Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Homeless Youth Awareness Month

November is Homeless Youth Awareness Month, and Virgin Mobile's re*generation campaign is turning out to be one of the big players in disseminating info about the month. The re*generation campaign is a campaign to get youth involved with helping other youth.

This month I'm going to focus on youth by sharing articles and statistics, hopefully on a daily basis.

Here's the link to an article about the campaign:

Stand Up For Kids is Calling for an End to Youth Homelessness
PR-USA, 11/06/2007
STANDUP FOR KIDS, a national volunteer organization whose work with homeless youth has been acknowledged by the White House, the Honorable U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ginsburg, and key Senators and House members, has teamed up with ReCelluar, Inc. - the world's largest recycler and reseller of used cellular phones and accessories - to create a nationwide fundraising campaign. The campaign, "Calling An End To Youth Homelessness," encourages individuals, schools, corporations, and organizations to collect old cell phones and cell phone accessories to raise money for STANDUP FOR KIDS' efforts in helping runaway, homeless and street-dependent youth.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Are Shelters the Newest Yelp Category?

Homeless need Information about Where to go for Help
Currant.com, 10/21/2007
Brenda sits on a street corner while her partner, Noel, is off convincing South Green shopkeepers to let him wash windows for money. If he's successful, they'll live large tonight, maybe get some beer (for him) or soda (for her).

Recently, some members of the American Bar Association in Washington listened to University of Connecticut law professor Robert Whitman talk about people like Brenda. Whitman has never met Brenda, but as an advocate for therapeutic homes for mental health and addiction recovery, Whitman wants to start a national database of services for people who are homeless. Someone like Brenda could go to her local library, type in her zip code, and get up-to-date information on services, including phone numbers and hours.
People who are experiencing homelessness know how to use the internts just like you and I. Some have laptops that they charge and use in public spaces while others use the library computers to check email and surf the web. This innovative idea of creating a national database could help some of these individuals find the services that they need but my question is how much of an impact will the website have on service delivery? I haven't read any research and don't have hard numbers but I imagine that many people know where the services are, and if they don't know their friendly local outreach worker would be happy to tell them. My guess is that many people who are not accessing services have had bad experiences and may be hesitant to trust them again. So, while I think that this is an awesome effort, I think that it will end up being more of a tool for outreach workers and shelter staff than for those actually living on the streets. I'm curious to see how things develop.

Friday, October 26, 2007

Keeping it Real

Chronilcing the Invisible: A Photo Essay about Ottawa's Homeless
The Charlatan, 10/25/2007What it's Like to be Homeless in Wrexham
Evening Leader, 10/25/2007
WHEN James Graves collected his degree in electrical engineering, he didn't imagine that 10 years later he would be homeless, living rough on Wrexham's streets and having to get himself arrested to get a bed for the night.

The place he calls his bed is fraught with danger. If it isn't the fear of who might be lurking, it is the needles that litter the ground around where he lays his blanket. At night it is pitch black and damp, cold and noisy.
Even as someone who thinks about homelessness on a daily basis, I have never once thought about where I would sleep if I found myself homeless. I once had a conversation with a couple outreach workers about what time of day is best to sleep. While I said that I'd be more likely to sleep during the day, because there are more people around. They said that there more people means you're more likely to get robbed or harassed. While my heart goes out to those who face this decision every night, I'm certainly glad that it's one that I may never need to face.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Kids Can Help

Winslow Students Working to Help Homeless
Morning Sentential, 10/23/2007
Last year Kendra Littlefield's community-based learning students at Winslow High School were one of 10 national winners of a USA Weekend magazine Make a Difference Day award.

This week they are up to another good deed.

"Raising the Roof Over the Homeless" is the theme for the chem-free dance students have been organizing for the last two months, Winslow High senior Melanie Gagnon said.

St Brenden School Students Prepare Packages for the Homeless
The Providence Journal 10/23/2007

Middle school students from the St. Brendan School, a pre-kindergarten to grade eight private school in Riverside, could say that after preparing 150 sandwiches and other snacks for the state’s homeless Friday afternoon. The bag lunch was paired with personal hygiene items and socks — which were collected by the school’s lower grade students — to make it an all-school project.

Principal Joseph Renzulli said the school got the idea from a St. Brendan parishioner, Anne Pari, of East Providence. She delivers food to the homeless every Friday and Renzulli agreed the school would take over her duties one Friday.

They titled the project “Bread Lines.”

Highschool Helps Homeless
Lakeshore Advance, 10/24/2007

South Huron District High School student, Taryn Anstett handed Trevor Johnson of the Youth Action Centre (YAC) in London $365 for the centre during a presentation on homeless youth at the high school last week.
The students were told to act as lobby groups for a law project and made their primary focus of the campaign, awareness of homelessness. They went above and beyond and started by collecting pocket change from students and teachers over two days, raising the money for homeless youth. “The response was incredible,” says Anstett.
Nine Year Old to Walk to Tally For Homeless
Tampa Bay's 10, 10/22/2007
In the past three years, Zach Bonner has collected supplies for Hurricane Charley victims, raised money for the “Teaching Tools Hillsborough Schools” program, organized a holiday party for kids displaced by Katrina and given away more than 750 backpacks for needy kids.

For his efforts, President Bush last year presented Zach with a volunteer service award. But the 9-year old is not slowing down, he’s just moving on to his next big project.

There is another article that I have saved and want to write about but the sudden flurry of youth and schools working to help people experiencing homelessness deserves some attention. Service learning is a valuable tool for all kinds of social issues and is a fantastic way to bring classroom subjects to real life. I wish that I had an opportunity to participate in projects like these when I was in school but alas, in the 90s it was all about HIV and DARE, subjects that would be a little more risque to develop service learning projects around.

