Friday, the Florida House passed HB 1365 which prohibits counties and municipalities from authorizing or allowing public camping or sleeping on public property without certification of designated public property by DCF.

Many persons on the (sex offender) registry are forced into homelessness and will be affected by this bill if passed into law.

According to the OPPAGA (Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability) 2021 Triennial Report pages 25-26, there were 30,180 persons on the sex offense registry living in Florida communities in September of 2021 with 6.3% having transient addresses only (homeless).  Those numbers made for a total of 1,901 homeless people on the sex offense registry in the state of Florida in 2021.  

Also in 2021, Florida had a homeless population of 27,640 with the 1,901 homeless people on the sex offense registry making up 6.8% of all homeless people in the state. 

At that time Florida had an estimated population of 21,477,737 people with the 30,180 people on the registry making up approximately 0.14% of the total Florida population.

In summary, persons on the sex offense registry made up 6.8% of all homeless people that year in Florida but made up only 0.14% of the total state population, meaning that persons on the sex offense registry were approximately 49 times more likely to be homeless than someone not on the registry.

This is huge!  Much of the homeless problem for people on the registry is the residency restrictions which have been demonstrated time and again to serve no purpose.  Residency restrictions do not reduce sexual recidivism and might actually increase it, break up families and support structures, and force people (human beings) into homelessness when they could otherwise be housed.

If Florida is serious about reducing the number of homeless people in our state, then our lawmakers need to follow the example of other states and abolish residency restrictions.

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