Los Angeles Accused of Criminalizing Homelessness
LOS ANGELES - Two major advocacy groups for the homeless on Tuesday ranked Los Angeles as the "meanest" city in the United States, citing a Skid Row police crackdown they say has criminalized poverty and homelessness there.
L.A.'s so-called Safer City Initiative was singled out in the groups' report as the most egregious example of policies and practices nationwide that essentially punish people for failing to have a roof over their heads.
Others include making it illegal to sleep, sit or store personal belongings on sidewalks and other public spaces; prohibitions against panhandling or begging; and selective enforcement of petty offenses like jaywalking and loitering.
Such measures are widespread in the face of a deep economic recession and foreclosure crisis that have increased homelessness over the past two years, according to the National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty and the National Coalition for the Homeless.
Their report examined laws and practices in 273 cities across the country, with Los Angeles topping the list of the 10 "meanest cities" for what the study called inhumane treatment of homeless. A previous report, issued in early 2006 before the crackdown began, ranked L.A. as the 18th meanest.
According to "Homes Not Handcuffs: The Criminalization of Homelessness
in U.S. Cities," the 10 Meanest Cities in 2009 are:
1. Los Angeles
2. St. Petersburg, FL
3. Orlando, FL
4. Atlanta, GA
5. Gainesville, FL
6. Kalamazoo, MI
7. San Francisco
8. Honolulu, HI
9. Bradenton, FL
10. Berkeley
Under the Safer City effort, thousands of L.A.'s most destitute residents have been targeted for harsh police enforcement, routinely receiving tickets for minor infractions such as the failure to obey crossing signals.
As a result, the study says, many are jailed and end up with a criminal record that makes it more difficult for them to find a job or gain access to housing.
A spokesman for Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa issued a statement dismissing the report as "short-sighted and misleading."
Los Angeles officials have touted their Safer City effort for sharply curbing serious crime in Skid Row, a 50-block downtown area inhabited by the biggest concentration of homeless people in the country. "The city's first priority is to protect our most vulnerable residents from violent crime," the mayor's statement said.
But homeless advocates say a promised strategy to ease homelessness there, including new housing and services to go with the Skid Row cleanup, have largely failed to materialize.
An estimated 40,000 people live on the streets, in abandoned buildings or in temporary shelters throughout Los Angeles, more than 5,000 of them in Skid Row. Another 8,000 make their home in that area's short-term residential hotels, or flop houses as they were once called.
Becky Dennison, co-director of the Los Angeles Community Action Network, said the homeless population in Los Angeles has ballooned due to a lack of affordable housing, a high poverty rate and "long-standing lack of local resources."
Tuesday's report cited a 2007 University of California study that found L.A. was spending $6 million a year to pay for the 50 extra police officers who patrol Skid Row while budgeting just $5.7 million for homeless services.
By comparison, Dennison said, New York City has a "right to shelter" policy and invests about $200 million a year in housing and other services for the needy, resulting in a homeless population half that of Los Angeles.
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62 Comments so far
Show Allminitrue and azjoe are on the right track, but the list of causes posted by poet is missing a big one that none of the posters have mentioned or may even be aware of--or are perhaps paticipants or deniers of: ... Domestic Violence
I was homeless at 16 when my mom finally left my abusive stepfather and NONE of her family (I don't claim them anymore) would help. In fact they blamed HER, she must have been a bad wife and did not follow the bible close enough. Yes, they are christian ministers and one is even a bishop, but there was no compassion there.
Many domestic violence victims have nowhere to go and even if they get in a shelter, funds are being cut, shelters are closing and staff are being cut.
As the economy worsens, so does the number of domestic violence cases as people lose their jobs and take their anger and frustration out on their partner/spouse.
Domestic violence affects all of us - some of the biggest killings lately have involved it - be careful your coworker is not a victim or you may be caught in the crossfire or the bomb or whatever way the abuser decides to "control" their subject.
We may be going backwards to the 18th/19th c. but I propose we are going further, to feudal times where only rich owned land and the rest worked it--the land grab, I mean subprime/real estate boondoggle is pushing us there. We will all be "homeless" if it's not stopped.
...
Those who forget history are doomed to repeat it--the French Revolution could be needed again, only everywhere this time.
This is everyone's problem.
Fraud complaint has been sent the California Attorney General at
http://ag.ca.gov/bmfea/reporting.php
Hosing the Homeless and The meanest cities in America
Posted at the "Justice Is Homeless" blog
http://homelessjustice.blogspot.com/
Excerpts from the above blog:
There are a few things that do not appear to be known by the public and or
because the news media has not "connected the dots'. There are some homeless
advocates (such as myself) that charge San Francisco has used this Homeless
Connect program for spin control, while criminalizing and abusing the
homeless for profit, in what appears to be a fraudulent manner.
