From
StreetVibes, February
CINCINNATI
– Whenever the temperature drops below 10 degrees in Cincinnati, the
city’s homeless now thankfully have someplace to keep warm.
The
Cold Shelter provides a solution for homeless individuals in need of emergency
shelter on extremely cold nights. It is a collaboration between the mayor’s
office, the Cincinnati Health Department, the Cincinnati Recreation Commission,
the Cincinnati Police and the Greater Cincinnati Red Cross. The shelter serves
to fill the gap between the number of available beds and the number of homeless
individuals in the greater Cincinnati area.
An estimated 1,300 people are homeless each night in Cincinnati.
In
January, The Cold Shelter provided beds, blankets and pillows for the city’s
homeless for an entire week during one of the winter’s harshest cold spells.
They housed about 100 people each night.
Serving
Up Dignity and Hope
From
StreetVibes,
February
CINCINNATI
– Mary Magdalene House is unlike most organizations that help the
homeless. There are no beds,
pillows, blankets or meals. But
this Cincinnati organization offers something else that is just as important --
dignity and hope.
Mary
Magdalene House gives Cincinnati’s homeless some of the comforts of home.
Run by Brother Giancarlo Bonutti, Mary Magdalene House welcomes those
without a roof over their heads to stop in and pick up care packages filled with
home’s little necessities, such as soap, shampoo, lotion, toothpaste and other
personal care needs. People can
stop in and take a cost-free shower, make phone calls, and grab a few changes of
clothes. Visitors can even drop off
laundry. Volunteers at Mary
Magdalene House wash between 20 and 25 loads of laundry every day.
Bonutti believes these services help the homeless develop pride and
self-respect, two qualities that are essential to helping them reshape their
lives. “We believe that dignity is the beginning of hope,” Bonutti said.
Pampering
the Homeless
From
StreetVibes,
February
ATLANTA
– An Atlanta pastor and his wife
are using one of the Bible’s most remembered passages as inspiration for a
valuable service for the city’s homeless.
Reverend
Bob Book and his wife, Holly, operate a weekly spa just for homeless people in
the Atlanta area. Rev. Book drew inspiration from verses in John13, where Jesus
washed his disciples’ feet as a lesson in service and humility. The spa
provides services including: a foot soak, pumice, nail trim, massage, and a free
pair of socks to about three dozen homeless men and women in the city.
The services help prevent foot infections, which affect many homeless
individuals. People with serious foot problems are encouraged to return to the
spa to see a volunteer doctor.
By
Daniel Horner
From
Street
Sense, March
4
WASHINGTON
D.C.– Among the $787 billion in federal spending on stimulus bill, $1.5
billion is reserved for homelessness prevention. According to the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development, the funds will “provide financial
assistance and services to prevent individuals and families from becoming
homeless and help those who are experiencing homelessness to be quickly
re-housed and stabilized.” In addition to the stimulus money, HUD will give
$1.4 billion “continuum of care” grants, along with another $160 million for
emergency shelter grants. As part of the grant process, a new pilot program is
created due to $24 million. The new program could help the rapid re-housing of
families in 23 communities.
From
Street
Sense,
March 4
More
than $1 billion in federal stimulus money has been set aside to address the
nation’s homeless issue in an effort that homeless advocates are calling a
“landmark provision.”
President
Barack Obama, his administration and Congress have allocated the homelessness
prevention money as one of several commitments intended to address both
short-term and long-term issues triggered by the current economic crisis.
Under the president’s new economic stimulus bill, the $1.5 billion will
be used for financial assistance aimed at individuals and families in danger of
becoming homeless, and to quickly house and stabilize individuals currently
experiencing homelessness.
According
to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the funds can be
specifically used for a variety of purposes, including rental assistance, credit
counseling, utility deposits and case management.
From Street Sense, February 18
FRESNO,
CA – An innocent bystander caught two Fresno police officers
The
tape shows a 52-year-old homeless man lying on the ground while the officers
brutally beat him, hitting the man at least six times in the face. When the
footage was shown to Fresno’s police chief, he immediately launched an
investigation, resulting in an explanation that was challenged by the eyewitness
who filmed the incident. The police chief based his response on the police
report written by the two officers involved.
By Elizabeth Schwartz
From Street Sense, February
6
PORTLAND, OR-
Frank Cobb has been a familiar sight for several years walking around the
southwest and northwest districts of Portland selling Street Roots. He
likes to draw portraits of Bob Marley, Anita Ward, and Jimi Hendrix, among
others. Frank has dyslexia and has some communication problems. When he
expresses his words, many people think he is being rude, so he tries to keep his
thoughts to himself when he interacts with the public. But things completely
changed after he started selling Street Roots. He said he has begun
learning how to interact with the public by following some of the newspaper’s
basic vendor rules: no cussing, don’t get mad, no aggressive sales, and stay
friendly. He also applied the rules into selling his artwork and he found that
people began buying newspapers and asking about the prices of his artwork. He
prefers to sell Street Roots rather than panhandling because he would
like to give something in return.
By Dede Stoops
From Streetvibes, March
CINCINNATI-
Most people don’t choose to be homeless, but life throws them a curve that
lands them in shelters or on the streets or sleeping outside. There are many
reasons that people become homeless: some youth are just kicked out by their
family or running away from a violent situation; others are adults who loose
their jobs and houses. Some people also become homeless because of natural
disasters or war. The whole society should work together and show compassion and
love to homeless people. Government can make available more housing
certificates, building affordable housing in neighbors and create more programs
to get people back to work, especially in the current economic crisis.
From Street Roots, February
20
PORTLAND, OR- A committee in charge of reviewing complaints of police bias has found some cause for concern, although most cases were handled suitably. Workgroup looked at discrimination complaints that citizens filed themselves and found that 75 percent of discrimination allegations involved race or ethnicity. Many complainants said the officers’ behavior was not just biased, but rude or insensitive. They suggest that police who generate more complaints should be trained in cultural competency and customer service. Critics said that the process puts too much control in the hands of the police bureau’s Internal Affairs Department and should have more civilian oversight.
Copyright Homeless Grapevine Issue #87 in July 2009 in Cleveland Ohio.