http://www.exposingtruth.com/utahs-plan-eradicate-homelessness-actually-working |
So let's get ourselves back to the subject of homelessness. You folks that are paying attention, might just notice that I posted an exact duplicate of this post in my bigger blog, found here:
http://themightyswordamericas26deadlysins.blogspot.com
Just blow it off. I decided this would be good for both blogs, and is pretty much the same, maybe with a tweak er two.
Now, it was said...more than likely in the first post on this subject, the fact that there is 5 times as many empty places as there are homeless people. For those of you reading that fact for the first time, I'll give you a minute to let that sink in...
(Time has ticked away)....So how did you like that one, huh? Nice. Well, here's some things I believe that are even nicer.
Every day, more and more apartments are going up in my hometown. Lofts, mostly. Meant to be attractive to white collar young folks just looking at Des Moines for the first time. Now, if you go back and forth between the Des Moines blog and this one, you'll note that the focus of this town, which is pretending to be massively bigger than it really is, is to attract people to the city itself, as well as rejuvenate the downtown area. The problem is, as they do this, there are things that they're doing at the same time that absolutely make me ill. I'm pretty much certain that they're doing this in every metro area over 100,000 folks, or my name isn't...uh...isn't....oh, never mind.
The only really efficient homeless shelter in this city is right smack downtown...has been for ages. CISS (Central Iowa Shelter and Services) started out here in the old Trailways bus station. I remember driving by it in the 80's wondering why it was that 50 or so people were asleep on mats on the floor. They then relocated a little bit south and west of downtown, to a much bigger building. Later on, that one would be deserted due to bedbugs, and the obviously growing homeless problem, forcing them to build up a new shelter, one that wouldn't take any more females, but would house 2x the male population. It didn't do a lot of good. Why, is obvious.
1. There are 3x as many people that are homeless in this country than there was 10 years ago. I'm afraid you're gonna have to get a much bigger shelter.
2. The people that were homeless to begin with...are still homeless. I used to work at this shelter back in the day...and because I've been homeless a few times since then, I've had to utilize this place's services for myself a few various eras in my life. The thing I loved about is was, the same damn people that had been there 10 years prior to that were still coming there to stay!!! The same men, women and vets are still utilizing the system. That's really helping.
3. In an attempt to attract more professionals to the city, you're just going to attract the attention of the more undesirable types as well. The homeless, allowed to reside indefinitely at CISS, call their homeless friends and homeless relatives. "Come on down you guys!! This city'll take care of you!" Then when the days they're allowed to stay (90 days, but longer with special circumstances) run out, well, guess where they're gonna camp? As close to downtown as they can, til they're allowed back in, 90 days later. This is, of course, where all the free meals are served too.
Worse yet, they bring all of these events downtown to get in the way of everyone going everywhere in the city, and they put them up around the same area...as well as build the majority of the lofts there; and build a whopping block-long sculpture park just 3 or so blocks away from it...then call the police, hire security, and physically patrol all areas around it in an attempt to get them away from it all; all the while wondering why it is they have people passed out drunk in the sculpture park, hiding out in the parking garages close by, and camping under the bridge of MLK Pkway (East/West) and caught stealing things at the events. Geeeeee........I wunder why??? errrrrrrrr........
What you don't seem to get, America, is that the problem is growing, and will continue to grow. Not because you're not chasing them off well enough, but because MORE PEOPLE ARE GOING TO BE HOMELESS EVERY YEAR. Because the problem isn't how we help people out, which by the way is a problem too, but because of a lot of different things that we didn't have before.
1. A much higher population.
2. The highest unemployment rate...well, EVER!!
3. Affordable housing...
I really don't think I have to rehash every single reason again, do I??? Just See "Homelessness" in this blog, if you're really and truly lost.
One problem I did mention just a couple of paragraphs ago, and want to and didn''t cover in the first blog post, is not only our attitudes towards the homeless, but the most obvious problem of social disconnection we have today. Gone forever, I'm sure, are the days when we helped each other in times of trouble. You people are, quite simply, ASSHOLES when it comes to people who need your help.
Think I'm joking? Try a little experiment in your spare time. Call all of your best friends. Tell them you just lost your job, and it looks as though you might not make your next house payment. Oh, you'll get all the sympathy you could ever want...but call them a week later, and tell them you lost your home, and you have nowhere for you, your wife/husband and two kids to stay...and watch how quickly they scatter. You'll be amazed how little help you're offered or actually receive.
Selfish, immature, close-minded, and closed doored. As long as everything is going swimmingly, you're my best friend, but when times are hard, and I really need your help? You couldn't run far enough. I'm lucky to get you on the phone, at least not until my troubles are fixed again. I don't know about the rest of you, but I don't need friends like that in my life. That's probably why I don't have but one or two anymore. :D
P.S. - By the way, Utah has a plan to eradicate homelessness entirely....that's WORKING. You guys might wanna check it out, HUH???
http://www.exposingtruth.com/utahs-plan-eradicate-homelessness-actually-working/