Fraudulent, because San Francisco accepts Federal money from HUD to
"help the homeless". While passing laws to make it a crime to be homeless.
Thus reducing the general assistance rolls by over 70% and saving millions
of dollars in the process. Those that could not be chased out of town with
such constitutional violations of their civil rights have been harassed as
well.
The San Francisco Chronicle newspaper ran a story that stated, "general assistance rolls for the homeless have been slashed by 73 percent -...in a story titled,
About 800 homeless move inside with Care Not Cash
Monday, May 2, 2005 San Francisco Chronicle
By Kevin Fagan, Chronicle Staff Writer Page B1
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2005/05/02/BAGO2CIGMB1.DTL
Other cities have been forced to pass laws against
homelessness to divert the onslaught of those fleeing
places like San Francisco and Sonoma County.
This is explained in a Press Democrat newspaper article,
Please note that "strict panhandling and camping ordinances"
is a "euphemism" for "homeless criminalization laws".
(A euphemism is a substitution of an agreeable or less offensive expression
in place of one that may offend or suggest something unpleasant).
In reference, the Press Democrat newspaper article is titled;
UKIAH'S TRANSIENTS VANISH:
CITY'S NEW ORDINANCES BARRING PANHANDLING,
ILLEGAL CAMPING VIRTUALLY CLEAR THE STREETS,
Published on March 5, 2005, The Press Democrat,
BYLINE: GLENDA ANDERSON PAGE: B1
You can reach Staff Writer Glenda Anderson
at 707-642-6473 or ganderson (at) pressdemocrat. (dot) com
Quotes (excerpts), from the PD article;
Some of the transients interviewed said
they'd come to Ukiah from Santa Rosa, San
Francisco and Eureka, which already had strict
panhandling and camping ordinances, Taylor said.
..... next quote from the same article......
....I used their ordinances as examples for our
new ordinances, (in the city of Ukiah)'' he said.
..... next quote from the same article......
....I am shocked by this unprofessional abuse of
power. Where do we go? We're not cockroaches,''
said Julie Bell, a 34-year-old Army veteran who
lived in the Ukiah homeless shelter and,
briefly, outside, before moving into a motel.
.... next quote from the same article ...
First-time offenders can receive a citation
for an infraction, punishable by a fine of up
to $300. Repeat offenders can be charged with a
misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of up to $500
or jail time.
End of excerpts from the Press Democrat newspaper.
..............
Gavin Newsom is the mayor of San Francisco where the
"Project Homeless Connect Program", that many major
American cities have patterned their homeless services after.
But I am unaware of the other cities hosing the
homeless to make money.
To clarify, the right hand usually does not know
what the right hand is doing". The people in Project Connect
usually do not see the connection of how they are being
used and "played" with regard to "political spin".
At this time, I am unaware of any other cities using this next
tactic with the homeless. I am not even sure if it is still being
used in San Francisco. But it was video taped and posted on Youtube.
Video: Posted at YouTube
How San Francisco really deals with the homeless
This Youtube video is of a San Francisco city truck with a water-cannon
mounted on the front of it, housing down a homeless man. It is posted at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dkfLFPxIVQU
End of excerpts from the blog titled;
Hosing the Homeless and The meanest cities in America
Posted at the "Justice Is Homeless" blog
http://homelessjustice.blogspot.com/
--
--
...-- End Of Forwarded Message -----
Tom Krohmer
Environmental Technologist
http://toxicreverend.blogspot.com/
aka
The Toxic Reverend
http://www.myspace.com/toxicreverend
aka
Justice Is Homeless
http://www.myspace.com/justiceishomeless
Database lists illnesses with toxic chemicals
that can cause them is now linked in with a
review and comments at :>
http://people.tribe.net/toxicreverend
These days I sometimes have "senior moments" and forget some aspects of my time on this sphere, but I do recall hitchhiking in my youth in the Midwest, ending up after dark without a ride in a town that had a jail, and the guy sweeping it out let me stay the night. There were no other prisoners.
By today's standards, quaint, but true. That jail had probably been built in the Prohibition 30s. I wish I could recall the name of the town. And I never did get that sweeper's name.
-30-
Only humans can criminalize humanity.
There isn't any real history of homelessness when the land belonged to the Tribes. Hung out with the homeless in my free time when I lived in Seattle. Knew most of them where I lived in the downtown area.
I'd verbally chew out someone if they started giving their grief to a homeless friend of mine in my presence acting as if they were all better than them as if they couldn't be be homeless one day.
I was getting ready to make my journey to various Rez's at that time so I left Seattle then. Return eventually & do some car camping in the city. Hanging out with the homeless again when I wasn't playing music.
Met a Indian friend from Canada who was homeless. He started coming around me when I was playing music with his spirit/dream catcher. Let him sleep in the front seat of the car while I took the back seat. Eventually found a room in a basement to rent that was cheap for Seattle & no big deposit required.
