Friday, June 13, 2008
Health Care for the Homeless
Last year was the first time that I came to this conference. At the time, I had been at my job for just under six months and I was incredibly overwhelmed by the conference. It made me realize how little I really knew about the homelessness world even after a half year of working in the field. This year has been a completely different experience; I can read through the list of sessions and know what they all mean, I'm seeing people that I know and people who I have emailed back and fourth with, and I have interesting and provoking questions to add to the conversations. There are still moments that make me feel like I know nothing at all but they are few and far between.
I can't wait to get back and apply what I'm learning to my work... and go for a run.
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Are Shelters the Newest Yelp Category?
Currant.com, 10/21/2007
Brenda sits on a street corner while her partner, Noel, is off convincing South Green shopkeepers to let him wash windows for money. If he's successful, they'll live large tonight, maybe get some beer (for him) or soda (for her).People who are experiencing homelessness know how to use the internts just like you and I. Some have laptops that they charge and use in public spaces while others use the library computers to check email and surf the web. This innovative idea of creating a national database could help some of these individuals find the services that they need but my question is how much of an impact will the website have on service delivery? I haven't read any research and don't have hard numbers but I imagine that many people know where the services are, and if they don't know their friendly local outreach worker would be happy to tell them. My guess is that many people who are not accessing services have had bad experiences and may be hesitant to trust them again. So, while I think that this is an awesome effort, I think that it will end up being more of a tool for outreach workers and shelter staff than for those actually living on the streets. I'm curious to see how things develop.
Recently, some members of the American Bar Association in Washington listened to University of Connecticut law professor Robert Whitman talk about people like Brenda. Whitman has never met Brenda, but as an advocate for therapeutic homes for mental health and addiction recovery, Whitman wants to start a national database of services for people who are homeless. Someone like Brenda could go to her local library, type in her zip code, and get up-to-date information on services, including phone numbers and hours.
Monday, August 27, 2007
It could be me, it could be you
Orlando Centennial 8/27/07
David Pirtle thought the worst of homeless people. They were bums, derelicts, worthless.
They were lazy, crazy and smelly.
It was a notion he believed as a teen and a young adult."Right up until I became homeless," he said.
"It is one of those things where we are going to allow the community to hear about the policy and to educate folks on the cost-benefit analysis approach to homelessness," Mendez said. "It costs the community just as much to allow someone to be homeless as it does to provide them with permanent housing, which ends homelessness. That is the only way to end homelessness." Mendez told the Neighborhood Institute members that it is costing communities more for police and emergency personnel to constantly respond to situations on the street involving the chronic homeless, than it is to build permanent housing for the chronic homeless and to offer them services to get them off the street. Any of Us Could Be Homeless Advocacy is a big part of making change, in fact, it may the key to change, and anyone can be an advocate. From individuals who are experiencing homelessness or have experienced homelessness in the past, to the heads of government agencies, to casual volunteers who write for the local paper. Why not join the masses? You can easily be an advocate too, without it taking up too much time. Just post a news article or video from youtube on your blog every so often. Say hello to the panhandlers you meet on the street and ask them how their day is rather than looking down as you walk by and then feeling guilty later. When you see or hear your friends or family making uninformed comments fill them in, it could be them. It could be me. It could be you.
Expert on Homeless Issues to Speak
Herald-Dispatch 8/27/07
TheDay.com 8/27/07'What makes homeless?” My husband and I were passing out fruit in New London's homeless shelter last week when a resident asked us this question. That morning The Day had reported on a public hearing the night before where neighbors of the proposed new Jefferson Avenue homeless shelter had come out in force to voice their opposition. Their comments had ranged from suggesting that shelter residents were pedophiles to complaining that their property values might go down.