The Problem with All These Homeless People is…

…they lack homes.   They ain’t got housing.  They have no legal place to operate from with dignity and privacy.  They have been forced–most of them–into a furtive 3rd class citizen existence.   Instead of respect, they get suspicion, blame, and abuse.

NORSE NOTES:  Contrary to the latest Santa Cruz “Public Safety” mythology, it’s not that
…Santa Cruz is a “magnet” with its homeless-hostile laws;
…that the meager services (which really don’t include shelter–except for 5% of the homeless) are too welcoming;
… that the  homeless are addicts, alcoholics, and crazies who would naturally become homeless (the majority of homeless people are women, children, and vets)
… that homeless people “flock” to Santa Cruz because of its reputation for “easy life” (though the climate–like all coastal cities–beats Fresno, and many have roots here or are aware of the continuing cultural residue of a counter-culture here)
…that homeless people are producing a “crime wave”–as Deputy-Chief “Clatterbox” Clark repeatedly pronounces (unless you regard survival sleeping, sitting next to a building, peacefully asking for spare change, or drinking a beer in an out of the way place as being “crimes”–which Clark does; he should know, his SCPD got city Council to define these behaviors as “criminal”.)

I’m hearing that the broader housed and tourist community got a graphic taste of the Police State at 10 PM on July 4th when massive lines of cops began “rolling up” the previously public space.  All for our own security–of course.

Housing, work, and safety net repair for the disabled are the most immediate needs of the homeless population, say I.

HOMELESS Homelessness on the Rise in Monterey County, Census Shows

tent Arvin Temkar

Tent residents of Chinatown in Salinas celebrated Christmas with decorations last year.

Posted: Tuesday, June 25, 2013 6:39 pm | Updated: 10:25 am, Thu Jun 27, 2013.

Sara Rubin

 

An overwhelming majority of Monterey County’s homeless population lives without shelter, and those numbers are on the rise.

That’s according to the 2013 homeless census, conducted in January and presented Tuesday to the Board of Supervisors. The census represents a point-in-time snapshot of homelessness, based on data collected in one day by volunteers, who work on teams led by paid homeless individuals.

The 2013 census reports a 3-percent increase over 2011, bringing the county’s total homeless population to 2,590.

That number almost definitely is lower than the reality, says Glorietta Rowland, an analyst with the county’s Community Action Partnership. That’s because the census is, by its snapshot nature, imprecise.
“It is historically an under-representation of homeless in the community,” Rowland says.

The census estimates over 6,000 individuals experienced homelessness over the course of the past year—that annual estimate is a 58-percent increase from 2011.

In South County in particular, Rowland worries the numbers don’t accurately reflect the homeless population.

“Because we did not have people familiar with South County, the numbers there were very low,” Rowland says. “We know there are more homeless in that area.”

According to the census, there were 99 fewer homeless individuals in Greenfield, and also declines in Gonzales, King City and Soledad.

On the Peninsula and in North County homeless was up, census data shows. Monterey, Seaside and Prunedale all reported increases.

About three-quarters of the individuals surveyed do not live in shelters.

“There is a need for housing,” says Jill Allen, director of Dorothy’s Place in Salinas’ Chinatown.

Dorothy’s converts a day-use room into an emergency shelter each night, called Women Alive, and last year provided sleeping space to 188 women—many of them mentally ill, and many of them seniors, Allen says.

The nonprofit is in the midst of a fundraising push and education effort to “get people talking about better emergency facilities for women, and aging women who are out on the street,” she adds.

About 20 percent of homeless individuals live in families, the census found, though the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development definition of homeless doesn’t count families that might be doubling up in houses.

HUD requires all communities that receive federal funds to support homeless services conduct a bi-annual census.

Comment from Brent Adams

So blah blah blah, Robert.

What is HUFF doing about it besides this blah-ing for years on end?
Where in this report is mention of the proposed Sanctuary Camp?
Then endless media stream has begun to ring hollow if you’re not advocating for solutions that are so near at hand.
I encourage you to put your clatterboxing aside and begin putting your energy into helping us create a safe space for real people to sleep and to
keep stuff.  I also encourage you to realize that once that space exists then we’ll also have a real base for organizing around issues of
homelessness and the illegality of sleep.
sincerely,
Brent