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Local ACLU Issues Stong Statement in Opposition to "Stay Away" Ordinance

by ACLU Santa Cruz County (santacruzaclu.org)
ACLU Board Questions Constitutionality of Ordinance
Dear Councilmembers:

The Santa Cruz Chapter of the ACLU of Northern Cafifornia strongly opposes the enactment of the proposed amendment to Ordinance No. 13.08.100 of the Municipal Code, which the Council will be considering again on October 28. We urge you to reject this proposed law, because it is an unconstitutional violation of both the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution. The blatant illegality of the proposed law seems to be inviting litigation.

The proposed ordinance would greatly expand the discretionary power of Park and Recreation employees and other city officers to issue stay-away orders for an enormously broad range of behavior (any violation of the Municipal Code or state law) in all property maintained by the Parks and Recreation Department (which are undoubtedly traditional public fora), and would vastly extend the duration of the stay-away orders from a maximum of 24 hours to a full year. Among other problems, these stay-away orders would be issued without any process at all, much less due process (no hearing, no opportunity to be heard, no appeal), and would bar citees and arestees from exercising their First Amendment rights of assembly and free expression. As the Court found in Cyr v. Addison Rutland Supervisory Union, USDC (D. Vt.) Case No. 1:12-cv-105-jgm (9/30/14) [** see link below] , the stay-away orders authorized by this statute violate the First Amendment because they are "not narrowly tailored and do[] not leave open ample alternative channels of communication." Cyr involved ​"notices against trespass" (similar to the stay-away orders at issue here) issued by a school agency without court involvement, to prevent a troublesome person from attending school board meetings.

A short excerpt from the District Court's discussion of the First Amendment violation is instructive:

"First, a categorical ban on speech is not tailored at all, as it entirely forecloses a means of communication. Cf. Hill v. Colo., 530 U.S. 703, 726 (2000) (“when a content-neutral regulation does not entirely foreclose any means of communication, it may satisfy the tailoring requirement even though it is not the least restrictive or least intrusive means of serving the statutory goal”). In order to be narrowly tailored, a time, place, or manner restriction must not “burden substantially more speech than is necessary to further the government’s legitimate interests.” Ward, 491 U.S. at 799. Here, ostensibly in order to protect school staff, Mr. Cyr was banned not only from the Benson school grounds, but from all premises owned by the ARSU. He was not banned only during regular school hours, but at all hours, for two years.

Furthermore, the tailoring threshold here is even higher than in Ward, as a notice against trespass targeting an individual rather than the public generally is equivalent to an injunction against speech, and the Supreme Court has explained, “[i]njunctions . . . carry greater risks of censorship and discriminatory application than do general ordinances.” Madsen v. Women's Health Ctr., 512 U.S. 16 764 (1994). Consequently, “when evaluating a content-neutral injunction, . . . standard time, place, and manner analysis is not sufficiently rigorous. We must ask instead whether the challenged provisions of the injunction burden no more speech than necessary to serve a significant government interest.” Id. at 765. In the case at hand, the ARSU’s categorical ban was not tailored to respond to the specific threat that Mr. Cyr potentially posed, a threat that was never articulated as anything more specific than “a potential risk of violence to [Principal Doty, Director Benway,] or their staff.” (Doc. 49-1 at 3.) If the ARSU’s goal in issuing a notice against trespass to Mr. Cyr was to protect school staff, then it could have drafted a notice against trespass that was in effect only during school hours or posted a police officer at public meetings held on ARSU grounds.10 Also, the ARSU could have moved school board meetings to a neutral and secure location.

Additionally, the Second Circuit has found that a categorical ban on expressive speech singling out an individual does not even satisfy the lower threshold of reasonableness review. See Huminski v. Corsones, 396 F.3d 53, 92 (2d Cir. 2004). In Huminski, the court observed that notices against trespass which barred the plaintiff from all state courthouses in Rutland due to a perceived danger “in effect prohibit[ed] indefinitely any and all expressive activity in which [plaintiff] might want to engage in and around Rutland state courthouses.” Id. “The defendants’ singling out of [plaintiff] for exclusion, thereby permitting all others to engage in similar activity in and around the courts, suggests to us that the trespass notices are not reasonable.” Id. The ARSU imposed a similar restriction on Mr. Cyr here by singling him out and categorically banning him from all Union property. See id. at 93-94 (when a notice against trespass was issued with “virtually no ‘tailoring’ at all,” the efforts of government officials to safeguard the Vermont courts “from whatever threat they may have reasonably feared from [plaintiff] were wildly disproportionate to the perceived threat”)."

