Dream.Green Dream.Justice Dream.Tech

Wisconsin Needs Housing Solutions, Not Criminalization!

Across the country, stable housing is becoming more and more impossible to attain. 

Right now, the Wisconsin State Legislature is considering a law that is directly targeting the unhoused — AB631 / SB621 would create an entirely new crime allowing people to be fined or jailed simply for sleeping outside.

This bill effectively criminalizes being unhoused. It bans people from setting up temporary shelter on most public property and subjects them to criminal penalties after a warning. For people with nowhere else to go, that means forced contact with the criminal legal system, new criminal records, and even greater barriers to housing and employment.

Instead of offering real housing solutions, AB631 / SB621 mandates a system of state-controlled camping sites. When these sites are full, people may be placed on a waiting list — but they are still barred from sleeping anywhere else. This creates an Orwellian predicament, risking being punished simply for existing without shelter, all the while waiting for a spot at a state-sanctioned camping shelter that doesn’t yet exist. 

The evidence is clear: criminalization, citations, and jail are more expensive and less effective than housing and social services. Punishing people for being unhoused does not solve homelessness — it makes it worse. 

Please sign the petition and urge your WI lawmakers to oppose AB631 / SB621 and instead invest in proven solutions: stable housing, outreach, case management, diversion, and shelter.

Oppose AB631 / SB621!

    Not ? Click here.
    By signing up, you are opting in to receive periodic communications from Dream.Org.

    Dear Distinguished Member of the Wisconsin Legislature,

    I am writing to urge you to oppose AB631 / SB621.

    This legislation would create an entirely new crime that allows people to be fined or jailed simply for sleeping outside. In practice, it criminalizes homelessness itself.

    This bill bans people from setting up temporary shelter on most public property and subjects them to criminal penalties after a warning. For people with nowhere else to go, this means forced contact with the criminal legal system, new criminal records, and deeper barriers to housing and employment — the exact opposite of what is needed to reduce homelessness.

    Rather than investing in housing and services, the bill mandates a system of state-controlled camping sites and waiting lists. 

    The research is clear: criminalization, citations, and incarceration are more costly and less effective than housing and services. Punishing people for being unhoused does not solve homelessness — it entrenches it.

    For these reasons, I urge you to oppose AB631 / SB621 and instead support proven solutions that reduce homelessness and improve public safety: stable housing, outreach, case management, diversion, and accessible shelter.

    Thank you for your time and consideration.