uncomfortable.鈥

South Beach resident Karina Sibata, left, joined in a recent protest against homeless residents getting arrested under an ordinance passed last year. 鈥淚 think a lot of people just want them out of their sight,鈥 said Sibata, speaking of people experiencing homelessness.
Daniel Rivero
/
港澳天下彩
South Beach resident Karina Sibata, left, joined in a recent protest against homeless residents getting arrested under an ordinance passed last year. 鈥淚 think a lot of people just want them out of their sight,鈥 said Sibata, speaking of people experiencing homelessness.

David Peery is the executive director of the Miami Coalition to Advance Racial Equity, an activist group. He experienced homelessness himself in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, and he sees what鈥檚 happening on Miami Beach as a major civil rights issue.

鈥淲hen you鈥檙e involuntarily homeless, you have no other choice but to sleep on public property. You have no other alternatives,鈥 he said.

Peery warned that what鈥檚 happening on Miami Beach is a precursor to what could happen statewide in the new year when the statewide law goes into effect, banning sleeping in public across the entire state.

鈥淚t鈥檚 simply making it illegal now to be homeless. And you鈥檙e not homeless because of anything you did, you鈥檙e homeless because we live in the most expensive housing market in the nation and because the minimum wage is nowhere near enough to afford a living space,鈥 said Peery. 鈥淏ut even worse is that it has provisions in it that allow private citizens to sue cities to compel them to go after the homeless.鈥

Daniel Rivero is part of WLRN's new investigative reporting team. Before joining WLRN, he was an investigative reporter and producer on the television series "The Naked Truth," and a digital reporter for Fusion. He can be reached at drivero@wlrnnews.org
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