Wealth
American cities are criminalising homelessness. Will that help?

DAvena Valencallia Watch as sewage workers wander in most of its property in the garbage truck. The 33 -year -old has been homeless for more than a year, and he was sleeping in a dominated alley in central Freso, the largest city in central California. The truck devour bags of clothes, a cart, a pile of needles under the skin and about $ 120 – in change. Police officers arrested her and her friend and sit at the back of a truck. Tickets for camping are given in a public place, which has become a misdemeanor crime in September in an attempt to reduce the city’s homeless camps. “That’s all I have,” she says, as soon as the handcuffs are removed. “I don’t know how it was finished here.”