HomeUncategorizedCalifornia City Sued by Homeless Man Claiming Its Underpass Encampment Is Too...

California City Sued by Homeless Man Claiming Its Underpass Encampment Is Too Loud

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 By Joe Saunders  April 5, 2022 at 2:06pm

With this kind of gumption, you’d think he’d have gotten further in life than living under a bridge.

A homeless man in uber-wealthy Marin County, California, is suing the city of San Rafael because a city-run encampment is too noisy for his liking or his health.

And he says he has the numbers to prove it.

The country has come to expect the irrational when it comes to the Golden State, governed as it is by an unconstrained socialist Democratic governor backed by Democratic supermajorities in both houses of the state Legislature.

It’s a prime destination for illegal aliens moving in and taxpayers moving out. Its schools have a national reputation for focusing on indoctrination over education.

And it’s the home of Hollywood, a city that is rivaled only by Washington for arrogant airheads spouting progressive pieties.

But even for California, the story of 49-year-old James Hellard stands out.

According to the Marin Independent Journal, Hellard is a resident of a city-sanctioned homeless camp established by the California Department of Transportation that boasts “security, restrooms, handwashing stations, garbage disposal, regular service referrals and other amenities.”

It is also, unfortunately for its residents, beneath a Highway 101 overpass, which means traffic is overheard fairly often.

And that’s too much noise for Hellard to bear.

According to the Independent Journal, Hellard’s lawsuit claims that a sound meter on his cellphone shows traffic noise at 90 decibels, above the levels established by the World Health Organization for safety and tied with the level for which the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration recommends ear protections for Americans on the job.

With the support of his wife, Dawn, he’s suing to improve the lives of his fellow camp dwellers, according to KGO-TV.

“Most of them don’t want to step out and have themselves be known, but at this point, somebody’s got to do it,” Hellard told the station.

“I’ve got ringing in my ears. We have coughs. We have just these slowly manifesting health problems that we’re not quite sure where it’s going to go to five years from now,” he said.

“We’re human beings”: Citing health problems he developed after living at a homeless encampment under Highway 101 in San Rafael, James Hellard is suing the city. Story here: https://t.co/iDpRwb7bPm pic.twitter.com/cODK8tZqZc

— ABC7 News (@abc7newsbayarea) April 3, 2022

“Getting into the position of homelessness is a very easy thing to do,” Hellard told the station. “And it’s a paramount, almost impossible thing to get out of.”

Oh, and according to the Independent Journal, the lawsuit also seeks “monetary relief for physical and emotional damages and property loss, as well as the ability to camp elsewhere without risk of having his belongings confiscated.”

So there’s that.

Now, to be fair, living under an overpass can’t be easy, even when it has publicly provided security, restrooms, washing stations and garbage disposal.

And it sure can’t be easy doing it in Marin County, just north of the Golden Gate Bridge from San Francisco. A December article in Forbes listed Marin as one of the top 20 wealthiest counties in the country. So being homeless there not only means being poor, it means being surrounded by wealth beyond most Americans’ dreams.

Still, the situation does raise the question of why, exactly, someone would live under an overpass that was too noisy. After all, for all its many, many downsides, being homeless does imply a certain freedom of choice for exactly where to be homeless. Like, say, anywhere.

If you were homeless, would you live under a noisy bridge?

According to the Independent Journal, Hellard runs the risk of having his gear confiscated if he camps elsewhere in San Rafael, but the article didn’t state just what the attraction is for that particular part of the world.

None of the news outlets that covered the story indicated he’s employed, so it’s not like a job would be keeping Hellard in the area. (And even if he has a job, living under an overpass is a good sign the career isn’t going anywhere.)

So, judging by what’s been reported, Hellard could live anywhere he wants, really.

Assuming there’s not something vital being left out of the news accounts, what it comes down to here is beggars deciding they can, in fact, be choosers.

Even in the leftist cesspool of social media, that didn’t go over well.

Letting activist vagrants occupy public spaces doesn’t stop them from suing. Cities need to stand up to them. https://t.co/6PMmOsceSA

— Ron Bassilian (@Ron4California) April 5, 2022

You know, you can pack up and re-locate at anytime.

OMG this really is nuts.

Wait…how did he retain a lawyer?

— MR_G (@Mr_G_01) April 4, 2022

That’s ridiculous. Move your tent elsewhere

— Teri P (@PoncianoTeri) April 4, 2022

Great job progressives, instead of giving the bums rehab you’ve given them entitlement.

— Silver Patriot (@SilverPatriot1) April 4, 2022

It’s also worth noting that this camp reportedly isn’t cheap for the taxpayers of San Rafael, Marin County or even the People’s Republic of California, the once-Golden State that’s now thoroughly tarnished by progressive politics.

According to the Independent Journal, San Rafael police Lt. Dan Fink said the city has spent $346,852 on the camp.

The state has agreed to grant $522,000 to the city to help with camp expenses, the newspaper reported, and Marin County is kicking in $166,000 to a matching fund program. That was supposed to cover 24-hour security and a caseworker, the paper reported.

That adds up to more than $1 million in public money for a camp under a bridge with a population of 31, according to the Independent Journal.

In a way, it’s no wonder Hellard isn’t happy.

For that kind of money, they should be doing a lot better than a highway overpass.

Joe has spent more than 30 years as a reporter, copy editor and metro desk editor in newsrooms in Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Florida. He’s been with Liftable Media since 2015.

Joe has spent more than 30 years as a reporter, copy editor and metro editor in newsrooms in Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Florida. He’s been with Liftable Media since 2015. Largely a product of Catholic schools, who discovered Ayn Rand in college, Joe is a lifelong newspaperman who learned enough about the trade to be skeptical of every word ever written. He was also lucky enough to have a job that didn’t need a printing press to do it.

Birthplace

Philadelphia

Nationality

American

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