Amicus Barrani v. Salt Lake City

  • Filed: 11/07/2023
  • Status: Dismissed
  • Latest Update: Nov 20, 2023
BARRANI v. SALT LAKE CITY graphic

The ACLU’s State Supreme Court Initiative and Trone Center for Justice and Equality, along with the ACLU of Utah and the Salt Lake Legal Defenders Association, filed an amicus brief defending the civil rights and liberties of people experiencing homelessness.

What’s at Stake

Hundreds if not thousands of Salt Lake City, Utah, residents have nowhere safe to stay and must live and sleep in public. This case—brought by a small group of residents and businesses—involves the question of whether this citywide homelessness crisis qualifies as interfering with their rights under Utah state law. It also presents the question of whether Salt Lake City can be ordered to clear encampments, forcibly relocate people who are unhoused, and enforce vague and overbroad laws punishing people for experiencing homelessness. We cannot arrest our way out of homelessness. Costly fines, fees, and arrests likely violate unhoused people’s state and federal constitutional rights. The ACLU’s State Supreme Court Initiative and Trone Center for Justice and Equality, along with the ACLU of Utah and the Salt Lake Legal Defenders Association, filed an amicus brief defending the civil rights and liberties of people experiencing homelessness.

About our Amicus Brief Defending the Rights of People Experiencing Homelessness

Our brief argues that the court should protect the rights of people who are experiencing homelessness. Excessive fines and punishment for the unavoidable consequences of being unhoused likely result in the city violating the federal and state constitutional rights of unhoused Utahns.

An injunction would require dismantling campsites that unhoused people rely on to survive, forcibly relocating people experiencing homelessness to unknown and undetermined locations. It would also make the problem of homelessness worse, not better. Clearing encampments further erodes trust between our unhoused neighbors and the government, making it harder to end homelessness. The time and tax-payer money used evicting encampments and spent forcing unsheltered individuals into the criminal legal system could be redirected toward services and housing that address the systemic issues of homelessness.

Case Number:
230907360
Judge:
Judge Andrew Stone
Pro Bono Firm:
ACLU of Utah, ACLU’s State Supreme Court Initiative, the national ACLU’s Trone Center for Justice & Equality, and the Salt Lake Legal Defender Association