Sean’s Outpost is a well known charitable organization cryptocurrency enthusiasts have supported since its inception. The homeless outreach located in Pensacola, Florida has provided over 165,000 meals using Bitcoin as a funding vehicle. The outreach has shown the magnitude of possibilities crowdfunding with digital currency can bring. However, today the Pensacola News Journal reports the sanctuary is being threatened by officials from the county.
Also read: Putin’s Advisor: Bitcoin Legality in Other Countries is ‘Fiction’
Escambia County Has Issues With Satoshi Forest Structures

“We have roughly 300 shelter beds in the county, so that means at any given time there are roughly 500 people sleeping illegally in parks, on public property, behind bushes and grocery stores. We wanted to provide a safe place to help some of those people out.”

One of these rules is is that structures or residents living on the land are not allowed to stay for over fourteen days a year. Kimbrel explains, “They’ve said we can’t have anyone staying in a structure on the property for more than 14 days a year. Currently, they are saying we can either allow people out here for 14 consecutive days and then take down the tents, or pick 14 separate days throughout the year that we will allow tents.”
Despite his team’s efforts to help people in the area, surrounding neighbors living next to the property are not comfortable with the homeless outreach. One neighbor Richard Grimes has started several petitions to stop the property from being a camp and has collected signatures from local residents against Satoshi Forest. Grimes explains that they are concerned for children living so closely to the camp and believes it could be located elsewhere. “I think that a lot of those people really do need help, and there is a need out there,” Grimes said. “It just does not need to be in a neighborhood.”

What do you think about the legal battle this outreach faces in Pensacola? Let us know in the comments below!
Images courtesy of Sean’s Outpost website