Edit: A couple more...
Virginia Run Students walk for Homelessness
Students Collect Pennies for the Homeless

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Hunters Helping the Hungry

Hunters Helping the Hungry
Hunters Helping the Hungry is a program that enables hunters to donate venison, providing high quality protein to needy individuals throughout New Jersey. In its fifth year, will continue to operate with limited funding. Therefore hunters wishing to donate deer must also donate a minimum of $25 towards the $65 fee charged by participating butchers. Hunters Helping the Hungry is now a 501-C3 Corporation, and all donations are tax deductible.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Nighttime Rounds with Health Care for the Homeless: The Outreach Van

After we met with several patients the Pine Street Inn outreach van arrived. Jim wrapped things up inside and grabbed our coats. It's currently a mild fall in Massachusetts and although it wasn't very cold the skies threatened to storm so I yanked my two sizes two big pullover on, just in case.

I've been out in an outreach van before but the van I'm used to is nothing like this. Inside there were several boxes, one full of blankets and one full of socks. When you opened the back doors there was a cooler filled with sandwiches, fruit, dry soup, hot chocolate, and two water dispensers, one hot and one cold. The van I'm used to plays more of a shuttle service role, is lucky to have socks to distribute, and giving out food is against program policy (because of health concerns, not because it's a cheap program).

We drove down Commonwealth Avenue, on the mall. I have walked the mall dozens of times, during the day and in the early evening hours, but I had never seen someone who presented as a homeless person there. That night I saw how many people really do call the Commonwealth Mall home. There was a variety of people, from an older men who needed to have an injured jaw taken care of to a young guy in a suit.

Outreach runs continue to be engaging, dare I use the word "fun", experiences for me. Everyone was appreciative of what we had to offer, even though it was only a light meal and some human contact. The staff that I talk with are interesting and passionate about their work and those who aren't are often burnt out and need a vacation that this field doesn't allow them to afford. The only thing that worries me is that the shock of seeing how people on the streets are forced to live is starting to wear off.

Monday, October 15, 2007

Nightime Rounds with Health Care for the Homeless: The Night Center

This past Wednesday I had the opportunity to go out for rounds with Jim O'Connell, the founder and president of Boston Health Care for the Homeless. While Dr O'Connell is one of the most humble and down to earth people you could ever meet he's a big wig in the health care for the homeless world and an opportunity to shadow him for the evening was a big deal.

The evening began at The Boston Night Center, one of the many Pine Street Inn programs. The Night Center was a new concept for me, it's an overnight drop in center. The center serves meals, has a tv, and space hang out. An overnight drop in center is the lowest of low threshold services; residents are able to go in and out as they please, they're allowed to be inebriated, and they do not need to accept any services. Because it is not a shelter there are no beds but clients can sleep on the floor and, two nights a week, receive medical services.

Jim brought a backpack full of medical gadgets with him, which included a thermometer, a bracelet-type gadget that takes blood pressure, something that goes on your finger that does something too technical for me, and the classic stethoscope and prescription pad. We saw four different patients, wrote one prescription, scheduled two follow-up visits at the clinic, and gave one person a phone number to call for test results. This was in the span of about an hour in a bustling room full of people.

Somehow Dr O'Connell made the space his own as he listened about the fractured ankle that wouldn't heal because the client couldn't walk with a cast, "How am I supposed to get around? I'm homeless." Clients who are homeless aren't always the easiest people to get along with, often life has gotten the best of them and sometimes that leaves them bitter and snarky. But the snark didn't matter, Jim still listened carefully and examined his patients with the same care one would expect in a hospital room, not in a homeless shelter.

Health Care for the Homeless is not unique to Massachusetts, there is actually a National Health Care for the Homeless Council that stemmed out of a 19 site demonstration project that is now 95 organizations strong. Not all Health Care for the Homeless Services are delivered like what I witnessed tonight, or what I experienced with Jill earlier this fall. The shelter I volunteer in actually also has a health care for the homeless component; there is a clinic on site where health care services are delivered. This isn't quite as exciting as health care on the streets but it still is an important concept; clients are able to meet their health care providers where they already are. Wouldn't it be nice if our doctors held clinics in our workplaces? Homeless services are onto something!

Monday, October 8, 2007

Highlighted Blog

I recently ran across Sans Houses on blogger. She's a photographer who photographs homeless individuals and posts the photos with audio clips. The photos are often haunting and the audio clips bring them to life. She's not a frequent poster but when she does post it is worth the wait!

Empathy vs Sympathy-- Do "Box Cities" Really Work?

Overnight 'box city' will help homeless
Post Bulletin 10/06/07

Cardboard Box City -- the annual overnight event that raises money to help organizations serving Rochester's homeless families and individuals -- will be Oct. 19.

Participants will spend the night in cardboard boxes and tents in a temporary city that will be created at Soldier's Field.

Event helps kids empathize with homeless
Strauss News 10/04/07

Box City ’07 is an event for high schoolers that gives them a chance to experience an aspect of homelessness. The children who participate will sleep in a box on the Sussex County fairgrounds for a night to get a sense of what it’s like for people who sleep that way every night.

Interfaith Hospitality Network (IHN), a nonprofit program providing emergency shelter to homeless families, hosts the “experiential event” for high school youth to promote homelessness awareness. Participants are given a light supper, engage in learning activities and replicate the actual experience of being homeless by sleeping outside in a cardboard box.

Is there anyone else out there that thinks that this fundraising strategy makes a mockery of what individuals experiencing homelessness face every day? For starters, a lot of the homeless people I know or see don't have cardboard boxes, they have tents or nothing. They don't get cozy sleeping bags and footie pajamas.

