Pro Bono Appreciation
As the Law Center looks back on our 2020 pro bono activities, we want to give thanks to all the people who made themselves available to serve. We know we say this a lot, because it is true: We could not meet the call of our mission to end homelessness and protect the rights of those experiencing it without our pro bono partners. We appreciate you!
We appreciate all of our LEAP members and the countless firms that have made our work possible over the years. We want to thank especially our partners at Latham & Watkins for the high-impact litigation work you handled in 2020 on behalf of the Law Center and our clients. We appreciate the lawyers at Akin Gump who helped aid and shape our policy work. We appreciate every person at Baker Donelson who helped us research and draft our 2020 State Youth Index. We appreciate our partners at Goodwin who worked on several pro bono projects, including 50 State Voting Rights Cards that instructed homeless voters about how to vote by mail. We appreciate our partners at Dechert who helped us fight criminalization of people experiencing homelessness in Texas. And we thank our most recent McKinney-Vento Pro Bono Counsel Award recipient, Fish & Richardson, who took lead on our COVID Letter writing campaign that helped us challenge budding policies and practices that were detrimental to people who were experiencing homelessness during the pandemic.
Even though we are only halfway through the year, our records show that your dedication towards serving our mission has continued. Let’s make this year better than the last. We have a greater impact when we work together.
Connecticut Senate Passes First Statewide Recognition of the Human Right to Housing
On May 20, following a strong op-ed from the Law Center, the Connecticut Senate passed SB 194, recognizing the human right to housing in the state of Connecticut. This bill builds upon a collaboration between the Connecticut Coalition to End Homelessness and the Law Center, and was introduced through the leadership of Connecticut State Senator Saud Anwar and Representative Brian McGee.
Tracking language drawn from international human rights standards, the bill states it is the goal of the state to implement policies that will respect, protect, and fulfill a right to affordable, decent, safe, and stable housing for every resident of the state.
SB 194 establishes an inclusive right to housing committee to review the state’s implementation of the right to housing and to report to the General Assembly Housing Committee by July 1, 2022. The bill also establishes an important moral and legal commitment to the right to housing, setting the stage for other bills that would help to actually implement the right.
The bill has been added to the calendar for the Connecticut House. With a favorable committee report, advocates are hopeful that it will see quick passage and then be signed by the Governor, making Connecticut the first state to officially recognize housing as a right! This bill is important for all Connecticut residents, but in particular the Black, Indigenous, and other People of Color who make up the state’s poorest residents. The Law Center will be tracking progress closely.
Criminalizing Homelessness In Texas
Despite opposition from the Law Center and local partners, the people of Austin, Texas passed Prop B—reinstating full camping, sitting, lying, and panhandling bans that had been partially rescinded—and the Texas legislature passed HB 1925 prohibiting camping statewide.
The state law explicitly prohibits localities from taking steps to discourage enforcement of the law, empowering the Texas attorney general to bring cases against such municipalities, under penalty of loss of all state aid for the year following a judicial finding of non-compliance.
Because homelessness has a disproportionate impact on Black, Indigenous, and other People of Color, the law will likely further entrench racial disparities in the criminal legal system.
The Law Center is working with local partners to evaluate potential policy or legal responses.
Iowa Passes Law Permitting Source of Income Discrimination
On April 30, Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds signed into law a bill permitting landlords to discriminate against tenants who receive federal rental assistance, overriding local protections against such discrimination which had been passed in three Iowa cities. Because federal rental assistance is used disproportionately by Black, Indigenous and other Renters of Color, discrimination on source of income is often used as a legal proxy for illegal racial discrimination. Statewide bans on protections for rental assistance recipients are of particular concern as national efforts to create universal rental voucher programs are under way to achieve President Biden’s commitment to a right to housing. The Law Center is working with national partners and the Administration to evaluate policy and legal responses.
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