He got back together with his wife & they found a real small travel trailer to rent.
Life is good. What an experience! It's always best to forgive.
Back then, human beings were actually considered to be part of a community, as radical as that idea sounds now. This notion of the "individual", who must be completely self-reliant in all matters and should be absolutely ashamed to need help, could very well be the root cause of all the problems in American society.
LA could sell its public transit system to Wall St for a few quick bucks. Then it could afford to buy a giant vacuum to suck all the homeless down into the sewer.
I am homeless and disabled in Ventura, CA. I receive a VA Pension of $985mo, not enough to put a roof over me, eat and pay bills. I went to the Post Office yesterday and found out that they are going to close my P.O. Box account out because I do not have a street address. I pay the $40.00yr. rent on the box that I've had for years in order to have some place of permanence for the various institutions I'm involved with to contact me. The address on my driver's liscense and CA ID is my P.O. Box. They want me to find someone to reopen my account in their name in order for me to keep it. It's bad enough to be homeless anywhere but even worse to have your nose rubbed into it as well. Criminalizing homelessness is taking place all throughout this country. They left out Portland OR. where you read in the papers there a few years ago about how the police were killing homeless there. Washington State was having there problems as well. For you Christians out there break out the Book of Revelation and take a goog hard look at it again. I'm not a religious Christian, I'm Born-Again. There's a diferrence. YOU CAN'T STOP PROPHESY !!!
If they require an address, could you just list the address of a homeless shelter, or even the VA? I don't know if that's an option. I know that many vets are homeless, so I wonder if someone at the VA could help you, as far as providing an address goes. I would guess they encounter this situation often enough, and would hope that they would know some options.
On the point of religion, I'm not sure what to say about Christianity in the US. You can't be a Christian and yet enact or support policies that directly go against Christ's teaching, like we do. Jesus was very clear about our moral responsibilities for the poor, and as a society, we have rejected these teachings. There was the parable about sharing without judgment, and sharing according to your means, about helping widowed/abandoned women and their children, and about the injustice of mistreating the poor, weak and powerless. As a society, we have rejected all of these teachings. In fact, America's policies against the poor are the antithesis of Christianity, as well as the other major religions, so I really don't think there's any room for religion in this country.
Interesting that You mention that.
"In fact, America's policies against the poor are the antithesis of Christianity"
I just realized that Your sentence leads into the right direction. In such a light, the 'Antithesis of Christianity' is nothing else but the 'AntiChrist'. So for all those people who wait for the antichrist to show, or even believe it is Obama (?!), You are all way off.
The Antichrist is amongst us and its name is USA (United States of Antichrist'?).
Believe That You Can Change Your Beliefs.
For some of the snide early posters on this thread, I have news for you. Homelessness can happen to just about anyone except perhaps the top ten per cent bracket (Bernard Madoff has a home!).
When I was around 40, the last time official unemployment was around 10 per cent---1982-83, when Reagan's Fed Chief Paul Volcker was called in to raise interest rates drastically, to slow down the then-maddening inflation rate unfairly attributed to Jimmy Carter---I suddenly became homeless. There is nothing funny about it.
A year earlier I had been a City Councilman, elected. My term had run out and I had taken some unpopular positions and had a new baby and could not find a real job despite my several skills. I could no longer pay the rent and was evicted and my wife left me and I followed her to her home city so I could be near my wife and daughter and try to work things out.
Things did not work out.
It is only in a crisis that you learn who your real friends are.
I ended up living in a storage space for a year, and please allow me to tell you that even in the early 80s there was a "safety net." For example, Ohio participated in a welfare program that offered a stipend EVEN to unemployed single males, in my case of around $100 a month. No longer exists. You are on yore own, Brother.
Meanwhile, whatever weaknesses the original article here may have, it should draw attention to an increasingly serious issue that the MSM are avoiding for the most part.
Today, on paper I am worth around a fifth of a million dollars, while one cancer could render me penniless in the mere pursuit of survival in our sick society.
We have lost our Culture, which was the reciprocity between the Individual and the Group. It was based in Law thousands of years old. (When was the last time you heard the word "reciprocity"?)
We have been violated. We need to defend ourselves. Our Selves.
Where once I was a Philosopher I am now a Scavenger. I still seek, and sometimes find.
Homelessness is NOT an individual failure; it is a failure of Culture. It is as much a crime as a "war of aggression" a la Nuremburg.
Former Treasury Secretary "Hank" Paulson's annual salary while at Goldman-Sachs probably could have solved LA's homeless "problem" for example.
Either you tax the rich to redistribute income or you end up with NO Democracy, an Oligarchy, Plutocracy, or something similar in this new electronic digital age of instant "information"...