I understand what these groups are tying to do, they are trying to be able to take the kids from "Wow, that sounds like it really stinks" to "I tried that for one night and it totally sucked. I feel your pain brother." But neither of the events above mention that there will be any "real live" homeless people there to answer questions and interact with the kids. To the participants, it is a giant sleepover. If you want to raise awareness take them to a soup kitchen just a couple at a time, not in a big pack, so they blend in with the regulars and feel what that first trip to the soup kitchen must feel like. Or, better yet, have them help work the soup kitchen for a few weeks. If you want people to even begin to comprehend what homeless individuals experience you need them to interact with homeless individuals. You can camp out in boxes all you want but you aren't going to change someone's view of homelessness until they meet that homeless individual who looks just like their grandfather or who has a heart wrenching story to tell.


Tuesday, September 25, 2007

"Hello, this is the Friendship Shelter for the Homeless, would you like to hire our client?"

Voicemail to be used to assist homeless

Baltimore Sun, 9/25/07

Without telephone numbers to include on job applications, gaining employment can prove difficult. And without a job, finding a permanent home seems impossible.

"If they get a call from an employer, the phone is answered, 'Arundel House of Hope,'" said director of development Mary Alexander. "That opens up a whole bag of worms."

This is one of the many examples of things that those of us who are housed take for granted. When I was applying for work I wouldn't put down the number to my parents' house, for fear that one of my brothers would answer the phone with a belch, or, more realistically, that I would never get the message. A phone connection is key to job applications, medical appointments, keeping in touch with family and friends, and so much more.

At the shelter residents need to rely on staff to answer the phone, write down the message, and later (often after a shift change, maybe days later when the resident returns from detox or couch surfing) relay the message to them. Voice mailboxes not only eliminate the inevitable "outing" of the individual's status as a homeless person, put the person in control of when to receive messages, takes pressure off of the staff, and keeps personal business personal and not the knowledge of the entire shelter staff team and other residents. While many residents of such programs do have cell phones, not everyone has a cell phone and those who do may not always have minutes to use.

One program that I am familiar with uses their voicemail access as a fundraising plan, and asks possible donors to sponsor a voicemail box. This allows donors to know where their money is going and to have a set goal amount to keep on giving so the individuals can have continued voicemail access.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Innovation is Key

Haven Bottle Drive will Feed Many Homeless in Need
Scabee.com 9/6/07

The Haven of Rest is continuing to collect cans and bottles with deposit to provide food for the homeless throughout the summer. Every 15 cans brought in will provide a meal to a homeless person. Whether you're having a family reunion or a small barbeque with your friends, The Haven is asking that you collect your cans and bottles to help us feed the homeless.

"We have been able to provide over 300 meals already with bottle money," said Executive Director Elaine Hunsicker. "This has been a great fundraiser for the Haven, so please continue to bring your bottles and cans in. Every little bit makes a difference, so whether you have a ton, or just a couple of bottles it all ads up to meals for the homeless."

I just want to point out that shelters oven have many innovative fundraising plans to help sustain themselves. One way to help homeless people, if you are willing to go beyond offering your smile, is to get involved with local shelters and help with the organizing and implementation of such events, which can be quite interesting!:

Volunteer Profile: Farytale Town Night Helps Homeless
Sacbee.com, 9/6/07

Monday, September 10, 2007

Outreach Van

I've been volunteering at a shelter for roughly a month and a half and tonight was the first time I was allowed out in the outreach van. It was an excellent experience!

It was just me and two burly guys who are passionate about their jobs, both recovering addicts (I emphasize this because they can relate to clients in a way that I can't), who have a LOT to say about outreach, life on the streets, and interactions with shelter staff. I got an exclusive picture of the friction between the outreach team and floor staff, a relationship that is most likely not unique to this program (I'd be interested to hear what the shelter staff say about the outreach staff... maybe this is my dissertation?). Working with the outreach team was a whole different world.

While I do feel more useful inside (inside I help in the kitchen, check people in, and clean up after dinner, whereas outside I just ride around and maybe hold open the door or talk to some people) riding in the van was an experience not to be missed. I got to go to where people live and meet them in their environment, people who won't, or aren't allowed to, come into the shelter. A few weeks ago I did outreach rounds on foot during the day with Health Care for the Homeless, which was also a great experience, but this was especially interesting because I had already met most of these clients inside the shelter, I had a relationship with the staff, and I had an understanding of the program; when I went for daytime outreach I had never met any of the clients, I officially met the outreach worker for the first time minutes before we began her rounds, and I had little understanding of the program.

The one negative is that this shift made me continue to question the value of what I do, sitting in an office 9-5 M-F with three weeks of vacation (which will be spent in Europe), sick time, holidays, and weekends off. I'm thinking that, if I can handle it, I might want to seriously consider taking up a part-time job in a shelter or on an outreach team. I want to stay close to these people, they are what matters, not the white papers or the statistics that I compile. It is the human lives and faces behind those numbers that I care so much about.

Does it matter?

Things have been hectic the past few weeks at work, as we pushed to complete all of our products by the end of the contract year. On Thursday, when I stayed until 10:30p doing "APA Checks," formatting, and printing, trying not to get too frustrated at the fact that the authors of the pieces didn't do all of this themselves, I began to wonder "what does it matter?" I come from a direct service background, only two and a half years, but I've done my time in the field (even if it wasn't homelessness, I feel that human services across all areas have a lot in common) and I wondered if the work that we do will affect the people who we aim to serve?

It's one thing to be at trainings, working directly with providers, but to be sitting in my cushy office checking to make sure that the appendix is in correct APA format? That's another story. We've written some interesting pieces and made some great "contributions to the field" as they say, but it is questionable when the pieces will get out and we don't really have a dissemination plan in place, yet.

