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The Homeless Grapevine: Issue 1

Welcome
To The New
Homeless Grapevine
The
New Homeless Grapevine is a newspaper
written by homeless individuals, formerly homeless people,
and those working with the homeless in Northeast Ohio.
The newspaper was first created by residents of Project: HEAT Shelter
"Site E", formerly located in a temporary class building of Cleveland
State University.
The New
Grapevine follows in the tradition of newspapers sold by homeless persons
throughout the country. These
newspapers have been an important medium for
people who are homeless to have a voice in their community and to offer a
product for which they can request donations.
The Northeast Ohio Coalition for the
Homeless (NEOCH) is actively helping to coordinate the production of the New Grapevine. It is
NEOCH’s goal to have the paper self -supporting and run
entirely by people who are homeless or formerly homeless.
The purpose of
the New Homeless Grapevine
is to:
1. Provide a forum for homeless people
to share their opinions and ideas on issues
that may or may not be specific to being
homeless.
2. Share information for the homeless -
about homeless rights, housing, legislative issues, maybe jobs, support
services, etc.
3. Provide those not homeless with greater understanding about what homelessness means...and what it cost.
4. Provide income and foster
responsibility to those selling the paper.
5. Provide a medium for those in need
of skills training to have hands on
experience in the production of a newspaper.
6. Empower the dispossessed: homeless
and housed.
As many of the proceeds as possible
will go to the individual who distributes the paper.
A small percentage (approximately 20%) of what she or he receives will go
into the Homeless Grapevine Fund at NEOCH to support the further production of
the paper. Production costs will
remain low, limited at this time to the
costs of printing the paper and to
paying the homeless writers for their articles, stories, essays, and poems.
NEOCH provides technical assistance,
office space, and use of equipment as part of NEOCH's mission to educate the
public and empower the homeless.
The
New Homeless Grapevine is still in its
initial organizational stages. The
way it is fiscally managed as well as the way it is distributed may change as
the homeless involved with the paper make modifications.
Empowering
The Homeless: Homeless
Advocate Shares Experiences
Dave
Pacetti, formerly homeless, is an advocate for the homeless and the mentally
ill. He serves as treasurer for The
Homeless Organization in Akron. The
following is an interview conducted between Dave and the Homeless Grapevine.
The Homeless Grapevine: Tell me a little bit about how you began to organize.
Dave:
Following the closing of the Okasek Project last year we began to meet with the
homeless in Grace park every afternoon and also met regularly in the courtyard
of the public library in downtown Akron. [The
Okasek Project is a seasonal overflow shelter in Akron.
It operates from October-April in the parking garage of the Oliver Okasek
State Building. The homeless are
provided mats. The project has seen
a high of 120 persons this winter.]
HG: Who do you mean
by “we”, who was doing this organizing?
Dave:
A group of shelter workers and advocates concerned about the closing of the
Okasek project began to educate the homeless and ourselves around GA cuts [in May Ohio General Assistance was cut back from $100/mo for 12 months
to only 6 months/year] and lack of affordable housing.
HG: Then what?
Dave:
We began to organize high impact activities in the community.
We staged an all day event called HOPE (the Homeless Organization Picnic
Event) across from city hall, we also organized a softball game where 70
homeless people came. We got a lot
of community support for this event, the American Red Cross came and served
meals and the Akron Public transit provided transportation for the
homeless...the bus driver even ended up being the Umpire for the game.
But there was still lots of denial in the community about homelessness,
and a lack of dialogue with government officials. So we engaged in a nontraditional form of empowerment
and took over a park operated by the City of Akron called Grace Park.
We did this illegally. The
city government finally began to listen to our concerns because of the illegal
occupation of a city park or The Grace Park Tent City as we called it.
HG: How many people
ended up occupying the park?
Dave:
We had a census of 70 homeless people staying in park for the entire 12 days.
We had 30 tents and other temporary structures.
HG: What were you hoping to accomplish by taking over the Park?
Dave: We wanted to communicate to the community about the plight of
the homeless and demand that the government officials see that they weren’t
doing what they were supposed to be doing.
We wanted to get attention and dramatize the problem of homelessness in
our community. At one point we
thought we might keep Grace Park Tent City as a permanent structure for the
homeless within the community...but the government wouldn’t let that happen.
HG: So how did the
government keep you from staying in Grace Park?
Dave: On
the 12th day the mayor moved the police in, and 10 of us were arrested. We achieved significant media coverage especially the night
we were evicted from Grace Park. We
also got tremendous support which we wouldn’t have gotten otherwise,
especially from the faith
community.
HG: What happened
after the ten of you were arrested?
Dave:
The charges of criminal trespassing were reduced to a misdemeanor
of violating the park curfew and we were released.
I’m still upset that the women arrested with us were subjected to body
cavity searches. I feel that as
advocates we need to have a passion for what we’re doing and I feel we have to
take these risks. We’re fooling
ourselves if we think we can make changes by being nice and playing the game of
diplomacy. I believe the Rev.
