Archive for March, 2010

CHILD ABDUCTION PREVENTION LEGISLATION

oday, the State of Florida has before its legislative branch of government two adjoining bills that will provide the state’s courts and judges with the ability to assess risk factors for a potential parental child abduction. Collectively, this is known as the CHILD ABDUCTION PREVENTION ACT.

Tragically, there are over 370,000 child abductions in the United States alone each year. The majority of these are parental child abductions. Thousands of children are stolen across international borders each year. Too many of them do not come home. They can’t. They are gone forever.

Please show your sign of support for Senator Eleanor Sobel’s bill now before committee (SB1862), and Representative Rouson’s adjoining House of Representative Bill (HR787).

We urge all parents and children who have experienced abduction to share your stories (they will be submitted to the various Senate and House committees) at www.floridachildabductionpreventionact.info

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RECENT COURT RULING AGAINST THE HOMELESS

PLEASE TAKE A LOOK AT THIS ARTICLE THAT SPEAKS TO A VERY FASCIST ANTI-HUMAN RIGHTS RULING BY A FAR RIGHT FEDERAL ACTIVIST JUDGE. THE JUDGE IN QUESTION, IS STEVEN MERRYDAY, WHO IS CONSIDERED ONE OF THE MOST CONSERVATIVE ACTIVIST JUDGES IN THE UNITED STATES. ONE THINKS OF JUDGES WHO RULED IN FAVOR OF THE GOVERNMENT IN GERMANY IN THE 1930′s. IS THIS JUDGE SUPPORTING A POGRAM OF THE CITY AGAINST THE POOR? WE AT THE REFUGE(WWW.REFUGESTPETE.ORG) AND THE POOR PEOPLE’S ECONOMIC HUMAN RIGHTS CAMPAIGN WILL NOT STAND BY IDLE. WE WILL NOT ALLOW THE POLICE AND THE CITY GOVERNMENT TO HAVE FREE REIGN TO HARASS AND MISTREAT THE HOMELESS COMMUNITY. HOMELESSNESS IS NOT A CRIME!!!!! FOR MORE INFO. CALL 727 278 1547

Federal Judge dismisses much of claims in homeless lawsuit

By Michael Van Sickler, Times Staff Writer

Published Thursday, March 11, 2010
ST. PETERSBURG — Federal Judge Steven Merryday tossed out nine allegations in a federal lawsuit that accuses St. Petersburg of violating the rights of homeless people by enforcing a series of punitive ordinances, scoring what appears to be a major victory for the city.
Merryday also denied class action status for the lawsuit, meaning the scope of those making the allegations is limited to Anthony Catron, Michael Lile, Jo Anne Reynolds, Raymond Young and William Shumate, a popular homeless leader in downtown St. Petersburg known for repairing bicycles.
Essentially, Merryday upheld the city’s right to arrest people for sleeping during the day in downtown public rights of way and storing personal property on public land. The city also has the right to ban people from city property if they had committed crimes there before.
Assistant City Attorney Joseph Patner called the rulings significant, saying it showed the ordinances that were alleged to be unconstitutional were appropriate.
Merryday wrote in his ruling Wednesday that individuals don’t have a constitutional right to store personal belongings on public land. The city’s ordinance, he wrote, gives people 36 hours to remove items before confiscation and allows them a month to reclaim seized property.
“The risk is exceedingly low that an individual will be unjustly deprived of personal belongings,” Merryday wrote.
Banning those previously arrested from public buildings and parks was legal, Merryday wrote, because government has a right to control the use of public land “for its own lawful nondiscriminatory purpose.”
Three groups represent the five homeless plaintiffs: the National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty, out of Washington, D.C., and the Southern Legal Counsel and Florida Institutional Legal Services out of Gainesville.
Catron was cited in 2006 and 2007 for trespassing and is banned from city parks. Young got a warning for having too much property, which included two suitcases, bags, clothes, groceries and other belongings. He was told the city’s limit was two bags, a backpack and one blanket. Reynolds was removed from public property because she had too many belongings. Shumate had his property confiscated three times. Lile was arrested for public urination, and served five days in jail in 2008.
“We’re obviously disappointed with the court’s decision,” said Catherine Bendor, an attorney with the National Law Center. “We’d prefer that the city devote its resources to alternatives to criminalizing homelessness. We’re considering our options at this point with respect to this litigation.”
Last month, Kirsten Clanton, an attorney with Southern Legal Counsel, told the Times that St. Petersburg’s ordinances were exceptionally onerous.
“They make it difficult for people to move out of homelessness by putting them in jail for just trying to live,” she said. “It costs more to put them in jail then it does to actually address the problem.”
Two allegations remain: that police have no right to ask homeless people for identification and that it’s cruel and unusual punishment to arrest people for public urination when restrooms aren’t available. Patner said the city will file a motion asking for those to be dismissed as well.
More litigation may be ahead, according to city attorney John Wolfe. He told the City Council on Thursday that the same legal groups are expected to challenge the panhandling ordinance.
Bendor said her office wasn’t pursuing a legal challenge.
Wolfe has told city officials not to talk publicly about the suit or even discuss the general issue of the homeless.
“My concern is that something they say may be misconstrued” and affect the lawsuit, he said.
As a result, the city is in something of a holding pattern in dealing with a problem that most say is growing worse by the day. Council members can only discuss it privately, as they did Feb. 11 in a closed attorney-client meeting.
Mayor Bill Foster is limited in explaining how he will tackle the issue, which he said would be a priority in his administration. In December, he said he’d consider building permanent bathrooms at the Society of St. Vincent de Paul South Pinellas.
But now, with the litigation, those bathrooms are “off the table,” Foster said Thursday.
Michael Van Sickler can be reached at (727) 893-8037 or mvansickler@sptimes.com.

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REFUGE NEWSLETTER FOR MARCH

REFUGE NEWSLETTER AND UPDATE FOR MARCH 2010

Dear Friends and Supporters,

I hope and pray that all is going well for you. So many good things are going on for the Refuge, as well as challenges. This includes several new outreaches. Just recently we opened the Refuge Thrift Store. It is a thrift stores designed to not only support the work of the Refuge financially, but it will also be a source support to needy individua ls and families in attempting to get resources for their residences. We will be offering a voucher program for poor families to get furniture and other household goods, including clothes. We are also looking for financial sponsors and donation of items for the store. The store is located at 510 49th st. North, in St. Petersburg. If you want directions or to make donations, please call 727 278 1547 . The store hours are Tuesday 11 – 5 pm, Thursday 11 – 5pm, Friday 11 – 5pm, Saturday 10 – 5pm, and Sunday 1 – 5pm.
In addition to this, we now have case management for clients that are homeless or in need of services. This includes helping clients navigate their way through the system. We also have another outreach happening with our bread outreaches. We are now distributing to needy families and to a local community center. We continue to do our regular outreaches, as well as planning for the Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign’s Poor Peoples march this spring and summer (go to www.economichumanrights.org).
In closing, we are asking you to continue to pray and keep us in your thoughts. We are in a campaign attempting to raise support on a monthly basis. We are trying to encourage 50 people to give $25 a month in new giving or current giving. We are also in immediate need of $750 within the next days. We especially need that within the next 24 hours. If you can help, please call me at 727 278 1547. You can send gifts to The Refuge 1818 29th Ave. North, St. Petersburg, FLorida 33713. You can also go to pay pal at www.refugestpete.org and hit pay pal option. If you can help with immediate need of $450, please call me. Thanks, Bruce PLEASE HELP IF YOU CAN NEED IS URGENT

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