As 'empowered' cities ban them from public spaces, homeless people in WA search for refuge
John Parke, known as Cowboy, is always ready to pack up and move. He stacks his black and blue tent, foam sleeping pad, and flannel-lined sleeping bag on top of a wagon that he hauls away every day at 7 a.m. before police arrive and order him and the other unhoused people of camp town to leave.
Moving has become part of Parkes morning routine. He had to move when officials in Clarkston, a small town in southeastern Washington on the Idaho border, closed the park where he was living in October. He moved days later when the city erected fences around another park where he was preparing his shelter for winter. And he moved again when the mayor declared 75 people at an encampment behind Walmart a state of emergency.
Now, the 45-year-old has to move every day so police wont ticket him.
Theyre making it harder to get a job and improve our situation, Parke said. Theyre acting like bullies at school, and Im not going to let them do that, so Im standing up for the homeless community.
The city of about 7,000 recently restricted tents and other make-shift shelters used by unhoused people like Parke to one city park between the hours of 9 p.m. and 7 a.m. and prohibited personal belongings that are not essential to living. Parke is part of an ongoing lawsuit against Clarkston arguing the ordinance is unconstitutional.
https://washingtonstatestandard.com/2024/05/06/as-empowered-cities-ban-them-from-public-spaces-homeless-people-in-wa-search-for-refuge/