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Aurora will begin sweeping homeless camps without warning, alternative shelter

Proposed policy follows landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling

Denver Post reporter Max Levy in Denver Friday, Oct. 11, 2024. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
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Aurora will stop giving three days’ notice before disbanding homeless encampments across the city under a new policy that also eliminates the requirement for shelter to be provided for those displaced by sweeps.

Aurora City Council member Angela Lawson, who co-sponsored the policy along with Mayor Pro Tem Steve Sundberg, said the change is needed to deal with camps near busy roadways and where drug use and violence have taken place.

“If we can offer shelter, thatap great. But right now, there are things going on in these encampments that are not only harming the unhoused but the people that are in the area,” she said during

Aurora last year eliminated the 72-hour notice rule in select areas. A majority of the council voted Feb. 10 to nix the rule for all camps.

Lawson and Sundberg’s proposal is the council’s latest escalation in its efforts to disband encampments after members instituted a formal camping ban in 2022.

Since then, Aurora has regularly abated encampments, sweeping 484 last year, according to city spokesperson Joe Rubino.

are open in Aurora on any given night, not including beds currently reserved for individuals in camps targeted for sweeps, the city says.

Setting the stage for the proposed acceleration of encampment sweeps was the U.S. Supreme Courtap ruling in the case of Grants Pass v. Johnson last year, which upheld cities’ ability to punish people for sleeping outdoors, even if no alternative shelter is available.

Aurora has begun rolling out programs like a specialty court for homeless defendants accused of nonviolent misdemeanors, which sponsors have said will connect defendants with housing and treatment resources, and is standing up a centralized “navigation campus” in tandem with enforcement of the ban.

However, Aurora’s strategy for connecting its homeless residents with shelter — which the council’s conservative majority has described as a “work-first” model in contrast to Denver’s “housing-first” approach — continues to set it apart from its neighbor.

Cathy Alderman, a spokeswoman for the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless, noted that the Grants Pass ruling was cited in challenging Boulder’s camping ban, and Douglas County toughened its ban shortly after the Supreme Court decision.

“There was a balance that had been struck where cities could enforce their camping bans if they had alternatives. You couldn’t just tell people they’re criminals if they don’t have a home,” she said. “Itap taken the responsibility off of local governments to address homelessness. … I think thatap really troubling.”

City Attorney Pete Schulte told council members Jan. 13 that people who refuse to move from an encampment site would be subject to arrest for trespassing, which under city code may be punished by a jail sentence of up to 364 days.

“I don’t know if anybody is getting anywhere close to 364 days on a trespassing case,” Schulte added.

The council’s progressive minority has objected to the policy, questioning the lack of data supporting the efficacy of the city’s camping ban and the impact of involving police officers in enforcement.

“What is the goal here? Because we implemented the camping ban, but that didn’t stop people from camping,” council member Crystal Murillo said Jan. 13.

Editor’s note: This article has been updated to include the outcome of the Aurora City Council’s Feb. 10 vote and additional statistics.

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