Federal Judge Temporarily Blocks Enforcement of Houston Ordinance Against Feeding the Homeless
The judge found that Food Not Bombs' activity was clearly expressive conduct under the First Amendment.

A federal judge this week issued a preliminary injunction against the city of Houston blocking it from enforcing an ordinance that prohibits feeding more than five needy people anywhere—including public property—without permission.
In a ruling issued Wednesday, U.S. District Judge for the Southern District of Texas Andrew Hanen agreed with the Houston chapter of Food Not Bombs (FNBH), a volunteer group that distributes free food in cities worldwide, that the city of Houston's monthslong crackdown on food sharing was not likely to survive constitutional scrutiny.
"While [Houston's] efforts to unify and streamline an efficient end to homelessness and feed the hungry may make good policy sense," Hanen wrote. "being sensible does not always equate to being constitutional, especially when the consequence of that policy is restricting the expressive conduct of those that are protesting government policy."
Houston police began ticketing FNBH and other local activists using the 2012 ordinance last summer. City officials want them to move to an approved parking lot for all homeless services, but the activists say they have a First Amendment right to hand out free food in a downtown public park, where they had been operating without controversy for a decade, with or without the city's permission.
The Texas Civil Rights Project filed a First Amendment lawsuit in January on behalf of FNBH. The suit argues that Houston's anti–food sharing ordinance is unconstitutional both on its face and as applied to FNBH by imposing an invalid prior restraint on the activists' protected First Amendment rights.
According to the Texas Civil Rights Project, Houston police have issued 96 citations for violating the ordinance, which outlaws providing free food to more than five people "in need" at outdoor locations without permission, potentially totaling more than $192,000 in fines.
However, the city's attempts to enforce the ordinance have not gone well. One activist was acquitted, while other cases have been dismissed and delayed because prosecutors can't find jurors who are willing to fine people $500 for the crime of feeding the needy.
In issuing the preliminary injunction, Hanen found that FNBH's food sharing is expressive conduct under the First Amendment and that the group had a substantial likelihood of succeeding on its claims that Houston's ordinance, as applied, creates an unconstitutional prior restraint. Furthermore, Hanen agreed that the ordinance was not narrowly tailored enough, likely making it an unconstitutional time, place, and manner restriction as well.
The ruling is unsurprising; other federal courts have come to similar conclusions. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit ruled in 2018 that distributing food was "expressive conduct" protected under the First Amendment. That decision was a response to a lawsuit by the Food Not Bombs chapter in Fort Lauderdale.
Randy Hiroshige, a Texas Civil Rights Project attorney, said in a press release that the injunction was "a huge win for our community."
"This is the first step in defending the First Amendment rights of food-sharing organizations in Houston and rejecting the City's cruel ordinance," Hiroshige said. "Feeding our neighbors should not be a crime - Food Not Bombs has done vital work in Houston, and it's time for the City to recognize the real harm this ordinance has caused. TCRP will continue working with Food Not Bombs and community members to ensure that the ordinance is struck down and that all Houstonians in need can access a warm, healthy meal."
Houston city attorney Arturo Michel says in a statement to Reason that Houston Mayor John Whitmire "is committed to working together to resolve differences and agree upon an ordinance that allows expression and provides a safe and healthy environment at the central library and elsewhere for the homeless and their neighbors."
"The judge's order recognized that there were competing interests," Michel says. "Food Not Bombs has a First Amendment right to express its views. The city has an equally important right to ensure public safety and safeguard public health."
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I know it is 2024, and you just never know about people. Municipalities have to be careful. That is understandable. But it is a sad day when an American is arrested for the crime of feeding a hungry human being in a public park.
A hungry human or hordes of mentally ill drug addicts with a few anti-societals thrown in? I get the compassion but the tragedy of the commons is a thing to be guarded against.
There's also the underlying trust norms and good faith.
Just like the public accommodations/CRA bullshit, it would be one thing if there were no other designated space, no soup kitchens, no private lots for lease, etc., etc., etc. in all of Houston. Free speech means you get to talk, it doesn't mean you get to go around to any and every space until you're sufficiently convinced people are watching and listening to you. That's a greater violation of everyone else's free speech/association rights.
It would be a pretty good joke in the vein of Satanists, to put a fake bomb on the table that says "Food Not Bombs"... you know... as a joke. As long as no one gets hurt by a fake bomb, it's just good humored free speech, right?
Food sharing is not speech. Another case of judges who make up some bull shit e.g. 'actual malice', 'strict scrutiny', or declare playing marbles impacts interstate commerce - the list is long and endless, and you can justify any ruling including this one.
Weird how CJ left "They're a protest group," Hiroshige says of Food Not Bombs. "They want to be visible, and the reason they conduct their food sharing is to show the public what it looks like when a community looks out for each other's needs and really provides mutual aid to one another." out of this article.
Almost like after CHAZ, the Summer of Love, soupcans and superglue, and sitting in traffic, the whole protest-group-occupying-public-spaces-as-free-speech has lost it's cache and people see through the lie (well, some, non-activists).
If they have a right to distribute food in a public park... as a performance... as long as no one gets hurt... then local gun owners have a right to discharge their weapons over peoples' heads... as a performance... as long as no one gets hurt. Take some of the food, load it up with laxatives, and then pass it on. You know, as a joke, free speech. Set up some harmless snare traps and use the food as bait, you know, performatively.
They aren't do-gooders, even their own attorney makes that clear, they're disruptive, divisive dickbags that will consume any and all property offered until you bend the knee to their message. Fuck them with a rusty pole.
Oh come now. If you feed the vermin it just encourages more of them to show up. Better to make it illegal to feed the pests.
(Is that how it's done?)
No.
Not enough dehumanization?
If America were a free country, this lawsuit by "Food Not Bombs" would have been unnecessary.
If America had the rule of law, this lawsuit by "Food Not Bombs" either would have been dismissed, or Congress right now would be arranging Judge Hanan's impeachment and removal from office, having already removed the criminal usurpers on the 11th Circuit back in 2018.
especially when the consequence of that policy is restricting the expressive conduct of those that are protesting government policy."
Y'know, people are going to get wise to that eventually. Every burp, fart, and sneeze is being hailed these days as "expressive conduct" in order to make 1A claims.
We're not stupid. This is not exercise of liberty. It's abuse of liberty.
Harsh as it may seem, there's a very good and legitimate reason to keep people from feeding stray cats and mongrel dogs wherever they come upon them. 1) They keep coming back; 2) More come with them; 3) An entitlement takes hold, the deprivation of which has a tendency to turn violent when not met.
Oh, sorry, were we talking about humans instead of dogs and cats? Yea, hey... about that? 1-3 are still true even when we're talking about humans.
There's a REASON charities use soup kitchens and homeless shelters and goodwill outlets to manage this kind of thing. It's not just about helping the less fortunate. It's about making sure they don't turn into swarms of locusts.
I'm not sure why so many feel the need to sustain vagrants in places that many responsible mentally-stable middle income people could not even begin to afford.