It is getting harder to have a conscience when it is needed more than ever.
-30-
Thank you for sharing your story. My family came very close to being homeless about ten years ago...my parents divorced, my mother developed narcolepsy and could no longer work, and Chase Manhattan very nearly foreclosed on our home...and we've basically been scraping by at poverty level ever since.
The good thing about all this is that I've learned how to have a fulfilling life with barely any money. And that is something I would not trade for an income of millions per year.
After reading through the posts so far I'm prepared to offer a "theory" about those cities that made the "meanest" list---ignoring for the moment the likelihood that there is a lot of arbitrariness and happenstance in which cities "earned" this honor (just like most of those 10 Best Whatever lists). Assuming that these indeed are "mean" cities, there is a pattern here I think. As was said above, they are mostly cities in "nice" climates and "liberal" social environments so that they attract relatively large numbers of the homeless. But (and here comes the theory part) they are also attractive destinations for people seeking to avoid less appealing conditions in other cities and parts of the country. In this sense they are the analogs of the suburbs of post-war America, in which people were "escaping" the perceived crime and crowding of the big cities. Cities in central Florida, such as Orlando and my home city of Gainesville (2 of the "meanest"), have grown rapidly from people who have left coastal regions of Florida in search of less hurricane-prone areas.
If you're going to compare these "more attractive" cities to traditional suburban explosions, it would be useful to see how suburbanites behave in their "dream" communities. Often as not, they locate themselves in gated communities or in condominiums with "security" protections that keep out the riff-raff of those who might invade their comfy enclaves. With suburbanization actually giving way now to the "new urban" trend toward middle class residents in downtown areas, the problem of the riff-raff becomes especially pronounced in the process of "gentrification" by means of which low-income downtown areas are giving way to housing for these new urbanists. Downtown Gainesville illustrates this to a t. If you've been to the city but not in 5 or 10 years, you'll get a big surprise if you go downtown where endless medium rise condos are replacing the semi-slum housing that has previously prevailed. And the conflict between the gentrifying new urbanists and the remnants of homeless "undesirables" was dramatized a couple of years ago when a major part of the downtown plaza where many of the homeless hang out was closed just to make space for storing building materials for a very nearby condo project.
So the "theory" is that those cities are "meanest" in their treatment of the homeless which have been most attractive BOTH to homeless people seeking a place where they can survive and new urbanists seeking to solidify that "better" environment by controlling the dysfunctional (i.e. the homeless) elements in in their environment.
Thinking like a sociologist, no theory is much good if it purports to explain only one situation (Gainesville FL in this case). It should as well explain other situations like the one I recently observed in Costa Rica: the co-existence of a very attractive climate and social atmosphere for both tourists and ex-pats from other countries, and a level of perceived dysfunction reflected in an incredible amount of barbed wires and iron gates surrounding practically every house and business in the capitol city of San Jose, whose streets are littered with homeless and other victims of a society which has virtually no "welfare" system for any unfortunate victims of social dislocation.
Gainesville Florida/San Jose, Costa Rica: a thin brew of evidence for the "theory" but maybe a starting point for a direction of explanation.
While visiting Farmington, NM one winter (4 Corners- gets very cold) a community leader told me they often have intentional public disturbances in town- homeless (often Navajo) individuals who get drunk or do something to catch a cop's attention just to get a warm place to sleep for the night.
Pretty sad, if our jails might turn into the only possibility of someone not freezing to death.
"Are there no prisons? Are there no workhouses?"----Ebenezer Scrooge
Poet July 15, 2009 1:40pm
Great comment, thank you.
genie
I had my grandkids at the public playground recently when I saw two police cars boxing in an old clunker.
Three police were talking to the guy who had stopped to rest.
The car was packed full of cloths and probably everything else the guy owned.
I and my grandkids walked down to the shelter for a drink of water and parked ourselves as far as possible from the others. It wasn't a big shelter. I could hear everything.
The guy was not allowed to go until he was checked out by the people back at the station. I knew they wouldn't curse, beat, or otherwise abuse him while I was there.
When the police finally left we stayed a few more minutes. I wanted to teach my grandkids something.
This is a suspicious society. We wouldn't be so suspicious if we were not sneaky and mean ourselves.
It always has been illegal to be poor and homeless. If you are moving you are a vagrant; if you are sitting still you are loitering.
Los Angeles--"The City of the Angels"? Not really, more like Germany in 1933 when Hitler was making the rules. First you take a group of people and dehumanize them. After you vilify them you stuff them into box cars and ship them off to centers which have gates stating "Work Makes Freedom". Then you send them to the showers. After that you pull out their gold fillings and send whats left to the furnace. When you criminalize the poor and homeless you are doing the work which the corporations started and Wall Street encourages. You are beyond immorality. THESE PEOPLE ARE HUMAN BEINGS!
