Wednesday Open Thread: Combatting Homelessness

It's Day 360 of the Year 2018 CE, the 52nd and last Wednesday of the year
So, December 26, 2018 - for my reference if nothing else.


Hogar



First, some History for the History buffs
Forty-six years ago, as part of Operation Linebacker II, the US bombed the shit our of a residential and shopping neighborhood named Kham Thien in Hanoi. Pretty much the whole neighborhood, including over 2,000 homes was destroyed. The US had taken an xmas holiday from its truly earth shattering bombing campaign in Hanoi and Haiphong, which had lured some of Hanoi's citizens back to the city, but they were still only able to kill roughly 278 civilians and injure barely 290 more in the post xmas raid on this civilian population center. That was a pretty miserable return on investment for the magnitude of the attack, the tonnage of bombs dropped and the loss of two B-52s. Two thousand lousy residences and under 300 civilians killed, a total failure as these things go. Assorted nasty furriners and murrikan traitors called this a war crime, but it clerly wasn't. If it were, then every time the US military intentionally bombed, shelled or otherwise intentionally attacked civilian targets, civilians, civilian neighborhoods, civilian infrastructure like schools and hospitals, shelters like the Amiriyah shelter in Iraq that G.H.W. Bush, a veritable saint, had bombed in Iran, and arguably things like civilian power grids, water and sanitation facilities and the like would be a war crime too. That's simply ridiculous. That would mean that the US has committed thousands upon thousands of them, for this is very much a longstanding favorite US "military" tactic. That cannot possibly be a war crime, for we are the shining city upon the hill

Onward
Because we destroyed far more residences than the number of civilians we slaughtered, the above raid did create homelessness, but that isn't what this is all about. Our economic system probably creates as many or more homeless here at home in a day. This is taking some sort of toll on the cities in which these people find themselves. The cities and pundits all tell us so, though I doubt that it is even remotely of the nature and magnitude of the toll that it takes on the homeless themselves. Many cities have tried to find some sort of solution, one of the most popular being one-way bus tickets to somewhere else, though seizing all of their possessions so that they die of starvation and exposure is also very popular. Some, still rare, cities, however, are actually trying to help these people, which is what I plan on discussing here.

Oakland, CA is providing some sort of temporary housing for at least some of the city's homeless population. These are "houses" (as opposed to warehouses such as the typical institutional style shelter) that are arranged in small "villages". Oakland is using converted Tuff Sheds (see articles here: https://www.mercurynews.com/2018/05/08/homeless-greet-new-tuff-sheds-wit...
and here: https://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2018/10/02/oakland-unveils-tuff-shed-v... ) and has had some limited successes in the goal of homeless persons using these "houses" as a stepping stone to permanent housing and even jobs. (It does seem to me that any unemployed person won't have "permanent housing" for long it they don't land some sort of gig shortly after they get the house, but what do I know.)
San Jose, CA has a much publicized and much delayed plan to create similar villages using custom manufactured "Tiny Homes". It has been long in process and often in the news, but, as far as I can tell has yet to approve a single locale for such a village. I am writing this on the 12th, however, and they may well have done so by the time it is published, insofar as they are meeting to approve (or disapprove) the first such locales on the 18th. (See article here: https://www.mercurynews.com/2018/12/10/see-san-joses-new-tiny-homes-for-... ).
Oakland is also firing up another program of a different but very important type. They have instituted a program to try to prevent at least some homelessness by intervening on behalf of those about to become homeless or who are very likely to become homeless. This is very important, because homelessness is a trap and the start of a vicious circle. Finding or even holding a job is not merely more difficult, but much, much more difficult. In fact, everything about, modern life is a great deal harder. Not just employment and dealing with bureaucracies, but things like health. Homelessness and ill health go hand in hand, especially for those whose homelessness was caused by ill health. Once one is there, it only gets worse and worse, because we have no meaningful health care system, only a medical profits sharing and distribution system. This is pretty basic. There once was a time when everybody knew that there were certain minimum basic necessities of life, hell, they were even taught in schools. Food, clothing and what? Think hard now - wasn't number 3 "shelter"? If you could survive as a hunter-gatherer, a cave could qualify as shelter, but not in this day and age, and less so under a bridge or freeway overpass. Shelter is a basic necessity of life and programs to maintain people in the homes that they are in is much easier than getting them new ones once they have lost those and begun the downward spiral.

This article Oakland’s plan to battle homelessness: Stop it before it starts is from the December 3, 2018 Christian Science Monitor and can be found on this page: https://www.csmonitor.com/Daily/2018/20181203?cmpid=ema:ddp:20181203&id=... as the third article. It notes that the Keep Oakland Housed program is a

$9 million, four-year pilot initiative, funded by the San Francisco Foundation and Kaiser Permanente, offers emergency financial assistance, supportive services, and legal representation to low-income tenants on the brink of eviction.

