Judge rules construction that will displace Chicago's tent city is ok

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Saturday, September 16, 2017
Tent city residents worried
A group of homeless people living under viaducts in the city's Uptown neighborhood.
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CHICAGO -- A federal judge has ruled the city of Chicago can move forward with plans to repair a crumbling Lake Shore Drive viaduct under which dozens of homeless people have been living.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Sidney Schenkier ruled Friday the homeless have no constitutional grounding to stop the city from pursuing "important roadwork for the public's safety."

Uptown Tent City Organizers filed an injunction last month asking Schenkier to halt the construction and bar the eviction of tent residents. The group hoped to force the city to either provide housing or allow them to relocate their tents to a nearby park.

Activists also contended the tents are protected by the First Amendment, as they're "visible" and help dramatize the status of the homeless.

The city's plan is to move the tent residents to Pacific Garden Mission, a homeless shelter about seven miles away.