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Posts Tagged ‘homeless’

Sorry, Thanksgiving is Canceled

Yet another story about people being forbidden to feed the homeless unless they are set up like a freaking restaurant.

Homeless ministry says Dallas food ordinance restricts their religious freedom

So you have to have a church and protest about your religious freedom being interfered with in order just to feed people?

This kind of thing is so vicious, so transparently NIMBY. “If we make it hard for kind people to feed homeless people, then they’ll go be homeless somewhere else and stop being such eyesores” is what’s really behind it.

For shame, City of Dallas.

 

Anonymous Goes After Orlando, Florida

Citing Homeless Law, Hackers Turn Sights on Orlando

New York Times

MIAMI — The hacker group Anonymous has declared a cyberwar against the City of Orlando, disabling Web sites for the city’s leading redevelopment organization, the local Fraternal Order of Police and the mayor’s re-election campaign.

This is a reaction to the arrests of Food Not Bombs personnel for feeding the homeless in the parks of Orlando. Food Not Bombs is quoted as not being entirely happy with being associated with this; Anonymous pretty much responds with “You don’t own this issue; our concerns are with the rights of the hungry and those who wish to feed them.”

Anonymous press release:

 

Female Veterans Getting Short End of the Stick

a href=”http://www.sacbee.com/2011/03/06/3452876/transition-to-civilian-life-challenging.html”>Transition to civilian life challenging for female veterans

Sacramento Bee, Mar 6

Reeder, 46, spent nearly 20 years in and out of homelessness after she was honorably discharged from the U.S. Army in 1987. The return to civilian life was difficult for Reeder, who said she struggled with the psychological effects of a rape while she was in the military. She became an alcoholic and drug addict, had trouble holding down a job and distanced herself from family.

“We’re supposed to come back and be daughters and mothers and sisters and go back to work. Some people can,” Reeder said. “The problem is how do I detach myself from being a soldier?”

Though women are still a small percentage of homeless veterans, they’re at much higher risk of homelessness than their male veteran counterparts, and their numbers are growing, according to a joint report by the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Department of Veterans Affairs released Feb. 10.

This disturbing article also notes that many female veterans do not identify as such, that services for female veterans are not equal to those for male veterans, and that homeless shelters catering to veterans often will not accept women, especially women with children, who are the fastest-growing sector of the homeless veteran population.

Genevieve Chase is quoted in the article. Ms. Chase is the founder and executive director of the American Women Veterans Foundation.

 

Is Feeding the Needy a Constitutional Right?

Fight over feeding homeless goes to court — again

Orlando, 2/14

This case is going to court on Tuesday.

The arguments before the 11th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals come more than four years after the Orlando City Council restricted how often people may feed large groups in parks around downtown. Businesses and residents had complained that frequent group meals at Lake Eola Park drew the homeless into the neighborhood.

After years of legal wrangling, the case has been condensed to a single question: Whether sharing food with homeless and hungry people in a public park is “expressive conduct” protected by the constitution. Expressive conduct is an act or behavior that’s equivalent to free speech, like burning a flag or wearing a black armband to protest a war.

Members of the group Orlando Food Not Bombs argue that by feeding the homeless, they are spreading the message that society should ensure no one goes hungry.

I admire the tenacity of these activists more than I can say.

 

Homeless People Need Technology Too

Increasingly, the Homeless Log On When They’re Down and Out

End Homelessness
Oct 21

(excerpt)

Regardless of the intent of those who recently posted images of homeless men using laptops, a discussion has emerged around the more-common-than-one-might-think bewilderment at how a homeless person could possibly (1) acquire a technological device and (2) benefit from one.

To many, a homeless person with a laptop might evoke the assumption that the laptop was acquired through illegal means (stolen, purchased on the black market, etc.). But Moore’s Law would suggest otherwise. The exponential rate of technological improvement has yielded $50 cell phones and $150 laptops — and that’s just retail price. In addition to charities that give away electronics, wholesalers and secondhand stores often sell used computers and other items for pennies on the dollar. (Of course, computers and other gadgetry can also be among what little is “left over” for people who were recently housed.) Beyond being affordable, technology can even provide an income stream for the homeless.