Martin Luther King when he said ‘a person who has not yet found something he
is willing to die for, cannot justify his own existence.’
I believe we have to have this passion.
As people are dying in the streets,
advocates for the homeless can no longer afford to play it safe.
HG: What happened
next, after the arrest and being released?
Dave: We moved ourselves and our belongings into a building
furnished as a shelter for the homeless...a furnished shelter that was empty.
HG: Where did that
building come from?
Dave:
It was furnished by the wife of a prominent Akron minister.
We acquired the building and are now leasing it to provide
transitional/progressive housing for
12-18 men at this time.
HG: Was she
planning on opening a shelter?
Dave: Yes, but she
offered to lease it to us, and the homeless now operate it. The homeless make their own meals. There are no compulsory programs that they are required to
attend. The goal of the Homeless
Organization and its project, Unity House, is to empower the homeless as much as possible.
We empower by removing them from their day to day survival needs.
We are developing them so that they can become a political entity,
so that they can speak in a unified voice to address the community and
the indifferent power structure.
HG: Explain how The
Homeless Organization was formed. Did
it come directly out of the Grace Park occupation?
Dave:
We formed Unity House and The Homeless Organization
the day after Grace Park.
HG: So how did you
get involved as an advocate for the homeless?
Dave:
I became involved as an advocate for the mentally ill in 1988.
I see many parallels in advocacy for the mentally ill as in the homeless
movement. It is a real challenge to organize both of these populations because
both are absorbed the real day to day struggle for survival.
Especially among the mentally ill there is a barrier of silence.
There is such a stigma to having a psychiatric label.
I see this also with the homeless. Many
homeless are ashamed of their socio-economic state.
HG: What happened
in 1988 that made you become an advocate?
Dave: I myself suffered a breakdown several years prior to 1988.
While in a public hospital setting I saw that something was wrong.
I saw that mental patients don’t receive flowers, cards, don’t get
back rubs. They are treated like
crap by the public and health professionals.
I felt the need to speak out for them.
I feel people who have a
psychiatric label who can articulate their cause have a responsibility to do so.
And I also feel that the homeless and formerly homeless who are able to
engage in the struggle have a moral imperative to do so.
HG: Tell me more about the opening and running of Unity House.
How are you able to pay for the operating costs of the House?
Dave: We have always relied on private funding from individuals and
the faith community. We recently
received funding from FEMA. [Federal
Emergency Management Association - federal dollars made available through the
Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act.]
That represents our first public funding. We still haven’t received our 501 C(3) non-profit status
and this makes it difficult for us to receive additional public funding.
It is a struggle to pay our monthly expenses, we pay $600 in rent, $100
for insurance, and $350 for the utilities.
Our food is donated or residents purchase food with their foodstamps.
Once we get our 501 C(3) status we can start using the food bank as well.
HG: Why haven’t
you gotten your 501 C(3) status, is something holding it up?
Dave: We are still organizing ourselves and Unity House.
We have no paid staff. We
rely entirely on volunteer service. If
we had paid staff things like that would get expedited much quicker but we have
to use the resources that are available. No
one is making a living off of Unity House.
HG: So what’s
next for the Homeless Organization?
Dave:
We are aiming to get back to the streets to work for the homeless to organize
into an effective political entity. This won’t happen overnight.
Sometimes we get so absorbed with paying the bills at Unity House that we
forget our real mission which is to empower the homeless...and start a
revolution of consciousness in our society regarding those who are
disenfranchised and removed from participating in the “American Dream”.
HG: Besides
homeless people doing their own cooking and not having set programmatic
requirements, what makes Unity House different from other shelters?
HG: Is there
anything else you want to tell me?
Dave: One
of the problems I see is that in the process of obtaining funding for many
agencies and advocacy groups they have to compromise their vision and many of
them get co-opted. I see this as
one of the dangers but it is a calculated risk that I am aware of.
Where do we go from here? I
feel that advocates for the homeless need to see themselves as part of a broader
social mission. In our coalition
forming we should look at other groups that are also involved in social and
economic justice.
HG: Have you ever
been homeless?
Dave:
Yes.
HG: At the time of
your breakdown?
Dave: No,
but as a person who suffers from psychiatric illness I am aware of the
vulnerability I face to becoming homeless.
When we struggle for justice for the homeless we are struggling
for justice for everyone. I
believe that there are a lot of myths about the homeless and a lot are even
reinforced by the advocates themselves. The
myths say that people are homeless because of a moral deficiency or because of
drug addiction. This isn’t the
case. But I feel that even decent
people can wind up doing activities that are criminal in nature in order just to
survive. Advocates need to
challenge these myths in the community. There
is no reason, no excuse for homelessness in America, there is plenty of money,
resources, real estate to end homelessness today. We have homelessness in America today because we have not
made ending homelessness a priority.
For more
information about Unity House or The Homeless Organization feel free to contact
Dave Pacetti at: PO Box 3, Munroe Falls, OH
44262.