I added volunteering to my regular routine because I wanted to be close to the people that I was writing about. I had considered going into direct services more permanently, but the reality is that I'm "too nice," and have a hard time being authoritative. While I did have a sense of accomplishment when we finally put all of the pieces from the year in binders, packed the binders in boxes, and sent my co-worker to the post office, there is a different sense of accomplishment that comes about when people who I've seen at the shelter begin to acknowledge me and engage in conversation. I hope that as I begin to embark on a full scale career that volunteering continues to be a big part of my week, it keeps me from forgetting why I'm in this job and doing this work in the first place.

Monday, August 27, 2007

It could be me, it could be you

Homeless people to tell teens about life on the street
Orlando Centennial 8/27/07

David Pirtle thought the worst of homeless people. They were bums, derelicts, worthless.

They were lazy, crazy and smelly.

It was a notion he believed as a teen and a young adult.

"Right up until I became homeless," he said.


Expert on Homeless Issues to Speak
Herald-Dispatch 8/27/07

"It is one of those things where we are going to allow the community to hear about the policy and to educate folks on the cost-benefit analysis approach to homelessness," Mendez said. "It costs the community just as much to allow someone to be homeless as it does to provide them with permanent housing, which ends homelessness. That is the only way to end homelessness."

Mendez told the Neighborhood Institute members that it is costing communities more for police and emergency personnel to constantly respond to situations on the street involving the chronic homeless, than it is to build permanent housing for the chronic homeless and to offer them services to get them off the street.

Any of Us Could Be Homeless
TheDay.com 8/27/07

'What makes homeless?” My husband and I were passing out fruit in New London's homeless shelter last week when a resident asked us this question. That morning The Day had reported on a public hearing the night before where neighbors of the proposed new Jefferson Avenue homeless shelter had come out in force to voice their opposition. Their comments had ranged from suggesting that shelter residents were pedophiles to complaining that their property values might go down.

Advocacy is a big part of making change, in fact, it may the key to change, and anyone can be an advocate. From individuals who are experiencing homelessness or have experienced homelessness in the past, to the heads of government agencies, to casual volunteers who write for the local paper. Why not join the masses? You can easily be an advocate too, without it taking up too much time. Just post a news article or video from youtube on your blog every so often. Say hello to the panhandlers you meet on the street and ask them how their day is rather than looking down as you walk by and then feeling guilty later. When you see or hear your friends or family making uninformed comments fill them in, it could be them. It could be me. It could be you.

Friday, August 24, 2007

Take it to the Streets

On Wednesday morning, I had the opportunity to shadow a Boston Health Care for the Homeless provider as she did her street rounds. Back in June, I attended a session of the National Health Care for the Homeless Council conference where my host had presented some of the nifty gadgets that she used on her rounds. The opportunity to see those gadgets in action was a memorable experience! At 9am I met Jill, and a student who was shadowing her for the week, across the street from a busy downtown Boston t-stop. She briefly told me what to expect and we were off!

Not even two blocks down the street we encountered three of her regular patients and by the end of the day we had seen over a half dozen people. Most were on the street but three had secured housing and we visited them in their apartments, two of the three had studio apartments on Beacon Hill (one of the richest parts of Boston) thanks to a housing first voucher program. I hate to admit that I was surprised by how clean the apartments, and their tenants, were but I was impressed. One's apartment was cleaner than my own!

The people on the streets were a different story. They were in rough shape. One had the opportunity to go to a shelter but was nervous that they wouldn't take him because he smelled bad and I'll admit, he did smell really bad. But who can blame him? I smell bad after a day in the park. I can't imagine not having the option to shower after spending an 85 degree day outside, never-mind weeks on end of those kinds of days.

Health Care For The Homeless is a particularly unique type of program, when these programs conduct outreach they often are actually practicing medicine on the streets. It is mainly basic medicine, but they use the relationship that they build to help the individual access specialized services when they are ready. I was impressed with the way that she asked what they wanted and gave them options. No one was forced to do anything that they didn't want to but we got two people off the streets that afternoon (though one was to the ER).

The experience also heightened my awareness of how severe many individuals' alcohol addictions are. As both men who agreed to be transported to services (BHCH has cab vouchers for this purpose) they discarded their bottles of mouthwash first, one handed his off to a friend, the other dropped to the ground with a hollow thud. Mouthwash is the easiest way for alcoholics to get their fix and is an indicator of exactly how bad the disease is.

It was a great experience, I hope to do something like it again!

Highlighted Blog

I just want to highlight a blog that a co-worker recently pointed out. I'm sure that there are dozens of blogs out there but the regularity of this authors posts make this blog a worthwhile read:

The Homeless Guy
(Image from blog)

Homeless Services Fair: The Wave of the Future?

Events Link Homeless, Service Providers
Forbes 8/22/2007

Some come for the haircuts and massages. Several want the free breakfast. Most need help finding housing.

But thousands of homeless people across the country are showing up at events designed like career fairs to help them tap into drug treatment, mental health and welfare programs, and navigate through the often confusing landscape of social services.

and:

Norfolk Project Homeless Connect: A Major Success
WAVY 8/24/2007

On Thursday, Norfolk's Project Homeless connect hosted a one day event to help homeless adults connect to resources and services. 609 area homeless attended the event and received various services including: medical and dental care, housing assistance and employment counseling, among others.

What an innovative idea! We have career fairs, college fairs and wedding expos, why not bring together services? Individuals who are experiencing homelessness often don't have the resources (no computer or caseworker), time (30 minute internet limits at libraries), or knowledge (systems are often extremely fragmented) to navigate the service system and access everything that they need.

Friday, August 17, 2007

If a 4-year-old can do it so can you


4-year-old's lemonade stand helps Atlanta's homeless
Atlanta Journal- Constitution 8/17/07

While politicians and activists argue over the solution to homelessness, a 4-year-old Vinings girl has decided to take matters into her own hands.

Tori Dutkiewicz has raised at least $400 for the Atlanta Union Mission by selling cupcakes and drinks at her lemonade stand. Her mother said her daughter decided to raise money for the homeless after she saw a homeless man begging for money.