Technology’s benefits to the homeless are even more apparent than its affordability. The advent of email, cellular phones and blogs has helped improved the plight of many homeless individuals as they attempt to move off of the streets and into permanent housing. Although providers of homeless services sometimes furnish mailbox and/or telephone services to their guests, email allows homeless individuals to have a permanent means of contact no matter their housing situation. Free computer and internet access at local libraries allows for reliable, written communication even without a permanent address (just ask some bloggers and commenters on this site). For things like obtaining food stamps, inquiring about housing, and understanding other essential services, cell phones have proven to be extremely useful tools.

 

Homeless News

Homelessness up 50% in NYC over last year

At one of New York’s homeless shelters, RT witnessed a lottery, but it was not a lottery to win some money. Dozens of people were patiently waiting to find out if they would “win” a roof over their heads for the night.

They were not criminals and they were not drunks. Their “flaw” was that they didn’t have a home. The shelter they were hoping to get into for the night was packed.

Lately, the chances of getting a bed in New York City have been slimmer than ever. Homelessness in the city has sky-rocketed by 50 per cent.

Well, the obvious solution is to lock them up.

Homeless park dwellers refuse city’s assistance

SF Examiner, 10/14

“I can tell you there are fewer homeless people, but does that mean we have cleaned up the park? No,” said police Officer Bob Ramos, who is part of the morning outreach-team sweeps. “It just means that the people we cited realize we are coming back again and they have hidden deeper.”

The lingering homeless residents tend to fall into two categories — they are mentally ill or they are substance abusers who are chronically cited, but never appear in court, said Dariush Kayhan, the mayor’s adviser on homelessness.

Kayhan said the outreach team is working with the Public Health Department to be more aggressive in placing the mentally ill homeless residents into a conservator program where they are brought into locked facilities and given involuntary treatment under the watch of the courts.

Take the solstice back from the Christians!

Homeless Memorial Day Resolution Introduced to Congress

National Coalition For The Homeless

On or around the longest night of the year, December 21, the National Coalition for the Homeless and National Health Care for the Homeless Council hold memorial services for homeless individuals who have died from causes related to their homelessness. Throughout the state of Florida, this important day is being recognized, along with over 200 other local municipalities, organizations, and statewide organizations throughout the United States. With the support of the National Coalition for the Homeless, National Consumer Advisory Board, and National Health Care for the Homeless Council; National Homeless Persons’ Memorial Day brings attention to the tragedy of homelessness.

Gotta wonder how many of the below are ex-Mormons

15,600 considered homeless in Utah this year

Of those who are homeless statewide, 43 percent are people in families, which is the fastest growing segment of the homeless population.

Almost 12,000 school-aged children statewide are considered homeless, according to the State Office of Education.

“This is the highest concentration of homeless school children observed in the past five years,” according to the report.

Just when you thought things couldn’t get any weirder..

Blood-sucking ‘vampires’ arrested for attacking homeless man with knife in Arizona, police say

Aaron Homer, 24, and Amanda Williamson, 21, allegedly stabbed Robert Maley, 25, last week in their apartment.

Maley, who was also arrested over a probation violation, told police Homer and Williamson were into “vampire stuff and paganism,” and he had allowed them to drink his blood in the past.

On the night of the attack, police were called to the couple’s home and found a trail of blood leaving the apartment.

 

Homeless News – Literally

Wine firm defends British homeless magazine deal

Calgary Herald, Canada
July 17

A South African wine brand defended Friday its sponsorship of Britain’s top homelessness magazine after sellers called it a “bad, ironic joke” that could fuel more alcoholic stereotyping.

Fairhills has signed a $90,000 deal that involves The Big Issue’s homeless street sellers wear the wine’s logo on new red tops.

However, some vendors believe the deal is inappropriate as many are recovering alcoholics and drug addicts.

Interesting ethical question there.

Fairhills founder Bernard Fontannaz said by sponsoring the vendors they were showing support for the treatment of alcohol misuse. He said they were opening an alcohol treatment centre in South Africa.

This does admittedly have an element of setting fires in order to have something to put out.

Street newspapers appear to be a growing thing. This is particularly interesting in a world where the Internet is leading to the death of so many hard copy versions of newspapers.

The International Network of Street Newspapers supports and connects over 100 street papers in some 40 countries, and will be having their yearly conference in Chicago July 29-Aug 1 of this year.

Their news agency is Street News Service, “an alternative online news agency that brings together the best of street paper journalism from around the world.” One can search this site for articles in 22 languages. The articles focus on issues including homelessness, poverty, child welfare, and women’s rights.

