Where Do We Go Berkeley v. Caltrans

32 F.4th 852
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 27, 2022
Docket21-16790
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 32 F.4th 852 (Where Do We Go Berkeley v. Caltrans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Where Do We Go Berkeley v. Caltrans, 32 F.4th 852 (9th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION FILED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS APR 27 2022 MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK U.S. COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

WHERE DO WE GO BERKELEY; KEVIN No. 21-16790 CODDINGTON; JOSE MORFIN; JONATHAN JAMES; KINNDRA D.C. No. 3:21-cv-04435-EMC MARTIN; MARIAH JACKSON; SHAWNA GARCIA; ALHONDRO MYERS; RONNIE BROOKS; TERRY LEE WALKER; JASON OPINION MILLER; SARAH TEAGUE,

Plaintiffs-Appellees,

v.

CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION; TOKS OMISHAKIN, individually and in his official capacity as Director of Caltrans; DINA EL-TAWANSY, individually and in her official capacity as Director of District Four,

Defendants-Appellants.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California Edward M. Chen, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted April 15, 2022 San Francisco, California

Before: Jay S. Bybee and Ryan D. Nelson, Circuit Judges, and Susan R. Bolton,*

* The Honorable Susan R. Bolton, United States District Judge for the District of Arizona, sitting by designation. District Judge.

Opinion by Judge R. Nelson

R. NELSON, Circuit Judge:

We are asked to decide what the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”)

likely requires when the California Department of Transportation (“Caltrans”)

coordinates and liaises with other government services before clearing homeless

encampments. When Caltrans planned to clear high-risk encampments along the

freeway, Plaintiff campers sought an injunction. The district court required Caltrans

to give Plaintiffs six months to relocate and find housing before clearing the

encampments. We vacate the district court’s order because there is no serious

question that the ADA requires such a lengthy delay. We also hold that the district

court abused its discretion when evaluating the injunction’s harm to Caltrans and

public safety, and thus erred in balancing the equities.

I

A

California law provides Caltrans with “full possession and control” of state

highways and property acquired for state highway purposes. Cal. Sts. & High. Code

§ 90. On one of these properties, situated along an exit ramp for Interstate 80, lies a

cluster of homeless encampments. Over the last several years, Caltrans has worked

to clear these encampments while coordinating with local partners to facilitate the

2 relocation of people who live there. This case is about Caltrans’s efforts to clear two

high-risk encampments and the district court’s injunction preventing it from doing

so.

Caltrans, under its authority to “do any act necessary, convenient or proper

for the . . . maintenance or use of all highways,” id. § 92, clears its properties of

homeless encampments according to its assessment of the risks posed by each

encampment. When the COVID-19 pandemic presented new health concerns for

homeless populations, Caltrans published interim guidance to govern its triage and

clearance process. The Interim Guidance instructs Caltrans to “attempt to request

assistance from local partners on homelessness but . . . not allow the response by

outreach teams to interfere with addressing critical safety concerns.”

Each encampment is assigned a priority level based on its threat to public

safety. The priority level determines whether and when the encampment will be

cleared. Level 1 camps pose a “critical safety concern” and “[r]equire[] urgent

relocation in coordination with the [California Highway Patrol], and with local

partners on homelessness if possible.” Examples of level 1 encampments include

sites “within the clear recovery zone, which is the area where a car may swerve off

of the road and still recover back to the roadway,” sites that “[c]onnect[] to a power

source or other State utility,” and sites that “physically block[] traffic, bike or

pedestrian pathways and [are] an imminent danger to the unsheltered or the public.”

3 As a general rule, Caltrans provides 72 hours’ notice to vacate level 1 encampments.

Notice is not required for “encampments that pose an immediate health or safety

hazard.”

Level 2 camps are “[h]igh [p]riority” and also pose “a safety concern,” though

to a lesser degree. For those sites, Caltrans balances outreach and public safety needs

by “work[ing] with local governments/homeless services partners to perform

outreach, allowing partners approximately two weeks.” Caltrans then provides 72

hours’ notice to vacate.

The encampments at issue are designated level 1. Caltrans began its efforts

to clear them in July 2020. Together with the City of Emeryville and a homeless

outreach organization, Caltrans imposed a ramp-up period of at least six weeks to

contact people living in the encampments and, along with Plaintiff Where Do We

Go Berkeley (“WDWG”), communicate the need to relocate.

Efforts to clear the encampments were reinvigorated in February 2021, when

Caltrans was advised that construction of a housing project was scheduled to begin

in March and a portion of Caltrans property had been leased to the construction site

owner. According to Caltrans, the construction project was delayed until May to

allow time to relocate the campers. In April 2021, Caltrans communicated with its

partners about “the general background information of the campers, the removal

4 status and the relocation efforts” and advised that it would post removal notices on

June 8, 2021.

B

One day after Caltrans posted the notices, Plaintiffs sued, arguing that clearing

the encampments violated the ADA.1 They asked the district court for a temporary

restraining order (“TRO”) to stop Caltrans from clearing the encampments until all

residents were given housing. The district court granted a ten-day TRO, which it

then extended for another month and a half. See Where Do We Go Berkeley v. Cal.

Dep’t of Transp., No. 21-CV-04435-EMC, 2021 WL 4427429, at *1 & n.1 (N.D.

Cal. Sept. 27, 2021).

WDWG then amended the complaint, seeking the same relief but removing

the individual plaintiffs (who had found new places to live) from the suit. The

district court declined to grant a preliminary injunction, holding that WDWG could

not establish organizational standing. It continued its TRO to allow WDWG to add

eleven new individual plaintiffs.

The new individual plaintiffs were offered a place to stay at a warehouse-type

group shelter called Horizon. But Plaintiffs argued that the shelter was inaccessible

1 Plaintiffs also raised claims under the Fourth Amendment and federal and state Due Process Clauses. Because the district court granted its injunction based on only the ADA claim, the other claims are not at issue.

5 to them because of their disabilities and again requested an injunction to prevent

Caltrans from clearing the encampments.

The district court granted in part Plaintiffs’ request for a preliminary

injunction. Id. at *6. Its order permitted Caltrans to clear the leased portion of its

property but enjoined Caltrans from clearing the rest of the property for six months.

Id. In doing so, the district court held that Plaintiffs had raised serious questions on

the merits of their ADA claim. Id. at *5. The district court also held that Plaintiffs

had shown a likelihood of irreparable harm, noting that most of the individual

plaintiffs had mental disabilities which made the Horizon shelter inaccessible and

that clearing the encampments would leave them with nowhere to go. Id.

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