FEAR GOD !!!!
how can you love your neighbour when you don't have one?
Gee, you'd think that this was a NEW problem. Many of the northern cities and probably some in the south as well, have been participating in "GREY HOUND THEORAPY" for many years now. A family becomes 'homeless' and moves into a local shelter. (Since they no longer have a permanent mailing address they're taken off the voter registration list). The local shelters will usually only help for a couple of weeks, and then some well meaning organization or local government, in a magnanimous gesture supplies a 'one-way' ticket to some warmer, southern city where there may be work or better conditions. But, most of these areas still have 'vagrancy' laws which automaticly qualifies the newcomers as criminals. As the list points out, except for those hanging out around the University of Michigan, nine of the top ten are warmer climate cities. Although the north has some homelessness, the burden is carried by locations where exposure to the elements is not so deadly.
The only freedom that exists in the good ole USA is
the freedom to starve to death in the streets...
HENRY THE EIGHTH PERHAPS YOU WOULD FIND YOURSELF AGREEING
MORE WITH THE DENIZENS OF RIGHT WING SITES. YOUR OPINION OF TEXAS IS FAR DIFFERENT THEN THOSE OF US WHO HAVE VISITED
OR TRAVELED ON BUSINESS THERE. IT WAS QUITE A CULTURE SHOCK
TO SAY THE LEAST TO SEE SO MANY FOLKS WALKING AROUND ARMED!
FOR WHAT REASON?WAS A WAR GOING TO BREAK OUT? WAS MEXICO
GOING TO GO TO WAR WITH YOU. AUSTIN ONE OF THE COOLEST
CITIES IN ALL AMERICA IS LIKE AN OASIS IN A DESERT!
ALSO THE MEAN SPIRITED NESS OF YOUR JUSTICE SYSTEM
AND THE ALARMING NUMBER OF EXECUTIONS CARRIED OUT THERE
MAKE THE REST OF AMERICA SHAKE OUR HEADS IN COLLECT
SADNESS AND DISBELIEF.NOT TO MENTION THAT YOU ELECTED
KING GEORGIE 2 OVER AN INCREDIBLY GIFTED AND VISIONARY
LIKE ANN RICHARDSON. THATS OUR BEEF!
I'm from Maine, and though I've visited Texas I wouldn't want to live there. That said, the wearing of guns is not a crime and should not offend or bother anybody. Yeah, they may have elected King George II as governor, but it was the country that elected him president (at least his second term). BTY, you may find it a culture shock to walk the back woods of Maine and find how many people are also carrying guns in a state where the constitution reads that "the right of the people to bear arms shall not be questioned". I DO agree with you about the 'executions' however.
Warning! The following post contains sarkasm. For side effects consult Your dictionary.
Ordinary people never understand the underlying deeper wisdom of political power. As the result of the 2001 New York 'Powder Festival' in Manhattan, wise leaders like Cheney and Bush paved the highway to 'National Security' with a brilliant plan to alter the appearance of the most preferred immigration destination and target for envy-derivated so called 'terrorist' attacks.
Their goal was noble, sophisticated and ambitious in its nature. They implemented as quickly as the slow political process would allow them the 'Project For A New American Global Image'.
At its core the project was extraordinary. With the creation of the 'Lesser Liberty Act' an important step was initiated towards the overall goal to change the global image of the US into a place nobody would want to emmigrate to or even less so plan to assault or attack.
Carefully and intrinsically engineered financial strategies were unleashed and with the support of leading, high ranking monetary specialists like Greenspan, implemented in a smooth almost undetectable fashion in order to allow continued prosperity of the main bearers of financial responsibilities and risks.
Like true visionaries, Bush and Cheney, with the honorable support of the entire legislative including the judicial system, military and law enforcement, knew that the program that included a provision for increased transparency of the populace, would take some time to show full effect.
Their patriotic efforts are now crowned by the full funcionality of 'PNAGI'. Thanks to restless sacrifice of both mental and financial resources of the rulers we are now able to benefit from the program.
Healthcare has finally turned into 'I could health care less'. Housing has become what it always was, a luxury, that is respectfully rejected by those Americans that believe that less homeness leads to enlightenment. The jobmarket has ultimately reacted to policymakers' vision to provide income sources only for those who really want it. Thus it is clear, that whoever remains unemployed does so out of one choice to follow the higher principle of Being, which makes 'having' and 'doing' obstacle prone limitations for the Freedom of the Mind.
Witnessing how this phantastic plan shows its first results is only comparable with driving a car on the moon.
Worldwide people have come to the understanding, that their coup-trained banana republic offers more than the country with the 'Statue Of Bribery' could ever provide. Scores of uneducated workers turn around in their boats and inner tubes, as they realize that they would lose the little they know by entering the 'United States of Uneducation'. People that intended to come to the US for plastic surgery are now better off to have the job done in Bhurma or Bangla Desh.
