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in San Diego: A Beacon of Excellence
San Diego Real Estate Attorney
HOMELESS COURT IN SAN DIEGO: A BEACON OF EXCELLENCE
By Gordon Kaplan
“No
man is an island, entire of itself; every man
is a piece of the continent, a part of the main.”
John Donne
In
contrast with our recent history of abysmally
inept local governance, San Diego’s Homeless
Court Program, or HCP, stands out as a beacon of
excellence. HCP is an alternative to the traditional
court system for dealing with homelessness, and
is designed to “bring the law to the streets,
the court to the shelters, and the homeless back
into society.” It has received recognition
and support from the American Bar Association and
in 2004 was a finalist for the “Innovations
in Government Award” at Harvard’s Kennedy
School of Government. Moreover, since its founding
in 1989 by Steve Binder, an attorney in the Office
of the Public Defender, HCP has become a model
for a growing number of homeless court programs
across the country, at this writing 16 in California
and some 15 more nationwide.
To understand how HCP works, and why it does,
it is useful first to describe briefly how the
traditional system deals with the homeless.
The traditional approach
The
homeless sleep on the streets and in doorways,
in parks, on the beach; others may sleep in cars.
Homeless people are often engaged in a “cat-and-mouse” game
with the police, who sweep an area and issue citations
for criminal misdemeanors to move the homeless
on. The citations cover public nuisance offenses
such as being drunk in public, “illegal lodging,” urinating
in public, camping in a park or on the beach, and “habitation
in a vehicle.” The homeless are then forced
into a new area, the police again sweep in an effort
to clear the area, and a new round of citations
and removals ensues. In the process a homeless
person can often collect numerous citations, each
one demanding bail, which he or she cannot meet,
and threatening incarceration or fines, which he
or she cannot pay. Many defendants then fail to
appear in court because of their personal condition
or circumstances, or for fear of being fined or
jailed. Arrest warrants for non-appearance start
to accumulate and unpaid fines pile up, but the
underlying misdemeanor charges go unresolved. When
defendants do appear in court, the traditional
system relies on levying fines, requiring community
service, or imposing jail time. And then the defendants
are back into the streets.
This
approach leaves many prosecutors, judges and
police officers frustrated. They recognize that
the traditional routines and tools -- citations,
fines, jail time, then back on the street --
create a “ revolving door” for the homeless
that burdens the system and clogs caseloads without
addressing the underlying problems of homelessness.
The homeless cycled through the system come out
much the same as they went in, still having to
face the daily struggle for food, clothing, and
shelter; only now the trials of everyday life are
compounded by unresolved legal problems which can
prevent getting a job, housing, a driver’s
license, or qualifying for public benefits.
How HCP makes a difference
While
the traditional approach is coercive, HCP’s
approach is voluntary and relies on a partnership
linking homeless shelters and related service agencies,
the homeless who wish to enter the program, prosecutors
and public defenders, and the San Diego Superior
Court. HCP works like this:
• Homeless
shelters and related service agencies are the
entry points for HCP. They sign up homeless people
who wish to participate, and work with them to
develop a rehabilitation plan appropriate to
each participant. The participants in turn undertake
to carry out the plan and meet its standards
and benchmarks for completion. Rehabilitation
can include classes and counseling in life skills
and dealing with chemical dependency, attendance
at AA or NA meetings, completion of computer
training or literacy classes, training or searching
for employment, or volunteer work.
• On
signing up, participants provide basic contact
information on an HCP Interest List, which is
forwarded to the public defender, the prosecutor
and to the court for a review of open misdemeanor
cases and warrants, fines and penalties outstanding
against participants on the list. Only misdemeanor
cases are considered for HCP; felony crimes do
not qualify (nor do parking tickets). The court
clerk then places active cases on the HCP calendar,
and participants are given a court date for a hearing.
• The public defender and prosecutor negotiate,
on a case-by-case basis, a plea agreement for participants
who have active cases on the list. The agreement
acknowledges steps participants have taken in their
self-rehabilitation plans before their appearance
in court. In effect, the plea agreements seek to
have the rehabilitation activities that participants
have already completed accepted as “alternative
sentencing,” instead of the more traditional
sentencing a court might order
• A Superior Court judge “brings the
court to the shelters” by holding monthly
HCP session in a homeless shelter (currently, Veterans
Village of San Diego and St. Vincent de Paul Village)
to hear HCP cases with all the formalities and
dignity of a regular court session. Each defendant
appears individually before the court, with the
public defender and prosecutor, and submits his
or her plea agreement with proof of completed rehabilitation
activities and other supporting documents. The
judge reviews the defendant’s submissions,
often questions the defendant, and consults the
public defender and prosecutor. In some 90% of
cases the judge accepts the defendant’s completed
rehabilitation activities as “alternative
sentencing” and, as envisaged in the plea
agreement, formally dismisses outstanding charges
against the defendant. The defendant leaves court
with a clean record.
Supporting HCP
HCP does not solve the problems of homelessness.
But it does make a material difference in the lives
of a material number of homeless people. Individual
success stories are far too numerous to be described
in this article. And by most standards the incidence
of repeat offenders is low. A report issued by
the San Diego Association of Governments in 2001
found that some 80% of HCP participants had no
post-hearing criminal charges.
HCP
is currently funded by Ashoka Innovators for
the Public, the American Bar Association Commission
on Homelessness and Poverty, the National Coalition
for Homeless Veterans, and the Brennan Center
for Justice. Key funding from several of these
sources will soon run out, leaving a gap in HCP’s
finances. The San Diego business community should
step up to support HCP. The program is an effective
alternative to traditional “revolving door” routines
which, because they fail to address underlying
problems, trivialize the police and courts in their
efforts to deal with the homeless, and waste taxpayer
dollars. And because HCP asks homeless people to
take responsibility, to find opportunity in adversity,
it helps them return to society and productive
lives.
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