FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
PITTSBURGH -- Under a settlement reached in a class action lawsuit brought on behalf of Pittsburgh's unsheltered homeless people by the American Civil Liberties Union, city officials have agreed to stop destroying homeless people's property and to provide advance notice of property sweeps.
Witold Walczak, the Pittsburgh ACLU's Legal Director who handled the case, praised the settlement. "A week ago, the city refused to do more than tell one social service worker that a sweep would occur, and insisted that it had a right to immediately destroy homeless people's possessions. Now, the city will have one of the nation's better policies for protecting homeless people's property rights."
Highlights of the agreement approved by Chief United States District Court Judge Donetta Ambrose on May 9th include the following:
Walczak also noted that the agreement allows area homeless people to enforce the terms in federal court for three years. "Given this city administration's disdain for, and past treatment of, the homeless and their rights, an airtight agreement that could be enforced in federal court was a crucial part of the settlement."
Area homeless-service providers, who had been trying for four years to get the city to provide notice of sweeps and to not destroy collected property, praised the ACLU's work. Robert "Mac" MacMahon, a spokesperson for the Homeless Outreach Coordinating Committee thanked the ACLU "for providing the homeless with a voice in their legal fight, so that they may be accorded their civil rights no matter what their housing situation may be."
The case is Sager v. City of Pittsburgh, CA-03-0635 (W.D. Pa., Ambrose, C.J.). The settlement agreement can be found at /cpredirect/13453
A news release about the filing of the case is online at /cpredirect/13452