Here we have The North American Street Newspaper Association, which currently “has 31 members, 23 in the United States and 8 in Canada.”

(From their front page)

A street newspaper is a newspaper that primarily addresses issues related to poverty and homelessness and is distributed by poor or homeless vendors. Vendors sell the newspaper for a set price, usually $1, and have to pay the organization a fraction of the price (20% to 40%) for each paper up front. The self-employed vendor sells the papers on the street and keeps the money he or she makes. For many people, this is the opportunity they need to get back on their feet and into permanent housing.

The benefits of street papers go far beyond economic opportunity. For the vendor, they offer a positive experience of self-help that breaks through the isolation that many homeless people experience. They offer the public a means to reach out with their dollar to help a homeless person directly and, over time, form a caring relationship.

Most street newspapers also provide homeless and/or those living on the margins of society the opportunities for expression by publishing their articles, letters and artwork. These publications build a bridge between the very poor and the wider public by helping people to understand the issues and the personal stories of those on the lowest rung of the economic ladder.

End Homelessness, one of the best homeless news blogs around, has published several stories on street papers. A few excerpts:

Street Papers: The Story Behind the Stories

Israel Bayer

June 29, 2009

Street newspapers tend to thrive in cities that have a high volume of walking and/or bike traffic, and an adequate public transportation system. All of these elements allow for vendors selling the newspaper to be mobile and more important, it allows them to engage with other people living and working in the community.

At Street Roots in Portland, Oregon, we have around 80 vendors selling the newspaper throughout the city. Vendors typically sell the newspaper at busy intersections downtown and at lively neighborhood grocery stores, libraries, coffee shops, and other locations that attract walking traffic. People experiencing homeless and poverty are able to make money to survive and build self-confidence through the relationships built with customers. We also work with and highlight the voices of the streets through poetry, opinion pieces and artwork. It’s about making human connections.

How Lucrative Is Selling Street Papers?

Sept 9 2009
Shannon Moriarty

One couple in Nashville sells roughly 500 papers per month and earns “a couple hundred dollars.” Unfortunately, despite their sales prowess, their earnings are not enough to pay for housing. So they live in a tent, saving their earnings for an apartment. According to the Tennessean, most street vendors do not use their income from selling street papers as a primary source of income, but rather as a supplement to purchase other necessities, such as medicine, toiletries, pet food, or utility payments.

To be honest, this isn’t all that surprising. But be careful before you write off the street paper model because it’s not a livable wage generator for street vendors. The real value of purchasing a street paper goes way beyond the physical transaction of paying money for a news source; the intangible benefits are worth much, much more.

First, it’s the unique content. Street papers often provide a grassroots perspective on poverty and homelessness that, in many cases, are detailed in a first-person voice. Street vendors are often themselves contributors, and in this digital age, how often can you buy a newspaper from a contributing author?

Shannon also notes that “Vendors must also agree to a code of conduct which bar the use of alcohol, drugs, and peddling papers on private property.”

Kevin Barbieux is one of these vendors of street papers. He lives in Nashville, Tennessee, and also has a blog; “The Homeless Guy”, which he’s been writing since 2007. This is an interesting blog; part of what he has been trying to do with it is dispel myths about homelessness, and having been in and out of being homeless since 1982, he knows a lot about it and his writing is both sophisticated and blunt.

Kevin has been threatening to stop blogging lately, and has even offered to sell the blog, so I recommend giving it a look if this subject interests you. Here today, gone tomorrow…

 

News of Trashpicking

I used to live next door to the back alley of a member of a big chain grocery store. Where the trash bins are.

It became obvious pretty quickly that the dead stuff was only dead by caveat. If you catch it fast, you’ve gotten it for free.

It’s funny how that changes your head, recognizing that you’re a trashpicker.

Dumpster diving with purpose: Grand Rapids Freegans make political statement by searching through trash

May 16
Grand Rapids, Michigan

The small Grand Rapids group began online in October. About 30 people have joined, and five or six actually meet up to go diving. They have started to keep tabs on stores that don’t have compactors or locked bins, and have come to learn which will yield the most food.

Members meet at 10 p.m., wearing gloves, old shoes and clothing they don’t mind getting dirty. From there, they pile into one or two cars, stopping periodically to check trash bins. Afterward, they spread their finds on the ground and the goods are divided based on what everyone wants or needs.

