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Advocates fear Georgia bill advanced by Republicans could land more homeless people in jail

Advocates fear Georgia bill advanced by Republicans could land more homeless people in jail

ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia House Republicans advanced a bill Wednesday that would let property owners get compensated by local governments if they don't enforce bans on homeless encampments and sanctuary laws that limit local cooperation with federal immigration authorities.
The bill comes weeks after Cornelius Taylor was killed when a bulldozer crushed him inside his tent while destroying a homeless encampment in Atlanta. It also comes amid a slew of proposals across Republican states, including Georgia, to reinforce rules for local law enforcement agencies to cooperate with federal immigration officials.
The bill passed 8-5 along party lines and would let property owners file claims amounting to lost property value or incurred expenses from local governments failing to enforce laws also prohibiting panhandling, shoplifting, public urination and loitering in addition to encampments and sanctuary policies.
'Our hope with this bill is it is never used,' said Athens Republican Rep. Houston Gaines, the bill's sponsor. 'Our hope is that local governments simply do their job and enforce the laws of our state and their local governments, and then no one would ever be able to utilize this.'
Opponents, including housing advocates, lawyers and affordable housing providers, said the bill could lead to frivolous lawsuits and would lead police to jail more homeless people, which would only make their situation worse. Many cities aren't equipped with enough programs and infrastructure to house homeless people, leaving many with no place to sleep but the streets.
'Pressure on cities and counties to increase incarceration for crimes and survival is a mistake that benefits no one,' said Michael Nolan from Intown Cares, a nonprofit that serves homeless people. 'If we want to reduce the effects of homelessness on Georgians, we have to reduce homelessness, point blank. This bill would only kick that can further down the road.'
Going to jail interferes with homeless people's ability to get housing, opponents testified during Wednesday's hearing, which would keep them homeless for longer. For example, people with criminal records aren't able to get into certain housing programs and people could get removed from a housing waitlist while in jail without knowing. It also could worsen their mental health.
State lawmakers should instead invest more in affordable housing, opponents said. A lack of affordable housing is widely cited as a root cause of homelessness.
Supporters of the bill said it does not criminalize homelessness and doesn't stop local governments from investing in other programs. They say it merely holds local governments accountable for keeping constituents safe, especially when shelter isn't immediately available for homeless people.
'We've got to protect everybody, and we do need to find better ways to serve people in the community,' said Rep. Jesse Petrea, a Savannah Republican. 'There's a better solution than doing what we're doing.'
Rep. Yasmin Neal, a Jonesboro Democrat, asked whether the bill would penalize local law enforcement for not having enough resources to respond to all the crimes mentioned in the bill. Gaines, the bill's sponsor, responded, saying the bill deals with a 'systematic' failure by governments to enforce the law rather than individual police actions.
Noah Roenitz from the Georgia Municipal Association worries the bill could penalize local governments for decisions by district attorneys to dismiss charges.
The bill would also protect businesses from illegal activity near their storefronts, which impacts customers and employees, supporters said.
Voters last year approved a similar ballot measure in Arizona that would let property owners apply for a property tax refund if a locality doesn't enforce laws on public camping, panhandling and others mentioned in Georgia's bill.
Alethea Allison, who was once homeless with two daughters after she was injured in a car accident in 2020, urged lawmakers at the Gold Dome to oppose the bill. She now works for Project Community Connections, which helped her get housing, but worries this bill would hinder people from escaping unfortunate circumstances by incentivizing officers to put them in jail.
'Pushing people to the brink and then punishing them for that is not the right choice,' Allison told lawmakers. 'We don't need anything like handcuffs. We need help.'

