โMay-23-2022 07:02 AM
โMay-25-2022 06:48 AM
2014 RAM 3500 Diesel 4x4 Dually long bed. B&W RVK3600 hitch โข 2015 Crossroads Elevation Homestead Toy Hauler ("The Taj Mahauler") โข <\br >Toys:
โMay-25-2022 06:08 AM
pianotuna wrote:
The fact that anyone is unhoused in the United States is a structural failing and should bring elected officials on all sides of the political aisle a good deal of shame. People living in unsafe conditions anywhere in one of the wealthiest countries in the world ..................
โMay-24-2022 07:54 PM
โMay-24-2022 06:00 PM
โMay-24-2022 05:13 PM
ken56 wrote:
These people who do this are not 'RV'ers. The simple fact that they have an RV they live in does not make them tourists. Many are "homeless" because they CHOOSE to be homeless. Many are drug addicts. Many have mental issues. They tend to park in a place and if they are not 'run off' by the local authorities then they become a nuisance. They will dump their black tank right in the street or a storm sewer. I have no sympathy or tolerance for this. I've seen all of this in Salt Lake City. I don't want it in my city.
โMay-24-2022 04:59 PM
โMay-24-2022 04:27 PM
โMay-24-2022 10:23 AM
JRscooby wrote:jdc1 wrote:johnhicks wrote:
The intent is to prevent the homeless from camping in non-CG parks and rights-of-way by criminalizing them.
They might as well just say "Being homeless in Tennessee is a felony".
Yes, let's make it illegal to be poor.
This is not the only policy in that state, that if commonly known would cause most to avoid the state.
โMay-24-2022 06:37 AM
charlestonsouthern wrote:
Johnhicks, yes, it is now a federal case in the state of Colorado between a church (their private property) who brings in visiting ministers with their RVs (and have been doing this for years) versus the local municipality or county. I'll try to find the case. US Constitutional Law is involved.
โMay-24-2022 06:31 AM
charlestonsouthern wrote:
There could be an economic bad side to this. A lot of Canadians driving down in their RV and taking the back roads; they happen upon a nice little Tennessee town and decide to spend some time being a tourist and drop some cash at the neighborhood grocery store, restaurant, microbrewery, antique store, admission to a small museum, and/or trinket shop. All of this may require a couple of nights parking say on a dead end street. The Tennessee municipalities or townships know how tourism works in their town; however, the state has taken these decisions out of the townships hands. Therefore, the Canadian RVer drives right through town on the way to their final destination and not dropping any cash in that Tennessee town. When a state writes new laws, they should not take out part of the economies of small towns.
โMay-24-2022 03:23 AM
jdc1 wrote:johnhicks wrote:
The intent is to prevent the homeless from camping in non-CG parks and rights-of-way by criminalizing them.
They might as well just say "Being homeless in Tennessee is a felony".
โMay-23-2022 06:30 PM
โMay-23-2022 06:14 PM
charlestonsouthern wrote:
Johnhicks, yes, it is now a federal case in the state of Colorado between a church (their private property) who brings in visiting ministers with their RVs (and have been doing this for years) versus the local municipality or county.
โMay-23-2022 05:44 PM