Exclusive: Houston ramps up citations of homeless after July civility ordinance expansion

The Houston Police Department ramped up its enforcement of rules intended to keep homeless people off sidewalks after the city council expanded the so-called civility ordinance. The typical fine was about $200.

In the two months following the Houston City Council’s vote to expand the so-called civility ordinance, the Houston Police Department issued more than 500 tickets to homeless people — marking the highest two-month rate of citations since Mayor John Whitmire took office last year.

Houston Public Media analyzed 10 years of citation data from Houston’s municipal courts related to two city rules — the civility ordinance, which prohibits sitting, lying down or placing personal possessions on sidewalks in certain parts of the city during the day; and the sidewalk obstruction ordinance, which generally prohibits blocking sidewalks across the city at all hours. In mid-July, the city council expanded the civility ordinance to be in effect 24/7 in the downtown and East Downtown areas as part of Whitmire’s effort to address street homelessness.

The ramped-up enforcement comes as part of a multipronged, $70 million initiative to move homeless people off the streets and onto paths to permanent housing…

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