“It’s focused around community more than anything else,” said Marie, a college student and the group’s founder, who asked that her last name be withheld because of the questionable legality of Dumpster diving.

This is about Freegans. This is their NYC meet-up site:

Sustainable living beyond capitalism

Do you want to reduce your consumer impact on the earth, humans, and animals? Are you concerned about the wastefulness of our consumer society? Learn how to find useable goods in the refuse of our throw-away culture, to identify wild edibles, to repair and rebuild bikes, clothing and more.

Independent Lens: Garbage Dreams

by Cynthia Fuchs

April 26, 2010

“I once went into Cairo to collect trash. I realized everyone was well dressed and I wasn’t, so I was a bit upset.” As 17-year-old Adham describes his revelation, he appears determined and self-aware, gazing calmly and intently into the camera. He is zabaleen, one of 60,000 impoverished Coptic Christians who live in Mokattam, outside Cairo: they have collected the city’s trash for 150 years. Adham is hardly content with his fate. Over low angle images of streets and trucks and piles of waste, he observes, “There’s the upper class, the middle class.” Adham takes a breath, then adds. “The nothing class: that’s us.”

The fate of the nothing class is the focus of Garbage Dreams, Mai Iskander’s remarkable first documentary, airing 27 April as part of PBS’ Independent Lens series. Following Adham and two other teens over four years, the film shows not only how they live, but also how they see themselves, their dissatisfaction as well as their ingenuity. Introduced as he’s counting and cutting cans to recycle, Adham seeks an alternative. At the same time, 16-year-old Osama can’t quite break into the garbage business; in fact, he’s having trouble holding any job for long, he admits, and the film shows him arriving late and suffering the complaints of his family (“He’s an irresponsible failure”). Working in a restaurant kitchen, he recalls his father’s warning, that “Garbage work is dangerous work.” Osama prefers washing dishes, he says, “because it isn’t hard like other jobs. Other jobs make my eyes pop out.”

Husby Experiences Dumpster Diving for a Meal

The Evangelical Covenant Church

ESSEX JUNCTION, VT (May 20, 2010) – Covenant World Relief Director Dave Husby fell on such hard times, he was eating cold pizza and French fries out of a dumpster.

Fortunately for Husby, those days were only one night – during a C.A.R.E dinner (Community Awareness Reflection Experience) at Covenant Community Church. Sixty people attended the event and were served by 20 people. At least some of the guests were, anyway.

The guests – who included three state legislators – sat at tables of 10 and drew strips of paper from hats that told them their fate. A lucky few were served a first-class meal and received five-star table service. Most of the others were part of the “middle class” and ate accordingly.

One person at each table pulled out the strip and had to eat what they found in the dumpster. The pizza and fries were packed in bags that were then retrieved from the dumpster.

Saving the World by Eating out of the Bin?

ABC News
May 21
Natascha Wank

(long piece about trashpicking in Germany)

It’s shortly after midnight on a Saturday in Mainz and a good time to swing by the local Rewe supermarket for a look.

Carring (sic) a backpack, Alex (whose name has been changed for the article), a 24-year-old biology student, is on his way to the store. The night is cold and the stars are shining.

Alex is a dumpster diver: Someone who doesn’t walk through the front entrance to the supermarket, but whose patch of turf is out back where the trash cans are kept. Their hauls can include salad with wilted leaves, dried-out bread or cookies in damaged packages — everything that shoppers inside the supermarket would no longer buy.

Busk Break: Gorgeous Doom’s Dumpster-Diving Ditty

May 14
Mountain Xpress
Steve Shanafelt

New Orleans-based band Gorgeous Doom have been busking downtown in advance of their performance at BoBo Gallery on Monday, May 17. We were lucky enough to catch the trio version of the group trying out some new material across the street from Pritchard Park. This song doesn’t appear to have a title yet, but we do know the basic theme. According to banjo-playing singer Josh Cole, the song is about “eating out of the dumpster.”

You can watch this at the link.

CU Bans Dumpster Diving University Police Say ‘Divers’ Confronting Students A Major Issue

Russell Haythorn
May 10
Boulder
ABC7 News

BOULDER, Colo. — This is the time of year when college students start moving out for the summer, leaving behind an array of junk, or in some eyes, treasures, ranging from clothes, to lamps, to furniture. There’s even an occasional computer left behind.

But police at CU Boulder have a warning before you “dive” into that Dumpster: do it, and face a fine of up to $1,000.