I only wish that I had been that socially conscious at 4. Or even at 14:

Teen Spends Birthday Helping the Homeless
Calgary Sun 8/13/07

The ice cream was abundant at Hayley Gorman's 14th birthday yesterday as she celebrated with about 1,200 people she didn't even know.

The teen spent her special evening serving dinner to Calgary's homeless at the Calgary Drop-In Centre rather than partying with friends.

But its never too late:

Woman helps feed the homeless with her knitting needles
Federal Way Mirror 8/14/07

Hatley, who once benefited from the free dinners and clothing offered through local churches, feels that this is her way of giving back to better the lives of the homeless.

Homeless people get cold, Hatley said, and her homemade afghans are the perfect remedy.

Each afghan typically takes about 12 spools of yarn and three months to complete. She relies completely on donations to create the large blankets, which could cover a queen-size bed.

We all can give back in ways other than just donating our own money. Granted we don't all have time for a lemonade stand, money to make a significant financial contribution, or the skills to knit an afghan but most of us have time to devote a couple hours a month to volunteering at a shelter or a soup kitchen. Most of us have enough money to buy a package of socks that we can keep in our car or bag and can hand out to someone in need. And all of us have the talent to stop and say "I'm sorry, I can't help you today" instead of walking by and not looking someone in the eye (I admit that I'm guilty of this too).

Here are just a couple cheap (even free) and simple suggestions:
  • Buy a package of socks, cereal bars, or bottled water to hand out
  • Offer your leftovers or, if you're going into a fast food joint or convenience store, ask them if you can get them a drink or a burger
  • Spend a holiday afternoon, or any day, at a shelter, soup kitchen, or food pantry
  • Just smile and engage in a conversation
  • Donate your old clothes to a shelter and your household items to a housing program or thrift store. Shelters are often in need of clothing for residents who are in disarray (I encountered this problem during my volunteer shift just last week). As for household goods, the shelter where I got my first taste of homeless services, The Salem Mission, will actually come and pick up unwanted furniture in good condition and also accepts donations of kitchen items for its thrift store and residents who are transitioning into housing. Look around for a similar program in your area.
You CAN help, you just have to take initiative, get out there, and do it!

Sunday, August 12, 2007

You've Got to Fight, For Your Right, to Sleep

Sacramento Sued Over Handling of Homeless
The Sacramento Aggie 8/9/07
Sacramento lawyer Mark Merin filed a lawsuit against Sacramento and Sacramento County on Apr. 2 for its treatment of the homeless. Its approach to the homeless, Merin said, is illegal and unconstitutional.

In the lawsuit, Merin calls for Sacramento to stop "enforcing the City and County ordinances which prohibit homeless persons from sleeping outside in the City and County." Merin claims that Sacramento peace officers are imposing on civil rights of homeless people who have no other option but to sleep on the streets.
While it's upsetting that the homeless in Sacramento are receiving such harsh treatment in the first place it is encouraging that there is pressure to change this treatment and recognition that many of these people really have nowhere else to go. It's like arresting someone because they can't afford to eat. Our bodies need us to sleep, there is no way around it!

Friday, August 10, 2007

A Downtown Where you Can Count the Homeless on your Fingers and Toes!

Only 25 Homeless Live Downtown: City Census
Chicago Sun-Times 8/10/07
The downtown count was released on the same day Mayor Daley claimed homelessness across the city was down 12 percent -- from 6,715 in January 2005 to 5,922 at the same time this year -- marking progress in his 10-year Plan to End Homelessness.
So, apparently someone in Chicago thinks that there are just about as many homeless downtown as there were students in an average sized elementary school class. Maybe they did go downtown and count people but to say that there are only 25 people sleeping on the streets of Chicago in the middle of the summer completely trivializes the issue! 1) What about all of the people in shelters? Aren't they homeless too? Even if there really are only 25 people on the streets why not throw out the number of people in shelters for comparison? and 2) Are you sure you looked everywhere? Did you check under the couch and behind the fridge?

For more of this crazy statistic:
City Census: 24 Homeless People Live in Downtown Chicago
WQAD 8/10/07

EDIT: Thank goodness someone came to there senses!
Count of 24 homeless was based on just 12-block area
Chicago Sun Times 8/16/07

Laws laws laws

City's Homeless Will Not be Disturbed
The Sydney Morning Herald 8/10/07

Police at the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation summit have been ordered to allow the more than 100 homeless people living in the forum's security area to remain undisturbed unless they cause a disruption.

The Operation Contego handbook states: "When you encounter a person that is homeless or appears to be homeless, you should leave the person alone unless:

They require assistance

They appear to be distressed or in need of assistance

Their behaviour threatens their safety or the safety and security of people around them

Their behaviour is likely to result in damage to property or the environment"

This is the kind of rule I like to see. It is amazing to see the efforts that Sydney appears to be making to protect the homeless, they're even concerned that when the park is closed for a concert these individuals won't be able to access their belongings. Lets all up and move to Sydney! And not Ft Worth:

Council to Vote on Alcohol Free Zones Near Shelter
Star Telegram 8/9/07

The City Council will vote today on banning alcohol and open containers within 1,000 feet of homeless shelters. It's aimed at curbing public drinking near the shelters on East Lancaster Avenue, just south of downtown Fort Worth.

Fort Worth is the first city in the state to vote on the ban since the Legislature approved the measure this past session, according to a spokesman for state Sen. Rodney Ellis, D-Houston, the law's sponsor.

Say what? You think that banning open containers is going to do something? Yes, it might make the business owners happy but my guess is that will be it. The consequence is a ticket, a ticket that they can't afford to pay anyway. And this part makes me laugh: "Don Shisler, president of the Union Gospel Mission, said the alcohol ban might help remove temptation from children and from people who are trying to quit drinking." Yes, not being around alcohol for a certain radius will help people quit drinking. And what about when they walk outside of that bubble of 1000ft? Maybe this could be a step towards something else but on its own I imagine this law is just going to be a disaster.