The article further notes that:

The city joined with Bay Area Community Services, Catholic Charities of the East Bay, and East Bay Community Law Center to create the program. Residents who earn 50 percent or less of the area’s median income can qualify for assistance – a threshold of $40,700 for one person or $58,100 for a family of four – and receive as much as $7,000 in aid. Case managers disburse the money straight to landlords or third-party vendors to cover a tenant’s lapsed payments on rent, utility bills, or other expenses.

and that:

Case managers in Oakland work with tenants to organize their household budgets and apply for assistance to lower their utility and phone bills. For residents in need of mental health or substance abuse counseling, job training, or education planning, the program provides in-house resources and referrals to other agencies.

“We don’t want to just be check writers,” Erickson says. “There’s usually a lot more going on, and without addressing those things, people can continue to struggle.”

.

Only time will tell how well this will work in Oakland, or in other cities like San Francisco, New York and Chicago that are experimenting with similar programs, but even a small success will really be a large success for those needing these programs to stay housed. While we await those results, we should consider being pro-active and lobbying for similar programs in the cities of our residence. We could maybe even push for something national along these lines, a couple of percent of the annual budget allocated to slaughtering foreign persons who refuse to take orders from our government and our corporations.

Photo by Daniel Lobo is public domain

Its an open thread so have at it. The floor is yours
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detroitmechworks's picture

Is just creating another spot for the pigs to Fish for "Criminals."

Because everybody knows exactly what those Villages will be like if run by the California Bureaucracy. No Drugs, no Sex, No Fun, and a good amount of mandatory exercise maintaining the camp. and if they can make a profit off selling your kids to somebody desperate, they will.

Because this might get you a job. And remember, Work makes you Free.

Of course, this is all exaggeration, as Public Officals are the most trustworthy in the world, and surely would not try to round up all the homeless into an nicely controlled area where they can be monitored, regulated and eliminated.

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I do not pretend I know what I do not know.

@detroitmechworks @detroitmechworks

occurred in California under a Democratic Mayor.

(For a lurker or two who may not have caught your reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arbeit_macht_frei

ETA:
Oakland, California: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupy_Oakland

Boston, Massachusetts--the most Democratic city in what some claim is the most Democratic state in the USA. https://www.occupyboston.org/2011/10/11/boston-police-brutally-assault-o...

Now that I think about it, all the worst instances occurred in cities headed by a Democratic Mayor, from Boston, MA to Portland, OR. (Not saying anything about NYC, because, if Bloomberg cannot figure out what he is politically, neither can I.)

I remember posting with a guy who assured me that nothing would happen in Portland because the Mayor was a good guy. At some point, he posted "I was wrong," with a link to a story about some horror in Portland.

I don't know if this was the link, but it was the first I found.https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-protests/portland-police-arrest-o...

And, fwiw:

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/nov/25/shockin...

https://www.cnn.com/2012/12/26/us/fbi-occupy/index.html

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/dec/29/fbi-coordinated-cr...

http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/339723

Sorry. This started because of California's homeless problem. I guess I got carried away. However, the subject of homeless people in this country is not entirely separate from how Democratic administrations, from Obama to Menino, reacted to Occupy.

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enhydra lutris's picture

@HenryAWallace
It is definitely true that Dems can't be presumed to be more supportive or humans or anything else than Rs. I don't really expect much out of the villages except a few successes which will be broadcast to the skies. The Oakland prevention program will, I think, do some good, but it is funding dependent and could end at any moment. It already has kept some folks in their existing homes and off of the street by providing bridge funding to make up for their lack of reserves, so now they will be safely housed until their next crisis.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

@enhydra lutris

Utah once created some housing units for the homeless. The rationale was that it was less expensive to house people than to have them homeless. But, as a society, we are so punitive that we'd rather pay more and keep them homeless.

What I see as bottom line disgusting about us, as a society? We KNOW we have homeless people, including school kids, who have no place to go to the bathroom or to clean up. Yet, we do not even create places with pay toilets, pay showers and a maybe some pay laundry facilities. Some homeless people started cleaning up at a sink in area of a local health center where patients wait to be called in to an examining room. So, the health center put a lock on the door.

Even thinking about it makes me choke back tears. Imagine how the homeless feel about it.

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enhydra lutris's picture

@detroitmechworks
that the villages are simply voluntary "camps", especially if they have curfews, which I believe the Oakland one does. This is especially true given the nature of policing, at lest historically, in Oakland. Nonetheless, it appears that at least some are eager to get into them, though many are ambivalent and others are not at all interested. I suspect that perhaps those just falling into homelessness are the ones most willing to give them a shot. Oakland definitely has a "no alcohol or drugs" rule, which is a bit bizarre since booze is legal elsewhere, as is pot.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

detroitmechworks's picture

@enhydra lutris policy for anybody not married under the strictest legal definition of the term. Also bet that all males are separated from children "For the children's protection."

Going down the list of standard fuckovers that occur...

Willing to bet your belongings are taken from you every night, and god forbid you keep any cash on you, because it won't be there the next night.

Mandatory public showers every night. For both Genders (And if you identify as a different one, be prepared to make a LOT of noise or sit down, shut up and get in line), and if you object you are clearly a diseased individual who prefers being filthy. (I will not mention that you are of course monitored in and out of the shower. Because all of the officials involved are of course pure of soul and would never THINK to use their power for prurient interest.)

