The city of Washougal is proposing criminalizing camping on City property in an effort to “improve the livability” of its public spaces through a series of municipal code changes that could have profound ramifications for unhoused community members.
The proposed code changes, contained in an ordinance that the Washougal City Council will consider during its meeting on Monday, Dec. 2, would amend the City’s municipal code to give its officers “enforcement tools” to address trespass and camping on public property as authorized by and consistent with Grants Pass v. Johnson, a July 2024 United States Supreme Court ruling that the Eighth Amendment’s “cruel and unusual punishment” clause does not prohibit the enforcement of laws regulating camping on public property.
The Supreme Court’s decision overturned the U.S. Court of Appeals Ninth Circuit’s 2018 decision limiting enforcement actions around camping on public property and prevented camping bans in areas without open shelter space.
“I just want to emphasize that this is merely a tool,” Washougal Police Chief Wendi Steinbronn said during the Washougal City Council’s Nov. 18 workshop. “Most of our officers know (the city’s unhoused) individuals on a first-name basis. (This proposal) doesn’t mean that we don’t take the totality of a person’s circumstances into account when trying to work with them on helping them solve their problem or (find) resources.
“This tool, the sharper end of it, if you will, is going to be reserved for specific circumstances when people are just not following what we ask them to do, and they end up using public space for their own enjoyment, which interferes with the rest of the (community’s) ability to enjoy the public property — for example, urinating and defecating in the grass behind City Hall, leaving needles around, things like that.”