"I think it should concern everybody whether you are homeless or not. Everyone should have a voice and am definitely against it," said James Johns.
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Johns has been homeless in San Francisco for 8 years.
"I'll keep trying. I'll keep looking and try as hard as possible to find shelter but the shelter they have in the city are not too good," said Johns.
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The latest (Point-in-time) count, identified 7,754 homeless individuals in San Francisco.
The Supreme Court's hearing comes as San Francisco fights its own lawsuit against the Coalition on homeless. The injunction that blocks it from removing homeless encampments from streets if there is no shelter available.
"We have in recent years invested billions of dollars in a compassionate, services and shelter first approach to addressing homelessness," said David Chiu, San Francisco City Attorney.
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City Attorney Chiu is hopeful the Supreme Court's decision will help San Francisco.
"Many of the justices pointed out how these complicated issues are best handled by local cities, local communities, and local policy makers. Not necessarily by a federal judge or a number of federal judges. From our perspective we think cities like San Francisco we need a bit more flexibility to address the crisis on our streets," said Chiu.
Glide Foundation is concerned City of Grants Pass v. Johnson lead to "criminalizing" homeless individuals.
"Our population would really be impacted by just being more criminalized than they already are. We know people are across the board looking for ways to help the unhouse community but jailing and fining is not the solution," said Naeemah Charles with Glide Foundation.
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Henry Karnilowcz president of the SOMA business Association is hoping for a change. He points to people sleeping on sidewalks as a huge challenge to businesses.
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"If we were to take the space on the sidewalk we would get a penalty. We would get a bill from DPW saying you owe us a thousand bucks. These folks who put up a tent and take the whole sidewalk and it's not accessible for ADA and its okay for them," said Karnilowcz.
The Supreme Court is expected to make a decision by the end of June.