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Homeless in the Media

Cops: Homeless Man Tried to Rob McDonalds
Newsday.com 8/8/07
A homeless man who turned to robbing for food instead of begging for it was arrested after using a pair of scissors in an attempted holdup of a McDonald's in Uniondale, police said yesterday.
Good Samaritans End up Victims of Homeless Woman
Fond du Lac Reporter 8/8/07
Two people trying to do a good deed by helping a homeless woman ended up her victims, according to a Fond du Lac County Sheriff’s Department report.

The couple allowed the woman and her husband to stay at their house on Mallard Lane for free since the homeless couple was having financial problems, according to a Sheriff's Department report.
Its rare that I can go a day without my googlereader homeless feed pulling up some random story that details the wrongdoings of some homeless person. That isn't very productive. Articles like these do nothing but evoke fear in the readers. I imagine that the McDonalds article would have gotten printed even if the individual had a home but I'm not quite so sure about the home robbery article. I've watched Court TV, this kind of stuff (and worse) happens all of the time.

But, of course, not all articles talk about how terrible homeless people are. For an uplifting read check out this really neat little bit on Eureka Street, Remembering A Homeless Man Named Patrick
Patrick was sitting outside one of those tired buildings at the top of Spring Street. One of those buildings where the doors never open. He had his head in his hands. It was two in the morning. I was walking because I’d missed the last train home and I asked him if he was ok. He asked for a smoke and said he was waiting for the door to open.

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Welcome home, thanks for your service, now pull yourself up by your bootstraps!



Homeless Vets: A Hidden Crisis
Orlando Sentinel 8/6/07
Often, when Ryan Svolto manages to sleep, he finds himself back in Iraq preparing for triage, awash in blood and bodies. But he can't find his medical kit, and, helpless, he thrashes awake, damp with sweat.

As an infantry medic, he patched up soldiers wounded in combat in Iraq. Now, Svolto, 24, is trying to fix his own wounded life after a recent stint at a Daytona Beach homeless shelter.

Svolto is one of a growing number of Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans who joined the ranks of Florida's homeless after returning home. Experts say a system already buckling under one of the nation's largest homeless populations might collapse under the weight of a new wave of veterans, many saddled with mental-health issues and crippling brain injuries.
Homecoming should be a time of pride and honor for returning vets, and it often is. But for some it doesn't last. According to the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans 23% of those experiencing homelesness are vets. To put this in perspective, according to a 2003 Census Bureau Report Alaska is the state with the highest percentage of veterans, a whopping 17%. Clearly, the percentage of individuals experiencing homelessness who are vets is not a reflection of the percentage of veterans in the whole population.

What's going on here? My first thought is that while I'm sure that PTSD and other mental health issues are playing a role we should be doing a regression analysis that takes into account in the individual's annual household income before they entered the military, their parents' education, and somehow scales the communities that they are returning to, but that's the statistician in me. Back on the National Coalition website they talk about PTSD, substance use problems, and lack of support (something else to throw into my hypothetical regression analysis). There are support systems there for the vets when they return but like all individuals experiencing homelessness sometimes it takes more than the availability to engage someone in services and sometimes the available services aren't sufficient to meet the individuals' needs.

It's not a crisis just in the US, the UK is experiencing similar problems:
Warning on Ex-Service Homeless
BBC News 8/6/07

A survey in 1997 by the Ex-Service Action Group on Homelessness suggested that 22% of people who were "street homeless" had a military background.

Veterans charity, the Sir Oswald Stoll Foundation, said that efforts by the government and the voluntary sector had brought that down to about 10%.

Clearly something is up and it seems to me that in finding a solution we are going to have to take a more global approach. While it's a relief to see the the numbers in the UK are remarkably similar it's also troubling that those who serve their country around the world may all face the same bleak outcomes.

*Image stolen from St Pete for Peace, the same city where some homeless individuals are suing city officials for destroying their tents and belongings

EDIT: Another article posted on 8/8/07
Homeless Vets: The Topic of Panel
The Colombian 8/8/07

Monday, August 6, 2007

Art: Something to Come Home To

Homeless Works Look For New Digs
The Sydney Morning Herald 9/6/07

Beno, 43, is part of a group whose goal is to open a "homelessness art gallery" in the inner city where the homeless and people with mental health problems can exhibit their art. People such as themselves.

"Homelessness is about being alone, and us doing this gives us a sense of community," Beno says.

The group, called Escape Artists, is holding its first exhibition this week to raise awareness of its project during National Homeless Persons Week.

Art isn't just a venue for those with a shelter over our heads. While it isn't a regular practice there are enough shelters and drop in centers that offer art therapy or art studios to suggest that individuals who are experiencing homelessness can benefit from the opportunity to create art. Not only is art a great coping skill, and opportunity for self expression, and a channel for creativity but all of this combined can help lead to a better self worth, something that every individual experiencing homelessness will need in order to make the strides to be successful and get back on their feet (among many other factors of course).

Beyond the benefits for the individual are the benefits for society. One of my work projects has led me to ask several providers what they think the barriers to providing effective services are and for the providers I interviewed about youth the community understanding was frequently cited. People don't necessarily see people who are experiencing homelessness. They think of the pan handler, or the person asleep on the park bench. They forget about the men and women who are pulling 40-hour shifts but are still unable to meet ends meet and the men and women who struggle with addiction and lack the coping skills to help them transition out of homelessness. Artwork that presents homeless camps is incredibly moving. This morning I was on a run and saw a tent slightly off the trail that looked like it was where someone was living and I suddenly felt so selfish for taking that run and worrying about whether I would get to work on time. Seeing how these individuals are forced to live is eye opening and truly shocking and when confronted with these images one can no longer blame these individuals for their addictions and short comings. Artwork that is created by individuals who are experiencing homelessness has a similar affect, it makes one realize that these individuals are just as capable as the rest of us. It is very important that we be frequently reminded of this because it is true. Under the "right" circumstances "we" could easily become "them."

