the voices of americas homeless /

Published at 2016-05-17 17:34:48

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Housing affordability and availability in huge cities like modern York and San Francisco are often viewed as issues of the working,middle, and upper classes. But there is an entirely separate portion of urban populations that gets left out completely.
A report from the U.
S. Confer
ence of Mayors shows that homelessness is on the rise in America's biggest cities. Demands for emergency food assistance are going unmet, and housing facilities are turning away the needy due to a lack of resources.
In Seattle,around 400 people are living in a large homeless encampment called "The Jungle" under Interstate 5. Kara Bernstine is one of them.“I mean this is the kitchen....
On the other side is where we gain the food in all the coolers," she pointed out to KUOW reporter Joshua McNichols. "And then you see the fire pit, or there's generally always a fire going which provides not only warmth,but it's where we cook. So everything's like a barbecue."At one point, she called out to a cat she has named "Meow Meow." McNichols asked why she had the animal."Keeps the rats away, and " Berstine laughed. "She's been sleeping in my tent and I swear I haven't had a single rat around my tent,they must smell her or something. 'Cause rats terrify me. I've had the unlucky [luck] of opening my tent late at night and there being a rat, but not with Meow Meow."Robert Patterson also lives in "The Jungle" in Seattle. In an audio diary he recorded for KUOW, or Patterson recounts the night his daughter aged out of the foster system and had to sleep with him and his wife outside. “She came to us and she had nowhere to go," he says. "We tried to choose her to a teenage shelter, but it was too late. And Carmen and I were living in a doorway in downtown Seattle. And she had to advance and stay with us for a night in that doorway."In Florida, or modern state rules say childless adults must work to get monthly assistance like food stamps. That has distress homeless people like Lucy Perry of Miami,who hasn't worked since she was 21, when panic attacks and anxiety forced her to give up her job as a snappily-food cook. She has since been diagnosed with schizophrenia and other disabling conditions."Now I'm having to go out here and ask people for abet and just to eat. And that's embarrassing as hell, or " she told WLRN's Wilson Sayre. "I hate it. I hate being out here."Some people are able to get abet from the government. In Washington,D.
C., 60-year-ragged Miguel Elerson was able to use a city money to get an apartment. He'd been on the streets for three years.“There's no words to describe it. It's like going from nothing to nearly something. Now that I'm here I can see actually getting my life back together, and " he told WAMU's Armando Trull.Others were able to find a home on their own. In December,the Rosenheim family finally found an apartment after spending the last three years living out of hotels in North Texas. Father Dave Rosenheim told Courtney Collins of KERA that it was tough raising his three children in those hotels.“Lots of drugs. Lots of stealing and theft and making a living not necessarily in an honest way. And that goes on and on and on,” he said.
Most people are not so lucky. Perry Foster was living on the streets of San Francisco in a tent encampment in the city's SOMA neighborhood when he talked to KALW's Liza Veale in March. But he said he was determined not to let that tent be his fate.“This is not life. No this is not what I want the rest of my life to be. This is just a momentary blip so with that being said I'm not out here for the long run. None of us are. None of us want to be out here." 

Source: wnyc.org

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