5/30/2022

Remembering all of those who served. Memorial Day is for them.

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The Los Angeles Times


Many homeless people resist group shelters even as L.A. mayoral candidates push to build more

BuzzFeed


People Who've Been Homeless Are Sharing The Unwritten Rules They Followed To Survive, And It's A Must-Read

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The Los Angeles Times


Many homeless people resist group shelters even as L.A. mayoral candidates push to build more

Research suggests that the type of shelters that could end up being the centerpiece of multiple candidates’ homeless plans doesn’t suit many homeless people.

The Los Angeles mayoral primary has seen candidates throwing big numbers around concerning how much shelter they'd like to see built for homeless people.

Rick Caruso wants 30,000 new beds in his first year in office, Rep. Karen Bass says 15,000 new beds in hers and Councilman Joe Buscaino wants 9,000 new beds within 36 months, to name a few of the candidates' publicized ideas.

The candidates haven't broken down exactly how many of those beds would be group shelters, but to achieve those lofty goals there probably would need to be a large number of them.

The question is, if these beds are built, will homeless people use them?

New research from the Rand Corp. suggests that the type of shelters that could end up being the centerpiece of multiple candidates' homeless plans is not homeless people's preferred destination. Fewer than a third of those surveyed in Hollywood, skid row and Venice said "group shelter" was an acceptable housing option.

"There seems to be very low appetite among people to move into group shelters, which seems to be a key part of the landscape of a lot of mayoral proposals," said the study's lead writer, Jason Ward, the associate director of the Rand Center for Housing and Homelessness in Los Angeles.

Ward noted that the city is already depending heavily on group shelters to entice people off the streets as it begins enforcing its revised camping ban, known by its municipal code, 41.18.

Some candidates — including Councilman Kevin de León and Bass — have expressed discomfort with the group shelter model in which dozens of people sleep close together in bunk beds. During the pandemic, these locations became the sites of superspreader events even as their capacities were reduced greatly — sometimes by 50% or 75%.

Others, like City Atty. Mike Feuer, acknowledge that the scale of the need means the city can't totally discount congregate settings. At a recent forum on homelessness, he pointed to the shelters the city has built through its A Bridge Home program as a more dignified alternative because each person has a smaller cubicle that isn't completely walled off but does have some privacy. These locations also were the sites of large outbreaks of COVID-19.

HOUSING & HOMELESSNESS

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The survey results resonated for Wendell Blassingame, who sat at his usual card table Tuesday with an umbrella for shade in San Julian Park. Blassingame hands out masks and water and seeks out ways to help skid row's sickest and most vulnerable. He's 74 and formerly homeless and has lived in a single-room occupancy unit in the neighborhood for many years.

"You want your peace and dignity," he said. "In a dorm setting, you can't get that."

Blassingame's unit is small, but at least he has a key and the knowledge he can lock the door and close his eyes each night.

HOUSING & HOMELESSNESS

L.A. just changed its entire approach to homelessness. Does it place politics above need?

He said he hears from the people he helps about the challenges they face in large shelters, where dozens of people sleep in bunks together — theft, lack of privacy and curfews. If you get there after 7 p.m., in some cases, you're not allowed inside, he said.

Most people on skid row want housing but they also want some space to call their own, he said.

"Our society doesn't cater to the seniors who are homeless here and might have a disability," he added. "It's depressing. It brings tears to my eyes."

The Rand survey joins a growing body of local research striving to expand on the picture of homelessness drawn by the annual count conducted by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority.

The research institute's survey was a microscopic version of the annual count in which thousands of volunteers search street by street over vast stretches of Los Angeles County for signs of homelessness. Small teams of Rand researchers zeroed in on three communities with known concentrations of homeless people.

The survey asked questions to probe one of the central unknowns in the debate over how to help the most people on the street: the extent to which they are open to or resistant to offers of housing.

Over the last two years, the city has built thousands of new tiny homes, which are private but lack a bathroom, rented thousands of hotel rooms and bought more than a thousand apartment and hotel units. All of this added capacity has been used in high-profile efforts to clear public spaces such as parks, sidewalks and locales like the Venice boardwalk or the area around El Pueblo de Los Angeles Historical Monument.