For more:
Understanding the Homeless: Exhibit Offers Local Perspective

Press and Sun-Bulletin 7/6/07

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Because I Need to Spend Time in the Field if What I Say is Going to Have Any Credibility

Last night was my first night volunteering at a wet shelter. I have experience at a dry shelter in a suburban town; I conducted a small survey to see what kinds of groups people would be interested in and helped to start up a reading group and a computer group (sadly both groups fell through shortly after their inception because both I and the other facilitator got new jobs) but a wet shelter is another story. Here clients regularly come in drunk, substance use problems are a prerequisite of being able to regularly access a bed at this shelter. I was quite nervous going in but the staff made me feel right at home. The clients were also great, even though one wasn't too happy with me for putting gravy on his potatoes. I didn't get to talk to too many people in great depth but the few that I did talk to were quite friendly, one updated me on the state of the Red Sox while another asked some deep questions (how am I supposed to answer "What's the most important thing in your life?" on the fly?). I'm looking forward to going back next week, I shouldn't have waited this long to get started!

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Outreach: Only a First Step

Sleuthing Needed to Track Homeless People
Star Telegram 7/23/07
Like a detective, Selena Sumner follows clues through Tarrant County's homeless community.

Today's case: Find a mentally ill homeless woman whose family is worried about her.

Because of the mental illness, the woman hates authority, so forget about the shelters, Sumner reasoned Friday, driving a white van past abandoned buildings on East Lancaster Drive.

Outreach is a huge component of combating homelessness. People who live on the streets know that there are services available and chances are that they know where to find them. The problem is that their trust in society has been broken. The job of the outreach worker isn't to hand out socks, it is to use those socks to build a relationship. A smile and some socks isn't going to convince everyone that it is time to return to the shelter, get sober, and begin to look for housing. Outreach workers need to be careful in that they must meet the individual where they are figuratively as well as literally, and allow the individual to make their own decision about whether to enter treatment.

The individuals who conduct outreach are some of the most driven, innovative, and dedicated people you will ever meet. Many have stories of that creative hook that they used to engage a client, who later entered services and stories about searching for that hard to reach individual who they had been following for months. This is not easy, outreach workers witness alcoholism, drug use, mental illness, profanity, trauma, filth, and much more in their work and they must look past it all and see the person underneath as a unique individual who needs their help. After all of that work to engage the individual and enroll them in services the outreach worker often does not follow them and become a part of a treatment team. But they may cross paths again, whether the outreach worker runs into the formerly homeless individual at the individual's new job or running into the individual while the outreach worker does his job. People aren't perfect and we're addressing individuals, not society, so chronic homelessness is a huge issue that outreach workers must witness first hand.

For more:
Homeless Care, Delivered
Chicago Tribune 7/23/07

Monday, July 23, 2007

Data Matters

Fight Homelessness With Data
Boston Globe 7/2o/07
IN THE 1980S, volunteers fought homelessness with bread lines and soup kitchens. But as the lines got longer, it became clear that a meal and a cup of sympathy weren't enough.

Now public policy is getting smarter, and instead of managing homelessness, the federal government is seeking to end it. Rather than join sleep-outs, officials are relying on data. This change should transform lives and mesh well with state and local efforts.
As a researcher, and a fan of quant at that, articles like this one excite me. Not just because they are good job security (and who doesn't love job security?), but because I'm a big believer in research, we need to understand the intricacies of the problem if we are going to find a way to solve it. Understanding homelessness requires more than anecdotal evidence. We also need to know who these people are, what brought them to the streets, and what the barriers preventing them from getting/staying housed are.

Counts of the homeless are conducted annually, usually in January, as point in time samples; a group of volunteers hit shelters, soup kitchens, and the streets to literally count each and every homeless person that they can find. While they don't get everyone the counts are useful to compare changes from year-to-year, if the methodology doesn't change. And the fact that the department of Housing and Urban Development requires counts for funding is a bit of a motivator to get out and conduct one.

For some more info on counts and a great report:
New Homeless Count Shows Need For More Housing
NBC 30 7/20/07 [Homeless count in CT]-2007 Point In Time Result Full Report

MSU Students to Survey Area Homeless

News-Leader.com 7/67/07 [Three-day count as follow-up to one day count]

Sunday, July 22, 2007

When Lying in Bed is Illegal

Crackdown on Homeless Brings Results-Police Arrest 100 in 5 Weeks
Tennessean.com 7/22/07

In five weeks, Central Precinct officers have made 51 arrests, issued 31 citations and identified 76 Metro ordinance violations. In the West Precinct, which covers Broadway and West End west of Interstate 40, primarily in the Vanderbilt/Centennial Park area, there have been 49 arrests, two citations and three Metro ordinance violations reported.
I'm not quite sure where I heard it originally but someone once said something to the effect of the only reason that many of these behaviors are illegal is because the individuals engaging in them don't have four walls around their home. Public intoxication is a perfect example. I can drink as much as I want at home but until I walk out the door the behavior is perfectly legal. For individuals experiencing homelessness the park bench, cardboard box, or alleyway where they sleep is their home for all intensive purposes but they can be punished for just having an open container. They have no bathroom so they are forced to urinate in public. The bench is their bed yet they can be ticketed for lying there, and some cities us dividers so lying down isn't even possible.

Even if the crackdown does reduce the visible signs of homelessness it will not increase housing or create a livable wage. Cities that institute initiatives like this need to think long and hard about what their long-term goals are and how they can truly achieve them.

