"If
Greater Cleveland had $10 million to help end homelessness, how would you
recommend the money be spent?"
The Grapevine
has asked a relatively diverse cross section of Clevelanders, who were not
themselves homeless, the following questions: 1) If Greater Cleveland had $10
million to help end homelessness, how would you recommend the money be spent?
And, 2) If a person has no money to offer, what can s/he do to help end
homelessness? Although most
responses illicited were anonymous, many were from customers of the Food Co-op
on Euclid; we would like to thank them along with everyone else who submitted
their opinions! If someone left
their name, the Grapevine listed the person's name next to their comment.
“Since there are numerous programs in Greater
Cleveland that have been serving the homeless for several years now, they should
be evaluated in terms of how effective they have been and how cost effective
they are in removing families from their state of homelessness and helping them
locate, move into, and stay in permanent affordable housing. The most successful projects should be expanded (if they want
to be) or replicated by other service providers, using the staff and
administrators of the 'best' projects to train the others in their successful
methodologies.
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“Greater Cleveland does not possess a sufficient
number of SRO [single room occupancy] units with a full complement of necessary
supportive services. A developer of
SROs should be identified, and support should be given to allow the developer
sufficient funds to be used as local match to develop a workable financial
package. In addition, minimal
salary costs of the developer and a one-half time assistant should be carried
for two years so that the project can be completed without interruptions caused
by having to seek constant funding renewal sources to maintain the 1.5 staff
persons required to bring this project to fruition.”
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“Subsidized housing with mandatory case management”
--Jay Gardner, Outreach Coordinator
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Here is an excerpt from suggestions written by a student from Ashland
University:
“With $10 million not being a lot of money to make
any big changes, I would start by changing things that won’t cost much to
implement. First of all, police can
be instructed to treat the homeless in a non-hassling manner.
Instead of just running them out of parks or out of alleys, provide the
police with a list of social service agencies where the homeless can be taken
to. You can’t force the homeless
person to accept help, but it’s an alternative to arresting the person for
vagrancy—at no cost to taxpayers."
“Provide with this policy a refurbishing of existing
shelters. Inspect the existing
shelters to assess their condition and make improvements where they can be made
and add new shelters in existing buildings not being used.
Buildings already owned by the city can be utilized and funds set up to
support its operation.
“Services and agencies could employ college students,
with agreements with the universities and colleges throughout and around
Cleveland as part of a student’s college credit for sociology and social work
requirements. The students can be
reimbursed for
"I believe the money should be spent
on
temporary housing
because many homeless people cannot get
jobs without an address.”
transportation costs to
the work site or can be given a discount on their tuition.
The students could work with social workers, case
workers, and social administrators to expedite a program to go out to the
homeless rather than wait for them to come in on their own or to be directed to
them from another source. Sort of a
social work apprentice.
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“I think it should be used to either build more shelters for the
homeless or to remodel older buildings into shelters.
It should also be used to purchase food to feed the homeless, and should
also be used to employ counselors and people that could help someone get a job
and start earning some money in order to get them off the street or out of the
shelter and help them start their lives again.
I also believe that it should be used for medical
purposes to help the homeless that have illnesses.
I also think that this money should be used to hold seminars all across
the country to get other people aware of the homeless situation, and get them
involved in trying to solve this problem. I
believe that more and more people would get involved if they only knew more
about the problem and could see it for themselves.”
#########
“Build a shelter/halfway house and pay for trained staff to manage it.
Institute a training program to re-train the homeless people for new
skills to get jobs—a step toward becoming self-sufficient.
Feed and clothe homeless people and Institute a program that would reach
homeless people that might not know of shelters or training programs.”
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“Three words: Jobs, jobs, jobs; okay, five more words: A decent place
to live.”
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“Get homeless people off the streets.
Housing, medical care, mental health facilities, job training, government
jobs, and foster homes.” This
same person replied that s/he had “no sympathy” for homeless persons when
asked what else could be done besides giving money!
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“Fund the ‘Continuum of Care’ proposal."
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“To renovate old closed down apartment buildings to
be used to shelter the homeless.”
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Here’s an ambitious project to say the least: “Set up a self contained community where the
homeless have to run it as a small city. There
would be a budget to be kept and products to be made. Education would be
provided to learn new skills which would contribute to the community and used in
the real world. By running a city,
all skills from accounting to mechanics could be learned.
Also, extensive drug and alcohol treatment programs
should be put in place.”
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“Job training with some kind of support behind it while people are
being trained!”
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“Put up
large tents in an open area and provide ‘portapots’ and cots. Pay for food to be brought in from a local restaurant.
Bus the homeless from the area to an unused building with shower
facilities. [Editor's note: For $10 million, those tents better
have showers in them already!] Then
bus them to areas that need cleaned up. Incorporate
Cleveland Works and CMHA to work on permanent employment and permanent
housing.”
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“Set up food and housing quarters, but only to be used for those with
the ambition to earn their keep. Perhaps
homeless persons could help in nonprofit organizations that also need funding
but cannot get enough money.”
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“Job training programs that would lead directly to existing jobs; drug
treatment programs, and transitional housing.”
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“Re-education, or initial education and literacy programs” --Jim
Cutrone.
Here’s a back to basics approach:
“Tear down every abandoned city block, fill the holes with fertile soil
and grow food and trees.”
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“The money would best
be spent by undoing the legislation that disallows mental patients from being
forced to take their medicine. This
certainly wouldn’t eliminate homelessness, but a sizable minority of homeless
people have mental problems and cannot function in society without their
medication. Also I believe the
money should be spent on temporary housing because many homeless people cannot
get jobs without an address.”