The Rand researchers found that nearly 90% of unsheltered people they interviewed indicated "interest" in receiving housing but that the response varied widely depending on the type of housing.

About 80% said they would accept a private room in a shelter or hotel, a "permanent" stay in a motel or hotel-like setting or permanent supportive housing. About 60% would accept interim housing with access to services, while about 50% of people surveyed said shared housing or safe camping would work. Only 30% would accept recovery or sober living housing.

Some of the responses also pointed to shortcomings in the services delivered to people on the street and the inadequate number of people who do that work.

Nearly half of respondents said they have been offered housing since they became homeless and a third said they were currently on a waitlist. More than 40% said the reason they weren't in housing is that no one followed up with them after the initial offer of housing.

Ward said he thought that could be related to cleanups that force people to frequently move their tents and possessions. "But also it may be related to issues with caseworker overload and turnover and other factors like that, that just break the links between individuals in need of housing and outreach," he said.

Asked for reasons they would reject an offer of housing, 38% of respondents said privacy was their biggest concern, far outweighing resistance to housing rules (19%), not being able to have a partner (14%) or pets (10%) or possessions (10%).

Louis Abramson, an astrophysicist who has done the statistics for volunteer homeless counts in Echo Park, Mid-City and Eagle Rock/Highland Park, said the Rand survey has provided valuable new insights with questions on housing preference that are not included in the annual count.

"That's a part of the conversation that's been missing," said Abramson, who is now running for state Assembly. "The fact that these authors have the measure of that is very important."

The researchers returned several times over four months starting in October to build a more dynamic picture than the annual "point-in-time" count.

Over the course of the survey, they observed increases in all three neighborhoods, averaging 17%.

Benjamin Henwood, a USC researcher who is doing a study tracking individuals over time, found that while it is unlikely the increase is a long-range trend, it may indicate seasonal variations that aren't captured by the annual count.

"This is a good effort, doing a place-based survey and seeing whether and how things change over time," said Henwood, a faculty researcher with the university's Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work.

Ward said he hopes to extend the Rand study to provide a better understanding of seasonal change and continue offering a deeper, more nuanced picture of the needs of people who live on the street.

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BuzzFeed


People Who've Been Homeless Are Sharing The Unwritten Rules They Followed To Survive, And It's A Must-Read

BuzzFeed Staff

People who experience homelessness face countless obstacles just to get their basic needs met. Everyday necessities like food, hygiene, and sleep become much more complicated without housing.

Well, a viral Reddit thread from user u/hayz00s once asked people who've been homeless to share the unwritten rules they had to follow in order to get by. Their responses were eye-opening, heartbreaking, and a critical reminder to help the people who are unhoused in your city.

So here are 27 unwritten rules of being homeless, according to people who've actually lived it:

1. "When dumpster diving, if you find a pair of shoes or clothes and they are not your size, then leave them neatly by the side of the dumpster for the next diver."

—u/T0mmygun

2. "Don't beg on someone's corner if they are already there."

—u/theriddler41

3. "Find a group of people you can trust (not easy to do) and stick with them."

—u/NicoHam

4. "Share what you have with your group. What goes around comes around. If there is a group of you, each person can stand on a different corner to beg and make far more than you would by yourself."

—u/theriddler41

5. "Look out for each other and be good to each other. We're all struggling, so let's make it as good as we can for each other. When I was homeless we paid for each other's food, clothes, and any other essentials if one was truly in need."

—u/PatchesJHollin

6. "The big one I remember is that you always take off your shoes when you sleep. And if you sleep outside, sleep on top of your bag and tuck your shoes under it. Sometimes my bag was way too packed to pull that off comfortably, but people would take your shoes. Just to fuck with you."

—u/devilpliers

7. "Sleep with your valuables at your feet in your sleeping bag. If you don't have a sleeping bag, put them in your backpack, and use your backpack as a pillow if possible, with one arm through one strap."

—u/ISwearMyNameIsNotJoe

8. "Sleep with your phone by your balls so if someone tries to rob you whilst you sleep, they can't find your phone."

