New Ordinance Outlaws Giving Money to Panhandlers, Violators Will Be Fined and Jailed

By Jack Burns

Wichita, KS— Wichita used to be known as “Cowtown” because of its cattle trade but now if people stop and give something as small as a cheeseburger to a homeless person they run the risk going to jail and paying a $500 fine. The ordinance was recently approved by the city council and now complicates matters for both panhandlers and philanthropic citizens alike.

Beatdowns and arrests by police are, unfortunately, becoming a larger and larger part of the homeless culture. Not only do police regularly harass the homeless but TFTP has reported on incidents in which officers have confiscated blankets and tents from homeless people in the middle of the winter.

Whether the dehumanization is to make way for the up and coming comic book festival or just a run of the mill sadistic police gang murder, homeless folks in the US are finding themselves in an increasingly hostile police state.

Cops in Saginaw, Michigan, who shot and killed homeless Saginaw resident Milton Hall, in firing squad fashion, during a confrontation in a shopping plaza parking lot were told that they wouldn’t face any charges. Who cares about one dead homeless guy, right?

Not only are police attacking the homeless but they are also attacking people for helping the homeless. And, as this new ordinance in Wichita highlights, helping those in need can now land you in jail. 

The police say they see the homeless situation in Wichita as more of a drug and alcohol addiction problem rather than an issue of hunger. Police have even created inter-organizational teams called “HOT” teams, Homeless Outreach Teams. HOT team members offer a hot meal and a warm place to stay but admit most homeless people don’t accept their offer.

HOT team member Officer Nate Schweithale told reporters:

Often times we see signs say they are a vet and they aren’t a veteran, they say they are homeless, they aren’t really homeless.

While Wichita police say their HOT team’s offers of food and shelter to homeless members of society are rejected, there may be a few valid reasons why. First, some police departments have a sordid history of beating up and tasing homeless people. Lastly, other homeless individuals have found themselves in jail for extended periods of time. On one occasion an officer gave a feces sandwich to a homeless man. One homeless man was even attacked by a police K9 for being in a public park asleep.

In the eyes of police and the city council, however, panhandlers prey upon the generosity of donors, usually motorists, who stop their cars to give money, food, or other goods. In doing so, the police claim traffic accidents and slow traffic are the results.

In an effort to improve the flow of traffic and reduce needless accidents, the city council moved to fine generous citizens, threatening them with big fines and jail time of up to 30 days.

Alluding to a conflict of interest between the Constitution and the rights of a city to govern itself, Garland Egerton, Executive Director with Inter-Faith Ministries said there comes a time when free speech rights must take a backseat to city ordinances. He said:

That’s America, you’re supposed to have First Amendment rights, but there’s a difference in expressing your First Amendment rights and creating a traffic hazard.

When pastors are telling citizens not to help the needy and to accept a violation of rights in the process, something has gone horribly awry in the land of the free.

Now, for the voluntary action of handing someone else money, or asking another person for money, cops will arrest you. The City of Wichita made panhandling a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of $500 and 30 days in jail. The ordinance also fines motorists with the same fines and possible jail time if they choose to give to the homeless.

Even if these panhandlers are rich drug addicts who live in high-rise apartments, there is no victim in the voluntary act of asking for and giving away money. As impeding the flow of traffic is already a violation in Wichita, this ordinance makes its purpose entirely clear—continue the war on homeless and those who try to help them, and generate revenue in the process.

Jack Burns is an educator, journalist, investigative reporter, and advocate of natural medicine. This article first appeared at The Free Thought Project.

Also Read: Activists Arrested In Atlanta For Feeding Homeless Without A Permit Before Thanksgiving


Activist Post Daily Newsletter

Subscription is FREE and CONFIDENTIAL
Free Report: How To Survive The Job Automation Apocalypse with subscription

8 Comments on "New Ordinance Outlaws Giving Money to Panhandlers, Violators Will Be Fined and Jailed"

  1. Maybe if you have hundreds of thousands of dollars invested in a business, you don’t want stinking creatures sleeping, urinating and defecating in front of it. If we can spend trillions on criminal wars, there has always been plenty of money to aid the homeless with shower/laundry/communication/sleeping/storage facilities.

  2. No sanctuary cities for the homeless?

  3. It’s amazing! we have three guys that have more money than over 50% of Americans, we have a government that gives our tax dollars in the billions to Israel and Saudi Arabia, we have a MIC that costs us over 50% of our tax dollars (with no threat on our border’s), we have politicians becoming millionaires, we have corruption from the top down, and yet we can’t feed our hungry and shelter our homeless. As a nation we are so uncivilized….

  4. H.O.T. If I were homeless, I think I’d rather sleep on the street then trust cops, too. But my question is: WHERE ARE THE CHURCHES? In a city of 100k or more, there are plenty of resources where even small churches can band together and build small shelters somewhere within city limits. Come ON. Church today is such a shell of what Christ intended. 3 hours of praise and worship a week, then the basket gets passed around for a shakedown. This non-sense is inexcusable.

    • Unfortunately, in many jurisdictions even the churches aren’t allow to feed the homeless.
      .
      Maybe if some of these holier-than-thou “officials” got tossed out on the street, they might have a change of heart.

Leave a comment