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Italians head to polls in referendum on citizenship and labor, but vote risks sinking on low turnout
Italians head to polls in referendum on citizenship and labor, but vote risks sinking on low turnout

Associated Press

time4 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Italians head to polls in referendum on citizenship and labor, but vote risks sinking on low turnout

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Mike Crapo's megabill Mission: Impossible
Mike Crapo's megabill Mission: Impossible

Politico

time12 minutes ago

  • Politico

Mike Crapo's megabill Mission: Impossible

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Senate Finance is expected to begin going through bill text with members and staff beginning today, and Crapo is expected to brief the broader Senate Republican conference mid-week. 'We're working as aggressively as we can to move as fast as we can,' Crapo says. Crapo's leaning on a cadre of trusted advisers. Finance staff director Gregg Richard, chief tax counsel Courtney Connell and deputy chief tax counsel Randy Herndon are among his critical staff on the bill. Crapo is known for his spare words — trust us, we've tried to get more out of him — but also for his history of landing deals. One of his biggest wins was the 2018 law that eased the Dodd-Frank banking law — an effort that required bringing along Democrats to help serve up a Trump administration victory. He also flexed as a deal-killer last year, blocking a tax revamp negotiated by House Ways and Means Chair Jason Smith and then-Senate Finance Chair Ron Wyden. 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The stealth Senate dealmaker who could deliver Trump's tax cuts
The stealth Senate dealmaker who could deliver Trump's tax cuts