Of course most important of all is the final diversion of US bound terrorism to other, more promising targets like Luxembourg and Liechtenstein. The tireless efforts of The Troops™ all over the planet showed the movement of United Enemy Combatants®, that it is way easier now to 'fight them over here' than 'over there'.
All in all, the foresight and wisdom of the "Greatest Führer Of All Times' (GRÖFAT) Bush, has opened a door for this country that was closed so tightly for way too long.
The letters on that door read 'Insignificance'.
May All Beings Be Blessed.
No Restrictions Or Limitations Shall Apply.
you must be very young
next year we will have 30 th universary of reganomics
George Carlin said something like:
The rich are there to enjoy all the best things in life.
The middle class are there to support the rich.
The poor are there to scare the hell out of everybody!
housing\homelessness, supported by the ownership of property and industrial economics, will be the straw that breaks the camel's back...if we cannot view the right to minimal housing as part and parcel of being alive, then the citizens will either need to unite to protect themselves from the henchmen of the landlord\banker, or begin to share housing already paid for, or the contributions to such...otherwise, they will watch each other get hauled off, residence by residence, to jail or slavery as they lose their jobs, due to economic upheaval and resource depletion, and, therefore, their ability to afford...
Remember how things work in the US:
--If you are homeless, you are often a "criminal" even if you never commit (a real) crime.
--If you are poor but not homeless, you will in many cases be homeless at one time or another, in which case see the previous item.
--If you are poor but never homeless, you deserve an award. But instead of an award, there is a good chance you too are a criminal, since statistics show that the poor are far more likely to have violated a law than the non-poor. By far the most prevalent motivation for breaking the law among the poor is to avoid total destitution and homelessness. In other words, they break the law to try to avoid being a homeless-criminal.
--If you are rich, except in rare cases, you are not a criminal regardless of how many crimes you commit. The rich very often know how to avoid getting caught, and they have plenty of money for highly qualified defense attorneys if they do get caught.
--Many rich people make some of their huge pots of money by doing things that are considered crimes in many other countires of the world. Selling health insurance policies and then refusing to pay for care is an example.
--The rich are getting richer, everyone else is getting poorer. Some formerly middle class people are falling into poverty so quickly that their heads are spinning.
--Even though it is more than ever society's fault, homelessness and poverty in general is virtually always blamed on the victim by the established institutions. There may be some sympathy for the poor from time to time, but officially the poor themselves are always to blame for poverty. For example, if a poor person (or anyone, actually) can not get a job, it's the individual's fault, even when the number of jobs available is shrinking, so that it is not mathematically possible for everyone to get a job!
I know, this stuff is very confusing and very disturbing to say the least, but what can I say? Don't expect things to make sense in countries run by right wingers.
Here is the full report, 194 pages, pdf:
http://nlchp.org/content/pubs/2009HomesNotHandcuffs1.pdf
This is another job for: The ACLU
Homeless peoples' only crime is not paying taxes to fund our wars and bailouts.
One of the reasons why Los Angeles is at the top of the list is an unofficial policy that is quite prevalent in the South & Midwest called "California Therapy." It is basically a bus ticket to Los Angeles issued to those whom should be in psych wards, or petty criminals whom the local sheriff strongly suggested leave town. Thus it is no surprise that the center of skid row in Los Angeles stands the Greyhound bus station. Making the matter worse in skid row are local Southern California municipalities (hospitals with indigent patients do so as well) unofficial practice of dumping their homeless on to skid row as well.
New York City is worse than SF. By a hundred country miles. SF feeds and overnites all homeless, men on mats on church floors, out at 5:00 a.m., but it is still shelter from the wind. NY? No. At least in Brooklyn and Manhatten where I went. I slept in Central Park, it was cool, but dangerous for naiive muggers....
As the lower middle class of yesterday slips through the sieve into the streets and finds they are lower class trash, homeless, to be spit upon, they will pine for their remotes and couches.
When the MIDDLE CLASS, slips down through cracks which have become crevasses,
Karl Marx's predictions will be manifest, and these disenfranchised classes will catalyze, rise up, and cut the throats of the Cheney's, Tillersons, and Limbaughs, and take back an entire stolen country, take back our Fields, our Meadows, our Dreams.
What % of the US population is w/o shelter, is an EXACT indicator of how far we are from Violent Revolution.
Home is where the Heart is, and my Heart beats in my chest, I was never never Homeless, I am Houseless Officer, "If you can stand up and walk away, you don't have to...," Thank You Officer, I'm leaving.
azjoe,
When those days come, I will be at your side.
stimpy, rad, we'll blow a lenyo and take over the world.
And when we are done we'll just let everyone be wild and run free.
