Advocacy


Published on Apr 01, 2024

Another light year for legislation tackling homelessness

Contact: Carl Schroeder, Shannon McClelland

Aside from budget investments, it was a very quiet session for bills that intended to address the growing problem of homelessness. Two competing proposals aimed to change the way vehicles being used a residence were handled when illegally parked, but neither bill made it out of committee. (We wrote up the bill, SB 5730, that mostly aligned with the 2022 task force recommendations.) We expect both proposals will return next year.

In the meantime, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral argument on the Grants Pass, Oregon homelessness case on April 22, 2024. The issue before the Court is whether the enforcement of generally applicable laws regulating camping on public property constitutes “cruel and unusual punishment” prohibited by the Eighth Amendment. The outcome of this case, whichever direction it goes, will almost certainly spawn legislation next session.

Bill #

Description

Status

SB 5730

Addresses towing vehicles used as a residence

Did not pass.

  • Advocacy
  • Homelessness
  • Session recap

 

Recent articles


  • Restrictions on how cities permit STEP housing facilities lead the homelessness policy conversations

  • Local option for kit homes bill clears cutoff

  • STEP housing bill advances to concurrence after additional helpful amendments

Related content

bill-iconAWC's bill tracker

Visit AWC’s bill tracker to learn about legislation with city impacts this year.

Copyright © 2018-2026 Association of Washington Cities