Archive

California’s mental health CARE Court aims to help thousands with untreated psychotic disorders

2023-09-28T00:55:42+00:00September 28, 2023|Archive, Breaking News|

CARE Court, a controversial and costly initiative set to launch in eight California counties by December before going statewide, gives hope to many. Under the program, judges will be able to order people with untreated psychotic disorders, such as schizophrenia, to get help, with counties required to provide the aid. Anita Fisher sees it as a possible lifeline for people like her son, Pharoh Degree, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia while serving in the Army 22 years ago. He's now 45 and said living with the illness can be difficult. "Constant overthinking," he said, describing how difficult experiencing schizophrenia can be when it's untreated. "Your brain is always racing, your inner voice is always talking, racing, racing. No peace. Never ...

Judge Blocks Fullerton’s Anti RV Camping Law, For Now

2023-07-07T22:51:23+00:00July 7, 2023|Archive, Breaking News|

Fullerton residents living in their RVs can continue sleeping in them after an Orange County Superior Court judge blocked city leaders from enforcing a rule that blocks anyone from leaving their vehicle on the street without a permit. While the question if the law is constitutional still needs to be decided in court, the new ruling from Judge Ronald Bauer blocks the city from enforcing it until a final decision is made, with a trial currently scheduled for September 2024. The law at issue – approved by city leaders in 2020 – stops anyone from parking an RV on the city’s street without a pre-approved permit that only lasts for 24 hours, and the law also caps visitors and residents at four days per month.

M4 Carbines, Armored Vehicles: A Look at OC Sheriff’s $4 Million Military Arsenal

2023-08-21T23:39:53+00:00June 28, 2023|Archive, Articles|

  BY Hosam Elattar and Noah Biesiada Hundreds of thousands of bullets, flash bang grenades, pepper balls, armored vehicles, drones and hundreds of carbine assault rifles – these are just a few of the weapons the Orange County Sheriff’s Department have in their nearly $4 million arsenal. On Tuesday, OC Supervisors voted 3-1 to approve the sheriff’s department military equipment use policy which has sparked a debate on the rarely used weapon inventory and what critics are calling the militarization of the county. Supervisor Vicente Sarmiento opposed the policy, arguing that while pepperballs may non lethally take down a suspect, in the instance of a protest it could be misused and “chill” people’s First Amendment right to peaceably assemble. “The ...

We Demand a People’s Budget!

2023-08-21T23:26:29+00:00June 26, 2023|Archive, Articles|

  BY DAVID DURAN | voiceofoc.org Welcome to June, when often clammy marine layers descend upon sunny Orange County—and the Board of Supervisors rolls out another wildly inequitable, unjust, and opaque budget. Budgets reflect moral choices among competing interests, and it’s clear where the supervisors’ interests lie: squarely on the side of the OC Sheriff’s Department, jails, and the District Attorney’s Office. These programs receive more than half of the approximately $1 billion discretionary budget (54%). Meanwhile, the Supervisors commit a measly 1% of those dollars to desperately needed affordable housing. In fact, the recommended discretionary budget allocates 230 times more in funding to the Sheriff’s Department than to housing. The numbers don’t lie. But many of the Supervisors feigned ...

Homeless advocates sue to allow RV parking in Fullerton

2023-04-26T22:33:58+00:00December 9, 2022|Archive, Articles|

By Sean Emery | Orange County Register A non-profit group has filed a lawsuit challenging a Fullerton municipal code that outlaws people living in recreational vehicles on city streets without a valid permit, arguing that the restrictions target the homeless and disabled and violate the state constitution. The suit filed in Orange County Superior Court on behalf of Housing Is a Human Right Orange County and several Fullerton residents challenges a city prohibition against “stopping or parking any recreational vehicle on city streets without a valid City-issued permit” by alleging that the law has “resulted in the arbitrary and discriminator expulsion of Orange County’s most vulnerable residents.” “During this time of desperation for so many, and a desire ...

Fullerton Sued For Banning RVs From Parking in City Limits

2023-08-21T23:49:11+00:00December 3, 2022|Archive, Articles|

BY NOAH BIESIADA AND HOSAM ELATTAR | Voice of OC Advocates for homeless people are looking to take Fullerton officials to court over a local law they say unjustly targets people living in their cars and people with disabilities. The ordinance in question prevents anyone from parking any trailers or RVs in the city without a permit, and was implemented about a year ago according to Fullerton Mayor Fred Jung, who called the lawsuit “completely counterproductive.” A handful of Fullerton residents and Housing is a Human Right Orange County, a local organization that advocates for homeless people, are arguing that the city law violates the state constitution. “Fullerton is one of many cities that are terribly cruel to people who are unhoused. We know ...

Disability Rights California & Over 50 Disability, Civil Rights, Racial Justice and Housing Advocacy Organizations Urge Governor Newsom to Veto SB 1338

2023-04-26T21:18:35+00:00September 1, 2022|Archive, Open Letter|

The Honorable Governor Gavin Newsom California State Capitol 1021 O Street, Suite 9000 Sacramento, CA 95814 RE: SB 1338 (UMBERG) – CARE Court: VETO REQUEST Dear Governor Newsom, On behalf of our organizations and our clients and constituents, we respectfully request your veto of SB 1338 due to the many negative consequences that will result from the creation of CARE Court – a new civil court system that will lower the legal standard to order mental health treatment against the wishes of a person with a disability. Collectively, we advance and protect the civil rights of Californians living with disabilities, experiencing houselessness, including Black, Indigenous, Latinx, and other People of Color, LGBTQ+ and others who will be disparately impacted by ...

Go to Top