The task force report is in. Atlanta has released new safety rules for clearing homeless encampments after a bulldozer killed Cornelius Taylor during a sweep earlier this year.
New Safety Rules
The task force's June report requires:
- Advance warning before clearing encampments
- Offers shelter and services to residents before clearings
- Thermal sensors to make sure tents are empty before using machinery
- A new centralized office to coordinate the city's homeless response
What's Missing?
New rules apply to city-managed encampments only, not state property clearings. This means people on state land (like under highway overpasses managed by the Georgia DOT) can still face dangerous clearings without thermal sensors, advance notice, or service offers. These are the same conditions that killed Cornelius Taylor. Taylor’s family has filed a lawsuit against Atlanta.
The different standards create a situation where a person's basic safety depends on which government entity owns the land. Georgia needs statewide protocols between city and state agencies to ensure consistent safety standards regardless of property ownership.
Author: Ericka Cameron-Carr
Sources
11Alive
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