Politico

time12 minutes ago

  • Politico

The stealth Senate dealmaker who could deliver Trump's tax cuts

Some of the most critical components of President Donald Trump's agenda are in the hands of a soft-spoken senator from Idaho who behind closed doors is one of Capitol Hill's most calculating dealmakers. Senate Finance Chair Mike Crapo is rushing to finalize his panel's portion of his party's massive legislative centerpiece. He could begin briefing colleagues on bill text as soon as Monday, according to a person granted anonymity to share an evolving schedule —while three people aware of the state of negotiations say a full tax package may not be ready for release until early next week. That package needs to unite 51 Republicans in the Senate without alienating more than three GOP members of the House. The fate of vast Republican tax cuts enacted in 2017, and set to expire at the end of this year, hangs in the balance. In interviews throughout the past several weeks in the halls of the Senate, as he shuffled between meetings and votes flanked by trusted advisers, Crapo played his cards close to his vest. Asked about how he planned to make sure a trio of expiring business tax cuts are made permanent, he replied, 'I'm just not going to comment.' On whether the Senate would make tweaks to controversial House Medicaid language: 'We're working that right now. I'm not going to get into the details.' On how negotiations were going over whether to lower the House agreement to increase the cap on the state-and-local-tax deduction to $40,000: 'We're looking at the entire bill.' Crapo is known for his spare words, but also for his history of landing deals — and squashing ones he doesn't like, such as last year when he tanked a bipartisan tax bill negotiated by then-Finance Chair Ron Wyden and the chair of the House Ways and Means Committee, Jason Smith. At the same time, longtime colleagues and aides say Crapo can sometimes play the role of committee consensus-builder to his detriment — and he may have to put that tendency aside as the clock ticks down to the GOP's self-imposed July 4 deadline to send Trump his 'big, beautiful bill.' The question is now whether Crapo can help broker an agreement at this political moment when he has never presided over a policy battle with such high stakes. 'Mike Crapo is probably one of the three most well-respected members of the Republican caucus. People trust him. He listens. He tells you the truth. He tries to be inclusive, sometimes to a fault,' said Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) in an interview. 'He's quiet. He's really, really smart.' People who have worked closely with Crapo say he likes to slowly build agreement among his committee members, has seemingly infinite patience to work out issues and most likely won't take a position with Senate leadership until he feels like all of his fellow panel Republicans are on board. 'Crapo is a very thoughtful and deliberate lawmaker who has strong views on tax policy himself, but also who cares about what his committee members want,' said Joe Boddicker, a former tax counsel for Senate Finance Republicans under Crapo, now of the law firm Alston & Bird. 'He will try to incorporate the feedback from them, and he puts a high premium on that feedback … so it'll be a group product, one that reflects the viewpoints of the committee membership.' He has previously walked political tightropes to pull off difficult legislative wins. Among the most notable was in 2018, when, as chair of the Senate Banking Committee, Crapo crafted a rare bipartisan deal with red-state Democrats to loosen Dodd-Frank regulations on banks — the most significant overhaul of the rules since they were first created after the 2008 financial crisis. '[He] puts the time in on it. He's low-key, but he is a connector, a facilitator,' said Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), who worked closely with Crapo on the banking overhaul. 'He doesn't need the spotlight, but he is very, very effective.' But Crapo is getting an earful from his members right now about what the tax portion of the GOP megabill should look like. Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) wants to make the 'no tax on tips' proposal — a Trump campaign promise — more fair for blue-collar workers in certain industries. Meanwhile, Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) wants to scale back a tier of new endowment taxes on private universities, a favorite proposal from House Ways and Means Republicans. Crapo is fielding a host of concerns from an ideologically diverse group of Senate Republicans, from moderate Susan Collins of Maine to conservative Josh Hawley of Missouri, who say they won't vote for a bill that could result in people losing Medicaid coverage. And then there's Sen. Ron Johnson, a Finance member who has warned he could vote against the megabill if Republicans don't commit to massive reductions in spending. At the same time, Crapo has shown in the past he's not afraid to stand up for his own interests. He surprised his House counterparts last year when he quietly killed the bipartisan tax deal crafted by Smith and Wyden. He opposed many of the policies, including an expansion of the Child Tax Credit. But while he didn't know then how the 2024 elections would shake out, stymying that deal also left the door open for the scenario in which Crapo now finds himself: able to run point on a more sweeping, and wholly partisan, tax overhaul exercise under a GOP governing trifecta. The fallout, however, also soured the relationship between Crapo and Smith. Yet the two men have found a new way to work closely together over the last few months to deliver Trump's biggest legislative priorities through the filibuster-skirting budget reconciliation process. 'I think part of the problem is that Wyden and Smith got together and Crapo didn't feel like he was a full partner,' said Finance Republican Sen. John Cornyn of Texas regarding the prior episode. Cornyn added that the current political conditions have necessitated an accord between the two lawmakers. They'll have to work together. Their two committees differ on the questions of business tax permanence — which would cost around half a trillion dollars to implement — and how high to cap the SALT deduction — which all Finance Republics want lowered. And there's continued disagreement over using an accounting tactic to essentially paper over around $3.8 trillion of extensions of Trump's tax cuts. Smith says he's in favor of the maneuver, but House hard-liners are extremely skeptical of the idea. Senate Republicans, including Crapo, want to keep it in place. 'We've been communicating very closely so we each know what the other is thinking,' 74-year-old Crapo, who has served in the Senate for more than three decades, said in an interview of his working relationship now with 44-year-old Smith, who was elected to the House in 2013 and has a reputation for being more outwardly pugnacious. 'We each know what the other's politics are in their caucus,' Crapo continued, 'and we're trying to keep ourselves in a situation where there are as few differences as possible.' A spokesperson for Smith did not respond to a request for comment about the House member's rapport with the senator. The partnership will come in handy as Crapo faces enormous pressure from other members of House GOP leadership, who are urging the Senate not to make so many changes to the House-passed bill that it will slow down the bill's final passage — if not derail the effort altogether. 'Mike Crapo is a brilliant senator and he's instrumental on the tax stuff and everything else. You got to respect his opinion. But at the end of the day, I hope they leave it right where it's at,' said House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-Minn.) in an interview last week. Crapo, meanwhile, has expressed quiet confidence he will deliver a viable product — even as he deals with the competing demands of House leaders like Emmer, his fellow Finance Republicans and even the Senate parliamentarian, whose rulings could complicate his efforts. Asked recently about an anticipated parliamentary ruling on the accounting tactic, he managed to sum up his whole approach: 'I never declare victory until the game is over.' Jordain Carney and Mia McCarthy contributed to this report.

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