Posts Tagged: ‘homelessness’
This episode of 60 Minutes opens with the following quote: “Unemployment improved a bit last month, but it is still nearly 9%. And the trouble is, job creation is so slow that it will be years before we get back the 7.5 million jobs lost in the great recession. American families have been falling out [...]
There was a bit of bad news that I overlooked last summer. The rate of homeless children enrolled in American schools during the 2008-09 school year increased by 41 percent over the 2006-2007 school year. A few states saw even more dramatic rises in homeless schoolchildren: Texas (139%), Iowa (136%), New Mexico (91%), Kansas (88%), and New Jersey (84%) all experienced more than double the national increase that year, so reported the Associated Press.
The hard numbers are that about 300,000 more schoolkids were enrolled that year than had been in the comparison year, which added up to about 1 million homeless schoolchildren across the country. As if the stark reality of a kid waking up in a homeless camp in time to catch the bus to school isn’t enough, studies of homeless kids have concluded that 40 percent of homeless children under age five have emotional and behavioral problems and a full 75 percent of those same kids have developmental delays, ostensibly from malnourishment, hunger, stress and myriad emotional trauma.
I am working on a homeless project with a friend that is requiring research, and as part of doing that research came across this site: Survival Guide to Homelessness This is one of those brilliant reconceptualizations that is worth reading simply because of the inventiveness and clarity of the author. Instead of being “homeless”, he [...]
If you have a job, there seem to be three ways to look at today’s economy in the United States. One way is to ignore the millions of people who have become unemployed recently. Another way is to mock and belittle them all. The third is to learn about what is happening. Last week, for [...]
Homelessness sucks. There are certain things that every human should have and a home is one of them. The value of a place to call one’s own where a person can watch TV or drink a beer in peace and rest can’t be overestimated, although it’s easy to take for granted. In its absence, though, nothing’s more important. Gratitude and yearning grows for simple and meager things like doing laundry or mowing the grass or not eating Burger King for one night, things that are mundane or chores under normal circumstances.
The New York Times reported on the growing number of tents and lean-tos in Fresno, Calif., in the article “Cities Deal With a Surge in Shantytowns.” It’s a throwback to the Hoovervilles of Depression-era America, writer Jesse McKinley says. McKinley clarifies that these shantytowns exist “on a far smaller scale” than Hoovervilles, but they’re becoming a very real part of the landscape in such places as Nashville, Olympia, Wash., and St. Petersburg, Fla.
It’s a grim reality. While some American families are dealing with foreclosures, some never had a McMansion to begin with. And perhaps the situation is most dire in Fresno, just judging from the numbers. Out of a city population of 500,000, nearly 2,000 homeless citizens have been counted. The city has more than three established encampments. Fresno officials hope to clear them and move the residents into permanent living areas.
Maybe it’s just really hopeful reporting or a bit of fairy dust, but McKinley’s piece didn’t leave me hanging my head, wondering where the justice is. There’s pride in the voices from the article, people who put in a day’s work and go home to a structure that they made from their own two hands. One man featured in the article, Guillermo Flores, assesses the conditions of his lean-to and says, “The only problem I have is the spiders.”
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