Edit: Here's an article about a similar initiative that isn't working:
Homeless Plan Needs Reality Check
ajc.com 7/23/07

Friday, July 20, 2007

Homeless Soccer

Homeless soccer widens goal: Brothers teach life-changing outreach program to visitors from 11 other U.S. cities
The Charlotte Observer Fri, Jul. 20, 2007

Today, people from 11 U.S. cities are in Charlotte to learn how to start a homeless soccer program back home.

This weekend, six homeless teams will compete for the national street soccer championship at the Urban Ministry's recently built art park and street soccer field.

This is an amazing example of how innovative strategies can be used to engage individuals in services. Of former players 8 out of 9 secured housing, which may suggest that the skills needed for teamwork may be transferable skills that can help these individuals access and maintain services, the same reason that your 10th grade guidance counselor told you to include team sports and group activities on your resume.

For more:
Homeless in U.S. find solace in soccer
Guardian Observer July 20, 2007 (another source talking about the same thing)

Homeless Footballers to Play in World Cup

News.com.au July 18, 2007 (the Cambodian team)

Edit: And more...
Soccer Helping Homeless Improve Life
News 14 California 7/22/07

Edit: and more...
We Can Be Winners
Guardian Unlimited 7/24/07




Holeless Celebrities

When A Homeless Person Dies and They're Not Mr. Butch
Allston-Brighton Tab Thu Jul 19, 2007, 07:54 AM EDT

Mr. Butch was a charismatic homeless man with a cult-like following, but he was an exception to the rule. When other homeless die in Boston, they’re not always met with the same outpouring of love and generosity.
As a Bostonian who has lived in Brighton for two years when the posts began that "Mr Butch" was rumored to be injured in a scooter accident I had to look him up to see who he was. Sure enough, I recognized him from Harvard Ave in Allston (where, according to urban knowledge, he was known as "The President of Allston"). Boston has it's share of local celebrity homeless individuals ( although one, Spare Change Guy, isn't even homeless), as I'm sure does any major city, and it has been interesting to see how the blog community has reacted to his death; it has been with respect and sorrow. If only every individual experiencing homelessness could have that kind of a send off.

The reality is that many of these individuals don't get a community send off like the one that Boston is giving Mr Butch this weekend. I did a little searching for cemeteries that will take individuals who died while homeless but google wasn't very much help. The Tab article notes that Boston has three cemeteries that have sections for those whose bodies are not claimed: Mount Hope, Fairview and Evergreen. But there have to be places in other communities too. If interested try contacting your local shelter, a funeral home, or cemetery and see if they can point you in the right direction.

Edit: And there's more:
Editorial: Remember Mr. Butch, Remember the Homeless

Allston/Brighton Tab Fri Jul 20, 2007, 03:27 PM EDT

Edit:
The funeral was yesterday, here are photos by historgygradguy

Edit: Here's how another town remembers the homeless:
Paying Tribute to Marin's Homeless
Marin Independent Journal 7/22/07

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Violence Against Homeless People

4 Youths Arrested in Attacks on Homeless
Los Angeles Times 7/19/07

Four teenage boys were arrested for allegedly driving around Los Angeles and attacking homeless people while using a cellphone camera to capture some of the assaults, LAPD officials said Monday.

The youths allegedly attacked at least eight homeless people either by throwing smoke bombs or firing plastic pellets from an air pistol at them and in one case throwing a bike into a homeless person's tent as he slept.

Police said the suspects filmed some of the attacks with a cellphone camera, and the attackers intended to post the recordings on the Internet.
A horrific incident? Yes. Shocking? Sadly no. According to the National Coalition for the Homeless attacks on homeless people was up 65% from 2005 to 2006, and these are only the incidents that were reported and confirmed. This spring it was highly publicized that a Florida youngster was facing charges for his treatment of a homeless man, nearly beating him to death if I remember correctly.

What is wrong with these kids? It may not be what is wrong with them but rather what is wrong with society. In a conversation I had this spring with Vicki Wagner, Chief Executive Office for the National Network For Youth, she mentioned that in her thirty years of working to end youth homelessness one of the changes has been that society today views homelessness as a nuisance rather than a problem that we should work to solve. That may be what is wrong with these kids.


EDIT: One day later and already two more similar stories:
Homeless man slain-- teenager sought
San Francisco Chronicle 7/20/07

3 Statesville Teams Charged in Beating Death of Homeless Man
WRAL.com 7/20/07

EDIT: Another day, another article:
Belfast Court Appearance for Man Charged wit Death of Homeless Man
Belfast Telegraph 7/21/07

EDIT:
Arkno Duo Attack Two Elderly Homeless Men
Cleavland.com 7/23/07


The College years

In the fall of 2000 I began my undergraduate degree as a communications major, but that didn't last for long. The program wasn't for me and I was in a very cool Sociology of Mass Media course so what the heck, I changed my major to sociology. It was an easy decision, sociology was me. It was how I thought about things, how I viewed the world, and it came so easily. In theory class we had many assignments where we looked for theory in unusual places and I embraced the assignments and found Marx, Weber, Durkheim and their contemporaries in nearly every situation.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

In the beginning...

In 1997 I was a junior in High School and there was a hole in my schedule. My guidance counselor suggested that I take a sociology course. I wish I could say that I jumped at the opportunity knew from that moment what I wanted to do with my life but it wasn't that easy. The reality? I asked "what's that?" and apprehensively signed up for the class. I don't remember much from that course. There was something about theories of deviance and watching "The Breakfast Club," a movie on serial killers, and a "Here's Johnny!" poster that was right behind my desk and freaked me out on a daily basis. The reality was that in the following year I would apply to communications programs, including at Emerson, with aspirations of work in broadcasting. Now I look back and wonder how I possibly could have been serious!