MIAMI BEACH, Fla. ā Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis held a news conference in Miami Beach Wednesday morning, where he addressed the topic of homelessness and signed a bill banning sleeping on public property.
Florida lawmakers recently passed that bill.
The governor appeared at Santorini by Georgios Greek restaurant on Ocean Drive at 10 a.m and was joined by Miami Beach Mayor Steven Meiner and Florida House Speaker Paul Renner, R-Palm Coast.
DeSantis said the bill will make sure that the stateās streets are ācleanā and āsafe.ā
It also promises the homeless greater access to services for issues such as substance abuse and mental health problems.
The state Department of Children and Families would oversee local governments that set up designated areas for the homeless to camp for up to a year under the new law, which takes effect Oct. 1. Anyone using those encampments would be prohibited from using alcohol or illegal drugs, with sanitation and security to be provided.
The encampments would be created if local homeless shelters reach maximum capacity, according a news release from the governorās office. The law requires regional entities to provide necessary behavioral treatment access as a condition of a county or city creating an encampment.
Allowing the homeless to camp in public spaces affects the local quality of life, can be a nuisance for businesses and makes it more difficult to deliver them needed services because theyāre scattered, DeSantis and other supporters of the measure said at a news conference in Miami Beach.
āI think this is absolutely the right balance to strike,ā DeSantis said. āWe want to make sure we put public safety above all else.ā
During the Legislatureās latest session, Floridaās homeless population was estimated to be about 30,700 in 2023. Thatās a fraction of the homeless populations in many large U.S. cities, but the lawās sponsors said it could worsen because of Floridaās rapid population growth.
āThis bill will not eliminate homelessness. But it is a start,ā said Republican state Rep. Sam Garrison. āAnd it states clearly that in Florida, our public spaces are worth fighting for.ā
Opponents of the law say it is meant to round up the homeless and hide them from public view.
āThis bill does not and it will not address the more pressing and root cause of homelessness,ā said Democratic state Sen. Shevrin Jones during a debate this year. āWe are literally reshuffling the visibility of unhoused individuals with no exit strategy for people who are experiencing homelessness.ā
Ron Book, who leads the Miami-Dade Homeless Trust, said of the legislation, āI donāt believe this is the best idea, but it is the start of a dialogue.ā
āWe will never, ever, ever support arresting our way out of homeless, itās not right, it doesnāt have a place in our continuum,ā Book said, but said he hoped itās a first step in engaging in policy changes across the states.
DeSantis, however, said the new law is a unique approach in pledging to provide the services that homeless people often need.
āThis is going to require that the services are there to help people get back on their feet,ā the governor said. āI think itās important that we maintain the quality of life for the citizens of Florida.ā
Beginning in January 2025, the law will allow residents, local business owners and the state attorney general to file a lawsuit to stop any city or county from allowing the homeless to camp or sleep on public property.
The bill will take effect Oct. 1.