A 27-year-old man called 911 to send an ambulance to his home when his girlfriend passed out.
He didn’t know what was wrong but told the dispatcher it could be an overdose.
About a month later, he received a letter saying the city wanted his landlord to evict him.
In Granite City, renters can be kicked out after calling for help for someone overdosing on drugs because of the city’s crime-free housing ordinance. Even if no one is arrested or charged with a crime, the drug use breaks Granite City’s rules for renters.
“I really do regret many of the choices of my life but it is extremely upsetting I may lose the only home/place to go I have, because I called an ambulance to aid someone,” the man told the city in a letter appealing his 2016 eviction.
He was one of at least 36 tenants to face eviction after an overdose with no criminal charges filed between 2014 and 2018, a Belleville News-Democrat investigation found.
He was one of at least 36 tenants to face eviction after an overdose with no criminal charges filed between 2014 and 2018, a Belleville News-Democrat investigation found.