—u/beardsandbombs

9. "If you find a friend, make sure one watches while one sleeps."

—u/dianamo11

10. "Respect your elders, aka don't fuck with the old-timers."

—u/crackheadhamster

11. "If you're trying to run away from good parents, and are underage, we will make sure the police find you. Kid was 15, and after talking with his friends, we heard no reason for him to be running away (teenage angst). Made sure the police took him home, and left my cell phone number in case he ran away again."

—u/Kishandreth

12. "Try and keep your socks clean. A fresh pair of socks go a loooooooooong way."

—u/ISwearMyNameIsNotJoe

13. "On raining/snowy nights, a ticket for trespassing is better than being found dead in the morning."

—u/ISwearMyNameIsNotJoe

14. "Even if you're not religious, if a religious family offers you a place to stay (sometimes 'if you go to church with us,' but not always), don't turn it down."

—u/NicoHam

15. "Just because I was homeless, that didn't mean I didn't work two jobs. Would work about 56 hours a week at a gas station between 2 stores, and then did the usual selling papers on the streets in the morning."

—u/kishandreth

16. "No one's pressing charges or calling the cops. If you get into a fight with someone, it's all he said, she said bullshit. Everyone takes it, and conflicts resolve themselves. Everyone you're around is homeless, you gotta stay in that shelter with them every night, you'll share the same public spaces that everyone who's homeless has to. You don't have a choice. Keep to yourself, don't mouth off, don't fuck with anyone else, or you'll get fucked with."

—Anonymous

17. "Hygiene!!!! Clean all of it. Clean. Clean. Find all shelters, soup kitchens, churches, mental health associations, and libraries. Most of those places hand out soap, toothbrushes, and hygienic shit. Use it. Wash your clothing any way you can."

—u/apparatusnine

18. "For my family, I remember that we would go to the library every day for several hours at a time. It's a place where extended stays aren't particularly unusual. Additionally, you have AC/heat, internet/computer access, water fountains, bathrooms, lounge chairs, and nearly endless educating vessels surrounding you in the form of books. TL;DR: If you're ever homeless, go to the library."

—u/readhomeless

19. "Most people don't want to acknowledge you exist. I'd say don't get frustrated with that, but it gets old really fast. Just find a way to make your day a little brighter. And be careful with what people give you. There's a lot of assholes out there."

—u/RemiMedic

20. "Cops hate the homeless, stay away. Mental health agencies are a gamble; if you actually have issues, they may report you to police. If you don't, they still might report you to police. Most homeless take advantage of the free resources offered by these agencies, so they go to them, but they are often bad news. Just take the resources and run."

—u/firehatchet

21. "Regardless of what the police say, no, you're not going to get your things back. Oh, and don't argue with them. They'll beat the crap out of you for no reason in a lot of cases because you don't have anybody standing up for you politically. So expect to be woken up really early, randomly, and be searched and then told to move."

—u/RemiMedic

22. "Protect your identity. Don't sell your ID. Seriously, some people want it."

—u/firehatchet

23. "If you're female and it's late fall/winter/early spring, wear a mens padded jacket, sneakers, sweat pants, and a woolen hat. Make yourself as masculine as possible. Don't sleep on roadsides or alleyways; find a rooftop with somewhat of a difficult entrance to navigate. Always give the illusion that you're a small man or young boy. You'll be left alone more."

—Anonymous

24. "People see what they perceive to be a homeless young female, and they think drugs and mental illness. They also think victim and sexually exploitable. For this reason, you must do all you can to not appear homeless."

—Anonymous

25. "Get a gym membership. Sounds nutty, but 24-hour available showers, exercise, and a place to charge your phone away from work is always welcome."

—u/TechnoEquinox

And finally...

26. "For food, I figured out the times bakeries threw away the day's sandwiches. Thirty minutes after they had thrown a trash bag full of still-fresh sandwiches and cakes in the dumpster, I was unsealing the bag and having a feast on a rooftop somewhere."

—Anonymous

You can read the full thread of responses on Reddit.

Note: Some responses have been edited for length and/or clarity.