Helping Those Who Cannot Help Themselves

Mental illness is a very broad term. It can refer to anything from ADD to schizophrenia and everything in between. Many of the people who fall under this broad spectrum, in today’s world, end up on the streets at some point in their life. In a very well written, thought-provoking article Rick Jervis emphasizes that, “The mentally ill homeless are some of the hardest to reach and toughest to treat, often self-medicating with drugs and alcohol and teetering between lucidity and crippling despair.” In my mind the mentally ill portion of the homeless are looked by the general public at as “passed the point of outside help” or dangerous, or just plain crazy so no one dares get near them. I know for me growing up in a town with a large homeless population, I was never to go near or talk to any of them, especially the “crazy” ones. You see a many walking down the street talking to himself or yelling at the lamppost, chances are you will walk the other way or cross the street to avoid him. This attitude towards those who are mentally ill makes it increasingly hard for them to find help or even find a place to sleep. And rather than helping these people find places to live and gain access to medication to help their illness, we as a government are paying millions of dollars a year paying for them to essentially “be on the street.”

But why have so many mentally ill ended up on the street? It is because of the progression of the closing of mental hospitals in the late 1970s and then the slow failure of the help that was supposed to replace them. Without the hospitals and the ability to commit someone against their will, and without the easy access to medication this drove a large portion of the mentally ill to the streets. It’s been almost 50 years since this epidemic so my question is why haven’t we done anything. After reading this article I came across in USA today, I realized that there is more work being done towards a solution that I realized. Between housing first and permanent supportive housing there has been efforts and funding that has been put towards the issue. I think that this is very important because this recognition that there is a problem is the first step towards a solution. But the progress is slow, and it concerns me that it is not an issue that is at the forefront of our awareness as a society. There needs to be help provided to these people who cannot help themselves. Mental illness is a very serious issue that needs to be addressed instead of stared at. Because no one likes to stick out of a crowd and if you have a mental illness, without help, you have no chance of fitting in.

 

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/08/27/mental-health-homeless-series/14255283/

 

Murder in the Park – Dangers of Homelessness

Lisa Biagiotti contact reporter for the web series “On the Streets” tackles the subject of danger and homelessness in her newly published episode called “Murder in the Park.” She reunites with her homeless friends at Sycamore Grove Park to see if any changes have been made to their housing situation since October. As she speaks with Patricia, Hope, and Jesus, she learns that the park that they have been sleeping in was the same park where 19-year-old Kaelyn Tarin was shot dead. The three homeless citizens were promised housing by January, but nearing February they were told it would be highly unlikely. In the atmosphere that surrounds them, gaining housing would be life changing and remove them from their life threatening “home” in the park. I encourage all who read this post to watch the video series posted in the LA Times – link below. Biagiotti speaks with and for her friends when addressing the cyclical non-progressive actions that have to be taken in order to receive housing as a low-income, homeless member of society.

One aspect of her video I especially want to touch upon is the fact that even when homeless people receive their Section 8 vouchers allotted for housing, there are few places that even accept them in their city due to high rent costs. Even the social worker at the homeless shelter Hope, Patricia, and Jesus were staying in, says she can hardly afford her rent and she is a working citizen. This just highlights the concerns for the widening gap between the upper class, and the middle and lower class. How are social services supposed to help provide shelter and food for the low-income or homeless people if they can barely provide enough for themselves?

http://www.latimes.com/local/california/la-me-biagiotti-onthestreets-20151118-htmlstory.html

Drug use among homeless, prison sentencing for non-violent drug offenses

Our discussion over the Crack epidemic in the 1980s made me think about the whole issue of imprisoning those who have committed nonviolent drug offenses.  Of course, we know that someone is much more likely to become homeless when the get out of prison (much thanks to our so called “correctional” facilities).  I read that almost 2 million people are currently imprisoned for nonviolent drug offenses.  This is where a large problem exists within our correctional system.  We treat everyone who has committed a crime, no matter what that may be, as if they need to be banned from society and punished, rather than rehabilitated.

From a liberal mindset, one might say that to address this issue, we should simply reduce the sentencing for these crimes, or even make drug use legal.  It would reduce prison populations, and possibly help control drug cartels.  However, what might be the ramifications for this?  Would drug use increase if we reduced fines and sentencing?  Do we have any country that we can use as a model?  Would this model be relative to our society?  In other words, could we say that if a smaller, less developed country legalized drugs and benefited from it, could we rightfully assume that it would help us?  I think its important to look at the other side of the spectrum when discussing issues such as this.

Also, I hope that we can also discuss the way prisons operate and are organized.  I read that the cost to house a prisoner is something like $30,000 a year.  Also, how are prisons “privatized?”  and how does that influence the homeless population?

Native American Poverty

We recently read a chapter from Heise about “Native Americans Who Are Poor”. I was moved by the facts that were presented about this group of people and desired for us all to have more knowledge about this particular group experiencing poverty.