Homeless rates are growing, spilling people on to the streets where they are harassed for sleeping. Cities bowing to those who object to having to deal humanely with reality, meaning the middle class mostly. (Oh please not in my back yard!) Limiting the number of meals served to the homeless! What, bread and water next?!
Having worked in a shelter, I find as with the population at large that there are those I like and those I don't, for various reasons. However I find that the homeless by and large are a great deal less of a drain on the environment.
How on earth are the homeless going to find "homes" when we do not allow them to? I hear say that they should be working but when the issue of actually employing them the excuses spew forth! It is well known that the longer one is homeless the less likely one will want a home and one is culturized to living on the streets or out in the open.
On the whole the homeless are a likable bunch and I've enjoyed their company. I wish the middle class could overcome their fear and distaste for the homeless and open their hearts and minds.
I just love how they say they put these policies in place to "protect the most vulnerable" people. Who is it that is more vulnerable than the homeless? It seems to me that making people who already have nothing into criminals is just adding insult to injury, as well as further injury.
God, I just hate politicians. I think they should all be kicked out of office and forced onto the streets for at least a month so they can learn just what the reality is, and to hell with their ideology. Until politicians can actually deal with REALITY in some way other than "this is what my ideology says", they will earn my disdain.
If they really wanted to do something to change this, and not just make things worse, then they should do something to get these people employment and housing. And as things get worse economically, they will only increase the homelessness. We can't keep arresting everyone for not living up to some sick and twisted ideology that only the ultra rich can live up to. It's time to start trying to be human towards each other for a change. This right wing "screw those who are already screwed" BS has got to stop. We are destroying our society with it.
I'm sure the private prison lobby would love nothing more than to have people go straight to prison on foreclosure day. Profits!
Ah, the peace, freedom and opportunity that all those terrorist countries hate us for.
For those of you who still read, see if you can find a copy of Orwell's "Down and Out in London and Paris," London's "People of the Abyss" and "The Iron Heel."
If you read them, you'll have few illusions about what is going on in the "United" States today. A good dose of Dickens wouldn't hurt either.
As the Oligarchy has consolidated its power, we are rapidly reverting back to the same conditions that existed in the late 1800's and early 1900's. Vast, unimagined wealth and privilege on the one side and unbelievable poverty on the other. The wealth has the power to persecute and degrade the poor, and uses it.
"Are there no workhouses? Are there no prisons?"
The United States of Scrooge
Patience, we're getting there!
I am the "proud" resident of a city on the meanest list, #5 Gainesville FL, which made the list along with 3 other Florida cities. We do know how to be mean in Florida; here the laws against residence of sex offenders within 2500 feet (state law) or as few as 1000 feet (in some cities)of places where children "congregate" have given such people no place at all to live legally (and in a Jacksonville case, the 1000 foot rule made even a homeless "city" under a bridge off-limits to sex offenders.) When we do the scarlet letter thing, we do it up right.
Gainesville specifically "earned" its rating by putting limits on the number of people who can be served meals at a downtown shelter, and vigorous police action in breaking up a "tent city" as the City Commission drags its heels endlessly on proposals for a "one stop" center for the homeless. Gainesville had been on the list also as #5 in 2004 but then dropped off. When Michael Stoops visited here during the time we were off the list, I "complained" to him that our absence was getting in the way of local efforts to shame our citizens into a better performance. The Mayor of Gainesville (a personal friend for whom I have campaigned and most of whose agenda I support) apparently didn't "get it" about the political advantage of the listing when she tried to excuse us by looking at the Top Ten list and saying:
"If you look at the list, many of them are places that you would generally consider to be pretty progressive, Berkeley and San Francisco ... The folks who end up on that list are cities who are doing something but maybe not to the full satisfaction of the advocates,"
What this seems to say is that it's relatively OK for "pretty progressive" (meaning, I guess, those who voted for Obama in 08) cities to make the meanest list because homeless "advocates" are holding them to higher standards for such treatment. This is nonsense, of course, as there was nothing in the National Coalition's rating criteria that factored in what local advocates were expecting; as they rate only the "something" that cities were doing or not doing.
You are exactly right of course. A group of little people get together around a table and decide to call others bigots, cruel, mean because they want to. They need no criteria. They are the "enlightened ones"
How do you get to be an advocate anyway? Who appoints all these wise people to tell everyone else what they are doing wrong?
This is one of the most absurd articles I've seen on CD this year.
The list strikes me as idiotic BS.
9 out of 10 of the cities are in warm-weather states (Kalamazoo MI being the only exception). So the methodology is probably not adjusted for the variable of weather. What it's testing for is probably mostly the areas to which homeless people logically gravitate, not the areas where they're treated worst.
If I was a homeless person, I'd want to live in Berkeley or SF, where the weather is great & the people are relatively tolerant. So you naturally get large influxes of homeless to those areas. Eventually, those would be the areas where the local authorities would sooner or later have to "crack down."
