Treating Neighbors as Nuisances: Troubling Applications of Criminal Activity Nuisance Ordinances

Joseph Mead, Megan Hatch, J. Rosie Tighe, Marissa Pappas, Kristi Andrasik, Elizabeth Bonham

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Thousands of cities nationwide enforce Criminal Activity Nuisance Ordinances that catalyze the eviction of tenants when there are two or more police visits to a property. We report findings of an empirical study of enforcement of nuisance ordinances, finding that cities often target survivors of domestic violence, people experiencing a mental health crisis, nonprofit organizations serving people with disabilities, people seeking life-saving medical intervention to prevent a fatal drug overdose, and non-criminal behavior such as playing basketball or being “disrespectful.” Codifying into public policy a path to homelessness in these instances is not only cruel and counterproductive, but likely violates the Fair Housing Act and the Constitution.

    Original languageAmerican English
    JournalEt Cetera
    Volume66
    StatePublished - Mar 24 2018

    Disciplines

    • Urban Studies and Planning

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