Last night, Wilmington City Council voted 4-3 to enact the Luke Waddell-sponsored “anti-camping” ordinance, which bans camping or sleeping on public property between the hours of 10PM to 7AM. It is no secret that this directly targets the unhoused population in our city, specifically in the downtown area. While there were some positive amendments to the ordinance to make it less punitive towards the unhoused, Wilmington DSA condemns this vote in the strongest possible terms, and applauds council members Andrews, Spears, and Barnett for their votes against it.
A variety of mental health professionals, community activists, and shelter workers spoke out against this ordinance. They all stated — correctly — that it offers no solutions to the housing problems in Wilmington, and that a cycle of punishment, even if lowered from misdemeanors to infractions, only further traps those experiencing homelessness in their present condition. It would also exacerbate the problems for unhoused Wilmingtonians dealing with mental health issues or addiction. Councilman Joyner and Mayor Saffo – both Democrats who will likely be asking you to “Vote Blue No Matter Who” in the near future – were the deciding votes on passing the ordinance. Their betrayal of the causes they campaigned on must be noted and remembered.
We want to be clear: anyone framing this as a grand compromise, or a victory, is lying to you. Any politician or political party that describes this as a positive example of reaching across the aisle to get things done is counting on you being too busy, or bored, or uninterested, to really look at what this ordinance does. This is not a bi-partisan compromise, it is a capitulation to those attacking the most vulnerable among us in the name of protecting downtown businesses and real estate value. No wonder, then, that so many of our City Councilors come from the world of real estate, and openly ignored the advice of the experts who had spent months trying to explain to them why this ordinance would not solve the housing problems in Wilmington.
City Council and the County Commissioners need to work together on a comprehensive plan to create more resources, shelters, and affordable housing in Wilmington and New Hanover County. Policies to control rent, build affordable housing, and create alternatives to police-first interactions are key. These are supposed to be our politicians — we should expect them to enact political change. If they cannot find it in the current laws to do so, they need to write new laws or appeal to the state legislature to do the same. Pretending the problem will simply go away through infraction punishment — which can still require fines or community service from unhoused citizens who often have no means of fulfilling those obligations — is a distraction thought up by those who believe that punishment and heavy policing are the only ways to fix our city’s shortcomings. That future changes and plans for a more compassionate response were promised with no plan for implementing them — despite this issue not being a new one — shows the contempt the city government has for those who organized or showed up at yesterday’s meeting to protest this ordinance.
We can imagine a better future for ourselves and our citizens. While homelessness has no magic fix, there are examples of working solutions to combat it all across the globe. Our inability to enact them here is a failure of willpower and general disinterest in the actual problems facing our city. Wilmington deserves better.
Image credit: WECT