Police say it’s no longer acceptable to rummage through someone else’s trash. That’s because there were so many Dumpster divers on campus last year, some students were actually afraid to go outside and throw stuff away.

Police also had a problem with non-students starting Dumpster fires.

What is a trash bin? How do we define that lately?

Well, big metal structure lined with filth. That works for starters.

Into which employees put things that have become defined as useless.

Food that was salable five minutes previously. Advertising displays that aren’t doing the job any more.

Shabby this, shabby that. And food.

Lots of food.

Masses of pasta delights, inundated with cheap vegetable oil. Out of date fried chicken, just recently.

Peppers drying out. Potatoes with sprouts.

And meat. But that tends to be dealt with otherwise. The rendering truck gets that.

It’s a fine art, being a trashpicker. Yeah, lots of bacteria in the vicinity. The best bins are ones you can watch.

Back when I lived by the trash bins, people would line up in the alley for up to 45 minutes, waiting, like so many hungry stray dogs. Waiting for the delivery.

Those Freegans are right in saying you should have rules. You should be polite, and you should not throw stuff around. You definitely should not intimidate the deliverers.

But it can get rough, it did sometimes, even in our little town here. I did know a guy who set teh Dumpster on fire once. He had problems. And the delivery was late.

Now he’s late. So it goes.

I think it is so weird that there is trash, that anything is trash. What terrible planning on all of our parts, that such a concept exists. Not to mention that it exists to the point where people make an entire living out of trashpicking, and have these fearful relationships with the people who throw away the “trash.” Something badly wrong there.

 

Grandmomma’s Last Wish

Best Health Insurance :Grandmomma’s Last Wish

http://www.jxyc54.net/2010/03/best-health-insurance-grandmomma%E2%80%99s-last-wish.html

Morticia Jackson knew that she was going to die someday. About six months prior to her demise, she walked into the office of Matt Lockard, a California Health Insurance agent, to buy a Final Expense life insurance policy, with her family in mind. Her family wasn’t so typical, but her gesture will not soon be forgotten.

The homeless population in and around Los Angeles knew her only as “Grandmomma” as she preferred to be called. But Morticia Jackson was no mere ancient crone who’d once had a traditional family. A wealthy woman, her last relative, a 62-year-old grand-niece, had preceded her in death some six years before, when Morticia had already achieved the venerable age of 105. That’s when the very old woman, still in excellent health, decided to volunteer to help the homeless. No mere bag lady, she brought bags of food and clothing to the numerous shelters, making the rounds. She also cooked meals and scrubbed floors, and referred to this last stage of her life as “my exciting new career.”

“Don’t you have a family?” she’d often be asked.

“Nope,” she’d reply, “I did. They’re dead.”

 

Massachusetts Hates on the Homeless

Massachusetts Hates on Homeless Families

http://homelessness.change.org/blog/view/massachusetts_hates_on_homeless_families

by Josie Raymond

Starting April 1, Massachusetts will deny shelter to homeless families through a number of draconian new rules. If families have been evicted or left public housing “without good cause” in the last three years, they’re out. If they have earned above the poverty level for three straight months, they’re out (the current rule is six months). If they don’t work 30 hours per week and save 30 percent of their income, they’re out. If they are absent from a shelter for two nights in a row, they’re out. If a family’s only children are between 18 and 21 and aren’t disabled or in high school, they’re out.

Massachusetts is sheltering more families than ever before this month, 2,700 in all, which makes it a strange time to introduce regulations limiting who can get shelter. The rules will save the state an infinitesimal amount of money over the next two years — $11 million out of a $28 billion budget — 0.0004 percent. A bigger goal is to push families out of the state’s 59 shelters so that families who’ve been waiting in motels paid for by the state (about 25 percent of all the homeless families) can move in. (Does no one see the coming cycle of being pushed out of shelters, struggling, winding up in motels and then back in shelters?)

In what was either a serious judgment lapse or a display of her naivete, the commissioner of the Department of Transitional Assistance, Julia E. Kehoe, told the Boston Globe, “Given our limited resources, we wanted to encourage people to find housing or stay where they are, rather than encouraging them to come into the system.” I assure you, Ms. Kehoe, no one comes to a shelter because it sounds like fun.

I suppose I should add something to this, but as is so often the case, commenting on a homelessness.change.org article is a bit above my pay grade. I am only the signpost. Good work as always, peoples.

 
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