The progressive enablers of Madison, Wisconsin have just about had it with a group they just made a “protected class”: the homeless.

Vagrants have turned the City-County Building into a commune of sorts.

“There are those who think this place is safe,” City-County Liaison Committee Co-Chair Mary Korlar says, Channel 3000 reports. “Right now the CCB is not a safe place. It is a dangerous place. People are getting in fights. Over consumption of alcohol. Illegal drug use. It’s not a safe place.”

Building employees report dangerous situations like knife fights, and sanitary concerns, such as “homeless people washing their underwear in water fountains and defecating on the walls.”

Feces-at-CCB-jpg“We have had a few incidents of a homeless person breaking into the courtroom at night and sleeping in the press room that’s right off of the courtroom,” Kelly McConnell, a judicial support clerk, told News 3 in December.

Personnel snapped a photo of the result of someone attempting to use a courtroom garbage can for a toilet and missing the target.

“This person did defecate on the couch that was in the press room and they have since had to throw away the couch.”

Last year, court employees were seeking special protections from the serial court pooper(s).

Instead, it was the homeless who became a “protected class” in a city ordinance.

For employment, the homeless need protection because “they sometimes seek jobs but have no place to store belongings, may not have had an opportunity to shower, or have a street address,” says former Ald. Brenda Konkel, director of the Tenant Resource Center, The American Mirror reported earlier this year.

“We’re not addressing the issues of behavior and there are people that feel that now homeless are a protected class they can go into any restaurant and use the bathroom, sit, loiter, do whatever they want,” Alder Paul Skidmore told ABC 27 in June.

Now, after seeing vagrants repeatedly taking advantage of the accommodations, the city is cracking down on its recently declared “protected class.”

Administrators are seeking to change the building’s trespassing and loitering rules, but that’s not going over well with the people who call it home.

“This is the only safe haven we have at night. It’s right in front of the jail. So we don’t get in trouble or hurt,” says Karissa Schaper, who lives outside the building.

“Those bad people, make them leave,” according to Schaper. “Not the people that need this place.”