So here is my attempt to provide us with some information and to see what others think about these findings.

HUD and the VA awarded $5.9 million to 26 tribes in 12 states for permanent housing for Native American Veterans experiencing homelessness in January 2016.

http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/press/press_releases_media_advisories/2016/HUDNo_16-001

 

In 2012, 1-in-4 American Indians and Alaska Natives were living in poverty. This seems astonishing to me, but also similar rates of poverty occur in black and Hispanic communities.

http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2014/06/13/1-in-4-native-americans-and-alaska-natives-are-living-in-poverty/

Issues that are identified that perpetuate poverty are the lack of education, food, and health care. The Federal government has provided funds to Native American communities in recent years. According to a former adviser of the White House on welfare issues, “It’s extremely difficult. If people aren’t integrated into American society then it’s very difficult to reach them and create the basis for economic opportunity and affluence.”

http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2014/11/27/native-americans-left-behind-in-the-economic-recovery

It seems to me that there is a historical problem with the segregation of native peoples that is still perpetuated on reservations. A disadvantage of living on a reservation is the lack of jobs and fostering of a local economy. Without the ability to work where one lives, you encounter such obstacles like the cost of transportation, accessing basic needs, and an overall unsustainable life.

I want to know, in moving forward with our assistance to vets especially with certain funds to Native Americans, what will the future look like for reservations? Are we paying enough attention to this issue? How can we incorporate this group of people into our class conversations?

Encountering the homeless

I recently went to the laundromat with my mother. She had so much laundry to do that she would rather leave the house and go to the laundromat where there are bigger machines to use.

My mother, my one year old brother, and I walked in the laundromat. It was very crowded as I assume it would be on a Saturday morning. I saw two little girls holding a leash to a big pitbull, a lady talking to herself, and a little boy running around.

I sit on the bench with my little brother, a young woman walks in with her little daughter accompanied by a gust of cigarette smoke. I inevitably start coughing and get up from the bench as I do not want my baby brother to inhale the smoke. As I’m walking away, I hear the woman yell at me “Oh hell no!!!” I look back and I see her exit the laundromat and approach the window where I am at. At this point I am by my mother. I hear her furiously scream and cussing at me, saying, “Do you want to come outside right now? I will beat you right now. You better not come out with that baby..” (this is the censored version of what she said) My mother looks at me perplexed and asks me what I did to her. I immediately defend myself knowing I did absolutely nothing wrong.

I’m thinking to myself, did I offend her in some way?  Did my coughing bother her? I was beyond confused. She would later approach us face to face and start screaming at me again. In her rant she would reveal to me that she was homeless.

I was completely shocked. I greatly sympathized for her especially since she has a little daughter to take care of. I hope she finds the help she needs, no one can progress in life if they are angry at the world. Being homeless shapes how you perceive life and how you interact with others. It’s a sad reality that many who are homeless  have anger or mental problems they have to face everyday. The woman I met was no exception. How can they help themselves..

Youth and the Streets

Saturday afternoon, I met with a representative from YouthHope, the organization I will be interning at this semester. After we finished filling out paperwork, she began to give me background on the organization and shared stories about young people that YouthHope has helped. As she went on,  the representative told me a story about a young girl whom the organization had met and helped a number of years ago. The girl, who they had come across by in Golden Gate park, was homeless and had been for many years. Her parents weren’t around, and she had no one to care for her. She explained to the representative that she had been on the streets for so long, that she did not even know her own age anymore. That information really struck me, as I could not fathom the experience of having been alone on the streets for so long, that I cannot recall my own age. The representative went on, and explained how the homeless girl had to sell her body for not only money, but also for human interaction and somewhere “safe” to sleep at night. The girl also explained how her friends, other homeless girls, had the same experiences as her. After hearing this story, I couldn’t help but be even more motivated  to volunteer for an organization that helps youth. I would never want to be in the situation that many homeless youth are in, and I realize that I am very privileged to have a home, and the many other things that I take for granted. I am very much looking forward in interning for YouthHope.

Social Support: Loss of Family

Last week at my internship I met one of my case manager’s clients I had been completing paperwork for. I formed the client’s rental packet to assist for the January’s rent, so I was surprised that the client visited us a second time in a month. This client was a single mother of three toddlers with difficult family burdens. When she described her situation and why she was back asking for Redlands Family Services to pay a second month of rent, I wanted to give her the world. She was bright, intelligent, and was her family’s punching bag for all baggage and events that occur within the family. With no one to rely on, she was able to rely on our services. This made me think of the loss of family that some people face that leads them to homelessness. I typically think of death as the tragedy that causes the homelessness, along with other factors, but this time I thought about loss of family from a different perspective. What if the loss of family wasn’t physical but emotional? They are not dead, but emotionally you find yourself unable to connect or feel loved by your family, an outcast essentially. This too, is the type of loss people can face that can lead to financial struggle, emotional instability, and depression/anxiety.

I dwelled on this aspect of family life for a while with my case manager. We discussed how it would feel to be in her shoes. Being kicked down, when you believe things will get better, and having family members tell you “you have failed”. How would I react? Would I have others to rely on? These types of hypothetical questions are often dangerous to think about, but I couldn’t help but reflect on what would happen. I also wonder how many of those who have lost family, have lost family due to death or due to the families unwillingness to help. This emphasizes just how deep the boxes we categorize homelessness as really are in our Hunger and Homelessness course. The main point: everyone is in need of social support.

Minneapolis: All Emergency Homeless Shelters must be in Places of Worship

While looking through the Minneapolis newspaper website, The Star Tribune, an interesting article caught my attention from 2015. This article explains an odd zoning ordinance that mandates all emergency homeless shelters to be located in churches, mosques, temples, or other places of worship. In Minneapolis, under 1995 zoning rules, emergency homeless shelters must be located in a place of worship, except a small area downtown where emergency shelters can operate independently. This odd zoning ordinance was originally in place to allow emergency homeless shelters to be out of sight. While Minneapolis is known for having a church on nearly every corner, the amount of the homeless was rising and out growing the church basements the emergency homeless shelters were allotted. In 2015 this zoning ordinance was finally being reevaluated however I am unsure whether there has been an outcome yet.

It is important to note that often times religious organizations will let aid organizations or in this case emergency homeless shelters use rent out or use their facilities basements for no cost and often the churches do not fund these aid organizations.

With this zoning ordinance explained I began to imagine myself as a homeless person in Minneapolis in the dead of winter, which usually gets down to the negative twenties or below, and I need a place not only to sleep but to be during the day so I do no freeze to death. Now I also imagine I have only one choice to spend the day and night in a Lutheran church basement because that is where the nearest available emergency homeless shelter is located. If I do not feel comfortable associating with the Lutheran religion, let alone being in the church, I am out of luck. This zoning ordinance is very strange and puts many individuals in uncomfortable situations.

 

Has anybody else heard of any other zoning ordinances similar to this?

Heres the link to the 2015 article!

http://www.startribune.com/minneapolis-may-free-homeless-shelters-from-worship-spaces/292035401/

Homeless Count Report

For my homeless count report I looked at the Los Angeles Homeless Count Report of 2015. The 2015 Los Angeles Homeless Count, led by the LA Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA), is the largest in the country. 5,500 volunteers participated in the 2015 count. There are four components of the count.

First there is the street count, where they count the unsheltered population. Then there is the shelter count, where they count the homeless population in emergency shelters, transitional housing, safe havens, and vouchered hotels/motels. Thirdly, there is a demographic survey that gives a sample of unsheltered homeless individuals to better understand the characteristics and experiences of homeless persons. Lastly, there is a youth count to better understand and identify homeless youth. LAHSA’s roles and responsibilities to conduct the count included developing the demographic survey in collaboration with the community, managing and completing the sheltered and unsheltered counts, assessing inclusion of youth count data in overall estimates, and reviewing and completing the final analysis of the results and preparing reports. The Carolina Survey Research Lab also collaborated with the LAHSA. They provided guidance and direction in methodology and data collection processes, analyzing initial data from the four Count components, and produce estimates and preliminary results.

 

Click to access HC2015CommissionPresentation.pdf

Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner

Compared to my everyday routine, today was an early morning. Being a college student I typically roll out of bed around 8:45-9:00 to get to my 9:30 class, although I realize this is unrealistic in the real world currently in my life this is my reality. Today was an earlier morning than normal because I woke up at 7:00 to be at my internship at Redlands Family Services by 8:00 AM.

I had to duty of preparing and serving breakfast to the people who would arrive at 9:00. I helped prepare pancakes, potatoes as well as setting out bagels and numerous options for drinks. When the people arrived to eat they would all sign in and then come to be served. Unlike most days there were many children because today there was no school so the food went fast. Every person I gave food to were very thankful for what they were receiving, which helped make my early wake up call much more rewarding.

Although Redlands Family Service is typically only for people who are registered with them and not a walk in help sort of service, anyone including the homeless are allowed to come in for breakfast and dinner. Today there were no random walk ins, but maybe the next time I volunteer and help with breakfast there will be.

The second task I took for the day was to organize the weekly breakfast, lunch and dinner bags. These are bags of groceries for families who need emergency help. One interesting thing I learned while doing this was how they like to bag the food in the same grocery bags. For example with one grouping of food use all Vons bags and another can be Albertsons bags. At first I did not understand the point of this and then it was explained to me that they organize the food in this way so when the parents go home the children can believe there parents went to the grocery store to buy those products and not that they got them for free.