Mandatory Bible study. (Maybe not for the state ones, but willing to bet SOME kind of "Life Skills" course will be mandatory. Just state run religion of course, just follow the rules and you will be redeemed...)

Mandatory Submissiveness training. (Also known as "Employability." The class is pretty much "How to Kowtow 101" Ask Any Chinese peasant during any of their dynasties is very familiar with this kind of behavior and expectation.)

Mandatory Helplessness. (Carry a knife? Not any more you don't. Don't care if it's a tool. You'll use our plastic and like it. Same with any skills or non-approved building. We have RULES round here, you can't make things better without approval.)

Of course, that's all OLD school stuff. I fully expect some brand new fuckovers.

Free Alexa in every hovel. (The Better to monitor you with.)
Free Cell Phone. (So your new master can contact you when they need you.)
Free Shuttle to Amazon Warehouse Job. (Because they're HELPING the homeless, donchaknow?)

You get the idea. Every single restriction will be sold as a giveaway to the homeless, stoking resentment against them while simultaneously reducing their freedoms. All while the Neo-Liberal Shithead Dems and Rethugs smile and claim moral superiority.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1J1Yz_RNzJ4]

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I do not pretend I know what I do not know.

Deja's picture

@detroitmechworks
I've heard stories of teen males being separated from their moms and forced to stay, unaccompanied, with grown men at "shelters". Strangers.

When my son and I stayed a few miserable days at a domestic violence shelter, they provided babysitting only when you were applying for public assistance and during those god awful classes they force you to take. Not if you had a job. You had to take your kids to work or find someone to watch them.

We were also required to apply for public assistance and required to hand that assistance over to the shelter. Not just food stamps, but cash assistance as well.

I wonder how many homeless shelters do the same.

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detroitmechworks's picture

@Deja At least with the Churches they're upfront about it.

When it comes to private industry... it gets ugly. And if the net cost of housing and feeding a homeless person is LESS than they would get on assistance, forcing them to apply for assistance results in net profit.

I of course will not sully the reputation of such fine institutions by suggesting that pimps often target them for recruitment due to the relative desperate conditions of the occupants. Because as we all know sex is never a factor in any of these things.

Short version: I trust the honest slavers more than the sneaky ones.

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enhydra lutris's picture

@Deja
that there will be some "rent" at the San Jose mini homes. None is referenced for the Oakland ones.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

enhydra lutris's picture

@detroitmechworks
I think that the Oakland ones have 2 sleeping cubicles per. Folks do get to keep possessions are presumably aren't frisked, and no mandatory bible study I'm sure. lso don't think there is alexa, cell phones, etc. There may be shuttles, dunno, or transit vouchers, also dunno.
I have even less info on the San Jose proposal.

The info on the San Jose and Oakland "villages' was included mostly for completeness. What got my attention was the program to try to prevent folks from becoming homeless, which I found to be a bit creative.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

mimi's picture

work that is not temporary is hard to find and get. What you earn is not enough to pay the rent for a single room for yourself (something that should be a basic human right). You have to share and get a roommate, who might be as insecure in his income, mental health challenged or damaged, and poof you have two people flipping out and become homeless both.

If you have no support from nobody, you have no home. It is as simple and bad as that.

No excuses accepted and no mercy with a system that can't prevent their own population from getting homeless. Period.

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enhydra lutris's picture

@mimi
Oakland program aimed and prevention will no doubt help some, it already has. A huge swath of the populace has no reserves, but continues to just get along. A sudden major expense or short, temporary hiatus in their income stream can put them on the street, and that program can keep those people in their existing housing long enough to recover.

The villages are a different matter. Unless the occupants can score a decent job somehow, quickly, I don't see them doing a whole lot except a short term slight mitigation of suffering for their occupants, especially the San Jose program which will actually be charging rent.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

mimi's picture

@enhydra lutris
much anger in me. Don't take me seriously on it.

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Azazello's picture

and Happy Boxing Day.
Big news for GIMPS fans, We have a new prime!

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We wanted decent healthcare, a living wage and free college.
The Democrats gave us Biden and war instead.

enhydra lutris's picture

@Azazello
days I have to find out how the hell folks are doing all of this computational stuff on GPUs.
Happy boxing day to you too.
Have a great one.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

Granma's picture

Makes good sense IMO. I think that roommate rule is a mistake. Allowing roommates is one thing. Forcing them is stupid. Putting 2 strangers who are stressed to the max in a tiny space together seems to me a recipe for more stress. Sheesh! College kids in dorms struggle with roommate problems.

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enhydra lutris's picture

@Granma
areas are separate, unless some crash pads I remember living in for a while.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

Seems odd to me the municipalities are not providing food and shelter for the poor. Private donations are great, but should be matching city outlays. If all the cities can provide are cops and jails, maybe they have too much of both. Invest in secure streets by giving people safe places to stay. Not doghouses in cages. Sheesh.

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enhydra lutris's picture

@QMS
but it appears that it mostly isn't.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

mhagle's picture

Can it merge with urban gardening in a beautiful way? The homeless being brought into a caring community?

I don't know.

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

enhydra lutris's picture

@mhagle
that raises a lot of interesting possibilities.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --