Chef,
90, faces jail, fines for feeding the homeless
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[November 08, 2014]
By Zachary Fagenson
MIAMI (Reuters) - For decades, 90-year-old
Arnold Abbott has hauled pans filled with roast chicken and
cheese-covered potatoes onto a south Florida beach park to feed hundreds
of homeless people.
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For his good deeds, Abbott finds himself facing up to two months
in jail and hundreds of dollars in fines after new laws that
restrict public feeding of the homeless went into effect in Fort
Lauderdale earlier this year.
“I’ve been fighting for the underdog all my life, so this is nothing
new,” Abbott said.
He was first cited last Sunday, along with two clergymen and a
volunteer from his nonprofit, Love Thy Neighbor.
On Wednesday, several police cars waited for Abbott at a downtown
Fort Lauderdale park, and officers pulled aside the frail man, clad
in a white chef’s coat, soon after the first plates were ready to be
served.
“The ordinance does not prohibit feeding the homeless; it regulates
the activity in order to ensure it is carried out in an appropriate,
organized, clean and healthy manner,” Fort Lauderdale Mayor John P.
Seiler said in a statement.
Abbott moved to Florida from Massachusetts in 1970 and was a civil
rights activist and wholesale jewelry salesman. He and his wife
first began feeding the homeless on their own in 1979. He started
the foundation and feeding full time in 1991 after his wife died, in
a tribute to her memory.
The dispute highlights a debate between two schools of homeless
rights activists: Those who argue that banning public feeding
criminalizes the homeless, and others who say feeding and
panhandling helps keep them on the street.
Since January 2013, 21 cities across the country have passed laws
restricting public feedings and 10 more have similar rules under
consideration, according to an October report from the National
Coalition to the Homeless. Nationwide, at least 57 cities have
limited or banned public feeding.
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"One of the reasons these kinds of ordinances are being embraced is
that this is what cities can do without spending money,” said Jerry
Jones, the coalition’s executive director.
A widely agreed-upon solution - giving the longtime homeless beds as
they work their way into treatment programs - is too costly for many
municipalities that struggle with homelessness.
But advocates for the homeless say that ignores the costs of not
addressing the issue in a compassionate way.
“What’s the cost if somebody presents themselves five times annually
to an emergency room?” asked Ron Book, a high-profile Florida
lobbyist who chairs Miami-Dade County’s Homeless Trust with a
tax-backed, $55 million budget.
(Editing by David Adams; Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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