Pubdate: Sun, 27 Mar 2005 Source: Stamford Advocate, The (CT) Copyright: 2005 Southern Connecticut Newspaper, Inc. Contact: http://www.stamfordadvocate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1522 Author: Brian Lockhart, Staff Writer SOME SAY PROPOSED RULES TARGET POOR: ANTI-LOITERING, PANHANDLING ORDINANCES UNDER HEAT NORWALK -- A proposed anti-loitering ordinance and recent passage of legislation cracking down on panhandling have some community leaders concerned the city council is treading dangerously close to voilating the civil rights of the poor and minorities. "The belief down here on the street is that developers are moving in and they want a lot of folks down here out," said Common Councilman Carvin Hilliard, a Democrat who represents the predominantly minority and low-income neighborhoods of South Norwalk. "And when you propose ordinances such as those, it kind of reinforces that." Abraham Heisler, a Norwalk housing law attorney, also challenged the legislation. "The law already says you can't create a public disturbance or engage in disorderly conduct," Heisler said. "So why do we need new statutes unless it's to keep poor people out of designated parts of town?" Proponents such as Democrat Michael Coffey, chairman of the council's Ordinance Committee, argue the ordinances have "nothing to do with pushing poor out of neighborhoods." "It has to do with improving the quality of life for every citizen of Norwalk," Coffey said. "Statutes such as these make Norwalk a safer and a better place." Passed by the council in December, the anti-panhandling ordinance levies a $99 fine on individuals found guilty of "aggressive solicitation," including continually asking for money despite refusals and intimidating pedestrians by following or touching them or blocking their path. The loitering legislation, currently being reviewed by Coffey's Ordinance Committee, forbids "any person to loiter or congregate upon any public street or sidewalk or other public place in such a manner as to obstruct vehicular or pedestrian traffic" and requires anyone doing so to move when ordered by police. The ordinance also would allow police to target convicted drug dealers or drug purchasers who appear to be engaging in those activities. Violators who refuse police requests to leave could face a $99 fine. Although both ordinances apply to the entire city, the neighborhood commonly mentioned in discussion of the new laws is SoNo. Concentrated in the area of Washington, North Main and Water streets, SoNo is South Norwalk's most northerly neighborhood, and since the 1980s has been an island of upscale restaurants, bars, boutiques, pricey apartments and office space. The gentrification is expected to expand once the new police headquarters opens this spring just below Washington Street at South Main and Monroe streets. The anti-panhandling and anti-loitering ordinances have been written in direct response to SoNo business owners' complaints about such activities in municipal parking lots or on public sidewalks outside of their shops affecting customers. Former Mayor William Collins, a Democrat elected in the late 1970s and again in the mid-1980s, said the ordinances reflect a tension between visitors to SoNo and greater South Norwalk's lower income population that has existed for 25 years. Collins recalled a debate about installing benches along Washington Street and whether it would "attract people with nothing better to do who might be a negative (effect) on redevelopment." He said ordinances regulating activities such as loitering cause his "antennae to go up." "The people who live around (SoNo) or come in on business and want to be entertained there are somewhat dissuaded by the fact they have to share the turf with some very poor people," Collins said. "My feeling about that is 'tough.' . . . We go to SoNo a fair amount, and I personally find it uplifting watching rich and poor sharing the sidewalk. It doesn't happen in a lot of towns." Tom Becker, a member of the South Norwalk Business Association, said the point of the ordinances is "to allow everybody to co-exist comfortably." Becker said he has been the victim of a panhandler who refused to let go of his car door in SoNo's Webster Street parking lot. "That's aggressive and that's when someone's rights are violated," he said. "And sometimes on weekends you'll have a dozen high school kids hanging out on a street corner, particularly around a movie theater, for hours on end . . . It can be uncomfortable for anybody walking through a crowd of 12 kids. We're hoping for an ordinance where a cop can say, 'Keep moving.' " Others say such ordinances create a slippery slope. "You have the war on drugs, efforts to curb street gangs and the complicating factor of dealing with the homeless," said Manny Margolis, an attorney and civil rights activist from Westport. "Cities and towns are busying themselves trying to write laws to give the police the authority to clean up the streets. That sounds very good and very reassuring, as do so many things in our times of stress over safety and security. But it has potential for over-reaching . . . It's the poor who will get hurt here and, in towns like Norwalk, it will be minorities, more often than not . . . Folks very comfortable living in their houses are not the ones who are going to be victimized or endangered by an ordinance of this kind." In passing the panhandling ordinance, members of the Democrat-majority Common Council and police department emphasized that individuals have the right to ask for money and that the rule would only apply to aggressive begging. The loitering ordinance also would allow the city to post signs declaring public properties closed during nighttime hours. A homeless person wanting to spend a night on a park bench could easily be tossed out by police. Police Chief Harry Rilling said most parks in the city already close at sunset or midnight, but not all are posted as such. "It's unfair if it's not posted and the police officer says 'You can't be here.' This makes it a little bit clearer," Rilling said. Rilling said it is unreasonable to expect "unlimited, unchecked use of public property" during evening hours, particularly when his department receives so many complaints about illegal activities in parks or on school grounds. "Parks are dark; they offer the opportunity and cover for anybody wishing to engage in inappropriate behavior or criminal activity," Rilling said. "They can't be patrolled 24 hours a day, seven days a week." Hilliard has a concern about the loitering ordinance's focus on known drug dealers or drug buyers. "While certainly I want to crack down on drugs . . . we don't want the police to think it's open season on our young people," Hilliard said. "It's overkill." Rilling said police officers know the difference between potential drug dealing and casual exchanges. "Repeatedly signaling vehicles, walking to a vehicle on the street, a quick exchange," Rilling said. "If you wave down your friend, he pulls over and gives you a ride, the officer's not going to chase you down the street." If Norwalk intends to pursue such ordinances, Margolis said, the Common Council not only needs to ensure they are clearly written with no vague language, but legislators should go "the extra mile" to solicit public input before voting. When hearings were held on the panhandling ordinances, the only members of the public to speak were Becker and Rilling. But a lack of attendance should not be construed as supporting a new law, Margolis said. "You have a hearing, but there are folks who aren't aware of it; a lot don't read the newspaper," Margolis said. "Reach out to welfare organizations, poverty organizations, minority organizations and invite them to be heard so they're going the extra mile to get input from the people most likely to be affected." Carole Antonetz, director of the Norwalk Homeless Shelter, a few blocks south of SoNo, said she is aware of the passage of the panhandling ordinance and the proposed loitering ordinance. However, she said she has not been motivated to speak against either on behalf of her clients because the shelter is not in the business of promoting "people hanging around." "The goal of the shelter is to get everybody involved in a program or working or doing something," Antonetz said. "We do homeless outreach, going out into the streets with police officers to determine who's out there (and) offer services to them." The Rev. Lindsay Curtis, president of the Norwalk branch of the NAACP, said though he believes some civil libertarians' negative views of such laws "are a little radical," he does have concerns such ordinances target certain parts of the community "not necessarily racially, but certainly economically." "Is this loitering ordinance going to apply to everybody?" Curtis said. "If there are 10 business people on the corner dressed up in suits versus a group of young people on the other corner, who do you move?" If panhandling and youth loitering is such a problem that it needs to be regulated, Curtis said, the city should seek other solutions to the problem. Building a youth center, for example, might keep teenagers from congregating on the streets, he said. "If we're going to take the time to work up ordinances, we need to look at alternatives," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom