Outcry after Atlanta tosses unhoused people's belongings near World Cup spot
Source: The Guardian
Sun 12 Jul 2026 08.00 EDT
Last modified on Sun 12 Jul 2026 08.01 EDT
City employees in Atlanta, Georgia, recently threw away tents, medication, identification and other belongings of unhoused people at a public park without warning. This led activists and a local official to point to an apparent violation of procedures created after a city employee ran over a tent with a front loader last year, killing a man.
The sweep through the park occurred less than a mile from a popular spot for World Cup watch parties, drawing into focus ongoing tension over the issue of what happens to the citys several thousand unhoused people during the month-long event. A city official said the park where about 15 people have gathered for months was not an encampment and that the incident was not a sweep.
Instead, city staffers were performing routine park maintenance last week when they threw out peoples belongings, wrote Chatiqua Ellison, Atlanta senior adviser on homelessness, in an email to the Guardian and therefore procedures developed last year after months of meetings, including giving unhoused people ample warning before arriving at a camp, did not apply.
But Atlanta city council member Kelsea Bond, whose district includes Freedom Park, disagreed. Its disappointing that the city is more concerned about the strict, and perhaps arbitrary, definition of encampment here rather than the impact these kinds of clearings have on the houseless community, Bond said.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jul/12/atlanta-park-sweep-world-cup
Dave Bowman
(7,616 posts)William Seger
(12,598 posts)JustKay
(232 posts)It's hard enough to be homeless without this kind of treatment!
Cheezoholic
(4,222 posts)slightlv
(8,298 posts)of Americans and our country after they attended their games here know about this? What emotion did they take away from our country from this common, every day occurrence in the good ole' usa? Would their country do the same? Does their country have as big a homeless problem as we do -- with hedge funds buying up all the rental housing and then raising the rents sky high? What say you, World Cup fans?