2023年8月13日日曜日

Phoenix officals ask judge for more time in clearing downtown camp of homeless people

Phoenix city officials said they have been slowly and steady clearing hundreds of people from a downtown encampment of homeless people called "The Zone," and they asked a judge for more time to clear out the remaining hundreds still living there.


About a year ago, as many as 1,000 people lived in the tent city that exploded in size during the COVID-19 pandemic. City officials say up to 300 people have since left the site under efforts launched in late 2022 to get them into shelters, or into temporary or permanent housing. Area shelters are typically full.

Representing Phoenix, attorney Justin Pierce told Judge Scott Blaney that much progress has been made since March, when the court ordered Phoenix to lessen the public nuisance the encampment created. Deputy City Manager Gina Montes testified that Phoenix has now identified a property for a structured camping site with bathrooms and showers for those without housing, which it hopes to open by summer's end. 

Attorneys for area business owners and residents said the city is taking too long and is not doing enough. Blaney said he would issue a decision within 60 days and asked both sides to file their findings and conclusions with the court on Aug. 11. This civil suit is one of two facing phoenix.

Like several other major cities, Phoenix has been challenged to balance the concerns of businesses and homeowners with the rights of homeless people. The U.S. 9th Circuit court of Appeals ruled in 2019 that homeless people cannot be criminalized for sleeping outside if no alternatives exist.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona argued in a federal lawsuit that the city is violating the constitutional rights of unhoused people by slowly clearing the area. However, U.S. District Court Judge G. Murray Snow declined the ACLU's request in May to declare Phoenix in contempt of a ruling he issued in December and said he would not bar the city from further cleanups at the encampment site pending another hearing.

ask for more time   もっと時間をくれるように頼む
judge n)裁判官・審査員
clear out   v)
★ to empty or tidy a place by removing things, sometimes people, that shouldn't be there
・Due to the approaching typhoon, authorities had to clear out the people living in flood-prone areas.
prone  adj)うつ伏せになった、複合語)⦅好ましくない⦆~しがちな・傾向がある
encampment n)テントに住む行為
explode   /ɪk'spləƱd/ v)爆発する、事態が爆発的に増大する
★ to increase quickly or rapidly
・Prices of goods have exploded after the pandemic.
in size   大きさ・規模
up to ...   ~まで
attorney n)代理人・弁護士
lessen v)小さくなる、少なくなる、減る
nuisance n)不愉快な人・やっかい者
testify v)証言・宣言する
identify v)確認・見分ける
property n)財産
structured adj)組織化された
file
findings
conclusion   n)結末・結論
suit n)スーツ、訴訟
criminalize /'krɪmɪnəlaɪz/    v)人を有罪とする
★ to officially declare that someone's action or behavior is illegal
・The government recently criminalized drinking alcohol in public places.
alternatives
federal   adj)連邦の・米国連邦の
lawsuit   n)訴訟・告訴
violate   v)法律指示などに違反する、妨害する
constitutional adj)本質的な、健康に良い、憲法上の、合憲の
unhoused /ʌn'hoƱzd/
★ having no house to live in
・There's an organization that builds houses for unhoused families.
declined
declare
contempt
ruling   n)決定・裁定・判定
bar n)バー、カウンター、棒状のもの v)横木で妨げる、締め出す、阻止する
further
pending 前)~まで(until)、~じゅう(during)  adj)未決定の




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