In granting plaintiff's summary judgment on the due process claim, the Cyr court concluded: "Because the notices against trespass were not issued pursuant to any protocol, the notices did not set out a process for contesting the notices, and Mr. Cyr had no meaningful opportunity to contest the notices, the notices posed a high risk of erroneously depriving Mr. Cyr of his First Amendment right to freedom of expression."

Of course, there is a great deal of additional law on these topics. We urge you to consult the law and reject this amendment.

Sincerely,
Peter Gelblum
Chair, Santa Cruz Chapter
ACLU Northern California​


** LINK: Cyr v. Addison Rutland Supervisory Union:
Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by G
Given the cites, and timing, does that mean actionable grounds have been established, should law enforcement engage in misconduct? How about injunctions? Class actions?
by Robert Norse
S.C. ACLU Resolution opposing the expansion of MC 13.08.100.

It's good to see the ACLU taking a stand to persuade the City Council that the Stay-Away expansion would run afoul of the Constitution as recently interpreted by the courts. It's rare and positive to have the ACLU issue such a statement, though I understand it is not soliciting legal help locally to challenge the ordinance. Vice-Chair Steve Pleich has told me that his Homeless Persons Legal Assistance project (which is primarily his solo venture) will take it on if he can find five plaintiffs (See "Time to Step Up and Fight City Hall on “Stay Away” Ordinance" at https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/10/22/18763162.php ).

The ordinance also not only gives a stay-away at the whim of the cop once she or he issues an infraction citation, but also includes all prior areas where 13.08.100 stay-away's were given in the prohibition. So for instance if you get a ticket for smoking in a distant area of San Lorenzo Park for the first time, you get a one-day stay away (if it's your first stay-away). If you then get a ticket for camping in the Pogonip some days later, you get a week stay away, but also a week stay-away from San Lorenzo Park.

The ordinance is also retroactive to the hundreds of one-day stay away's already given in the prior year. HUFF activists have been tracking these orders and there are hundreds of them. Given almost entirely to homeless people and for such "crimes" as smoking, camping, and being in a park after dark.

The iron hand of the Parks and Recreation Department not only extends to a few parks but also to the following areas (according to MC 13.04.0111, "without limitation all city parks, greenbelts, all city park trails and roads, all city park facilities and buildings, including Lighthouse Field State Beach, DeLaveaga Golf Course, Main Beach, Cowell’s Beach, Steamer Lane, Harvey West Pool, the Beach Flats Community Center, the Louden Nelson Community Center, the Teen Center, the Civic Auditorium, City Hall Courtyard, Mission Plaza, the Town Clock, the Natural History Museum, the Surfing Museum, Santa Cruz Municipal Wharf, Pacific Avenue, West Cliff Drive (Pelton Street to Swanton Boulevard), the San Lorenzo River Levee and bike path, the San Lorenzo Benchlands, the inner banks of the San Lorenzo River within the City limits, the Branciforte and Cabonera Creeks within the city limits, Jessie Street Marsh, plus any other facilities or areas assigned to the parks and recreation department by the city manager."


STILL...
Parks and Rec as well as the SCPD have issued hundreds of Stay-Away orders from the parks and park territory in the last 15 months. Although only one day long, they have been just as unconstitutional and abusive as those being rubberstamped by the Council majority. I don't remember the ACLU publicly opposing them then--when the fascist camel stuck his nasty snout into the tent. Nor did any ACLU folks offer any help in the shitstorm of tickets and stay aways that followed. Even in the form of public statements opposing the sweeps and targeted harassment of homeless people.

These 1-day Stay-Away Orders (which were given out on multiple occasions to some individuals) can now be used to compel longer Stay-Aways under the new law when any new infractions occur. Or so the law can be read.

Now ACLU Chair Peter Gelblum finally opens his dusty lawbooks to suddenly discover it's been unconstitutional for the last 15 months. Pardon my bile, but the prior silence amounts to a form of collusion coming from a civil liberties organization. It smells very bad. Gelblum is the same smiling chairperson who voted against the homeless right to sleep at night, ordered homeless observers and possible plaintiffs out of the ACLU meeting before the Sleeping Ban agenda item was over, and successfully muzzled the ACLU on the issue during the prior year. See "Speak-Out Leads to Historic Shift in Local ACLU Avoidance of Homeless Civil Rights Issues" at https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/07/01/18758158.php .

It would be nice to believe that the tide is turning--but the local ACLU's reactionary roots are quite deep. People need to round up out-of-town attorneys, para-legals, and activists to take the necessary next steps to defend the most basic survival rights of homeless people.
by fuck government
24 hour stay aways may pass constitutional muster because of the minimal intrusion of rights. but long, broad stay aways are another matter.
barisone doesn't seem to nave much ability as an attorney if he thinks this ordinance will fly.

then again he can make more money defending this when it is challenged and he loses.
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