That doesn't make those areas "meaner" than states like Arizona, Texas & Mississippi. Such bastions of reaction might have fewer police crackdowns on homeless people, only because they're so nasty that homeless people don't even dare to go there in the first place!
The list strikes me as a distraction from the larger and more appropriate question of how come there are so many more homeless with their numbers growing daily. This survey probably does not take in many new "Hoovervilles" (tent cities and shanty-towns) that are springing up all over the country.
Some sources of homelessness include:
The deinstitutionalization of the mentally ill.
The sub-prime mortgage industry's forclosure and predatory lending practices.
The vanishing of avaiable jobs for people who want to work.
The destruction of low cost shelter and its replacement by upscale gentrification in the name of "urban renewal".
The destruction of lives through warfare and the refusal of the military to care for the lives of those they have destroyed psychologically.
But to look at these issues forces us to look at ourselves as a society rather than point the finger of blame at others.
Poet
Poet, the 2nd & 3rd reasons you cite for increasing homlessness are DeadOn.
The multi-national corporations have outsourced so much labor and updrafted so much wealth, people en masse are going from living poor to living in tents.
But this is NECESSARY. Goldman Sachs and other American Employers need the Lion's Share of our resources to attract top notch talent.
You are missing the primary reason. During Ronald Reagan's presidency, he slashed the HUD budget from $85 Billion to $17 billion. At the end of his reign, he was welcoming cudos for his generosity - for spending $800 Million on shelters. Since Reagan, HUD's budget for basic housing hasn't changed much. Before Ray-gun, homelessness was not the serious problem it has become. Homelessness in the USA was, and continues to be, a bipartisan creation of Federal policy. And therein lies the solution to the these "mean cities."
"meaner" than states like Arizona, Texas & Mississippi.
Quite predictable Rich. Those must be mean states because of the stereotypes folks like you continue to push. Berekley and San Francisco certainly couldn't be bad....after all, they are so "enlightened"
Texas is so far better than the places you call wonderful and Texans are so far better and more neighborly and caring rather than the nasty people you call us you "out" yourself by showing your ignorance.
At least we pay our bill's and don't use BS to critique other states. You shame yourself by this display of ideology.
Up until 6 years ago I could pretty much get arrested just for *being* in Texas. I'd say that's pretty mean, sir.
No, you're wrong. Except for Austin (which has a university that draws in people from superior cultures), Texas is populated by morons. But of course, morons aren't smart enough to know they're morons.
And also not smart enough to know when to use an apostrophe.
Rainborowe
RichM: This is a variation on a theme of "explanation" of mean-ness ratings, that I posted almost simultaneously with your post, with special regard to #5 Gainesville. There is (marginally) more sense to your explanation than what I cited as that of the Mayor of Gainesville. There is a certain truth to the fact that large numbers of the homeless "gravitate" to more pleasant climates (forget about hurricanes!) and perhaps more liberal social environments. But there were "only" 4 Florida cities (Orlando, St.Pete, Bradenton, Gainesville) that made the list and you'd be hard-put to identify these as the most liberal of Florida cities with the best environmental conditions. As I said in my post, these ratings were based on performance, not the expectations of homeless advocates; and while I wouldn't defend the list as being BS-free, I would also not, as did our Mayor, try to get a city off the hook for landing on a list that they "deserve" to be on by virtue of their performance.
Ah, I should post this here then. Something I had the displeasure of flagging at work yesterday:
Bill Cunningham advocates "beat[ing] the hell outta" homeless people with "a big old cane, Singapore-style"
http://mediamatters.org/mmtv/200907140050
Zman,
I went to that site yesterday and posted a comment they did not publish. ( i should have know)
who could listen to him without throwing up?
I don't know how the commenting works there, we're not really allowed to comment ourselves. But yeah, he is awful...we've posted several instances of him ranting against Section 8 housing and the like. Even I couldn't believe he said that on Monday.
Hooray! Atlanta is number 4! I knew we could do it!
Seriously, Atlanta, like most of the cities on the list, is constantly prodded by local corporate interests to carry out "economic cleansing."
The only thing that I don't understand is how Dallas, TX, stayed off of that list
q
Not to mention that Obama's "health care reform" will criminalize the uninsured.
As the French said more than a century ago, it is equally illegal for the rich and for the poor to sleep under the bridges. We have nurtured our worst nature, not our best. As a people, have we at long last no shame?
loopless July 15th, 2009 10:02 am.....If Americans had ANY SHAME, we would have marched by the tens of millions to DC long, long ago.
The only shame American's have is IN Washington D.C.
Really? I thought is was our embarrassing misuse of apostrophes and aversion to logic.
Johnny J-Rock
GOOD ONE, J-Rock!
Rainborowe