Sweeps & COVID-19: Organizing and Legal Strategies to Stop the Sweeps of Homeless Encampments During and After the Pandemic
 
Outdoor encampments have grown along with the nation's affordable housing gap, and because homelessness has a disparate racial impact on Black, Indigenous, and other communities of color, sweeps of encampments contribute to disparities in law enforcement and wealth building.
 
Governments across the country routinely evict people from their encampments despite the lack of available housing or even any stable and safe place for them to go. These evictions - or "sweeps" cause people to lose their access to private shelter and other personal property, including items necessary to protect life and health, such as medication and protective clothing. They also cause people to disperse to other outdoor locations or enter into congregate shelter facilities - both risk factors for the spread of the deadly coronavirus.
 
Join us Wednesday, July 29th, 2020 at 2pm EDT, as we discuss organizing and legal strategies for stopping the sweeps during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. You will learn about a new national campaign to stop the sweeps, House Keys Not Sweeps, launched by the Western Regional Advocacy Project. 
 
This webinar will feature:
  • Paul Boden (he/him/his), Executive Director of the Western Regional Advocacy Project
  • Tristia Bauman (she/hers), Senior Attorney at the National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty
  • Terese Howard (she/hers), Organizer with Denver Homeless Out Loud
  • Sterling Johnson (they/them), JD, MA
 
To view previous webinars and see planned ones, please visit nlchp.org/resources/webinars/. Even if you cannot attend at the broadcast time, if you register you will automatically receive a link to the recorded version.
 
This biweekly webinar series will share the actions and legal strategies needed to ensure a right to housing both during the COVID-19 and moving forward. Keep an eye out for future themes and speakers! 
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Address postal inquiries to:
National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty
2000 M Street, N.W., Suite 210
Washington, DC 20036