The Supreme Court may have to decide whether it's OK for an Oregon city to ban homeless people from camping in its parks.
That's because the city of Grants Pass is in the midst of a legal battle over the 29 rules the Gospel Rescue Mission, which runs a women's and children's shelter, has put in place to keep its residents safe, the Oregonian reports.
Those rules include no use of drugs or alcohol, no camping in the city's parks, and no attending religious services.
Residents are also required to pay $100 a month or $50 a child for food, and if they stay more than 30 days, they're required to attend religious services and pay the $100 fee.
The shelter's executive director, Brian Bouteller, says the goal of the rules is to get the homeless off the streets and into independent living, but it's not enough.
"For them to become independent requires something different than what it might be just to simply get them off the streets," he says.
Gloria Johnson, one of the plaintiffs in the Supreme Court case against Grants Pass v.
Johnson, says she's been ticketed for sleeping in her van in the city's parks and banned from staying in the shelter.
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