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Related: About this forumWoman Cites Religious Freedom Law To Defend Her Right To Feed The Homeless
Joan Cheever being ticketed by San Antonio police
CREDIT: Flickr/David Davies
by Bryce Covert
Posted on April 18, 2015 at 11:12 am
Updated: April 18, 2015 at 12:21 pm
Joan Cheever of San Antonio has been serving meals to the citys homeless for 10 years. But last week, police officers handed her a ticket with a potential fine of $2,000. Despite having a food permit for the food truck she cooks out of, which she calls the Chow Train, she was cited for transporting and serving it from a different vehicle.
But that hasnt stopped her from continuing to hand out three-course meals to the homeless. On Friday, she went back to Maverick Park with 50 supporters to hand out food, and this time she wasnt ticketed. Cheever has argued that she has a right to feed the homeless under Texass Religious Freedom Restoration Act because she considers it exercising her religious beliefs.
Her situation has caught the attention of the city council. Councilman Ron Nirenberg called for a hearing on how city police deal with its homeless population, which numbers nearly 3,000, saying, We need to do what we can to identify smart policy that helps us encourage compassion, rather than discourage it. Their tactics have come under scrutiny before after an investigation found that in under two years, they had handed out more than 12,000 citations to the homeless themselves for violating ordinances aimed at criminalizing homelessness. Offenses range from aggressive panhandling to sitting or lying down in a public right of way.
But plenty of other cities have used similar tactics against the homeless and those who seek to help them. Arnold Abbott, a 90-year-old veteran, has been arrested and cited for feeding the homeless in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida after the city passed an ordinance to crack down on people who hand food to the homeless. In Daytona Beach, Florida, a couple was given a more than $600 fine. A pastor in Birmingham, Alabama was blocked from feeding the homeless because he didnt have a $500 permit needed to comply with a new regulation for food trucks.
http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2015/04/18/3648616/san-antonio-feed-homeless/
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Woman Cites Religious Freedom Law To Defend Her Right To Feed The Homeless (Original Post)
rug
Apr 2015
OP
cbayer
(146,218 posts)1. Very, very cool. It could be a real victory if we can find ways to turn these stupid laws
around to support our causes.
okasha
(11,573 posts)2. Good for her.
The people who wrote those laws never thought them through. Or maybe just never thought.