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WSWS : News
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New York: Homeless man crushed to death by sanitation vehicle
By Peter Daniels
1 December 2003
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A homeless man was crushed to death in the early morning hours
of November 21 when a New York City Sanitation Department machine
picked him up as it was scooping up debris under the overpass
of the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. The man was sleeping under
blankets and near garbage bags in cold late autumn temperatures.
The expressway in the area straddling the Greenpoint and Williamsburg
neighborhoods of Brooklyn, just across the East River from Lower
Manhattan, has long been used by the homeless because it provides
shelter from wind and rain. The section of the highway where the
man was killed is also just a short distance from an all-night
diner, a church where food is sometimes distributed to the homeless,
and a day labor agency.
Residents of the neighborhood said there were fewer people
sleeping under the overpass in the recent period, following numerous
police sweeps of the area that sometimes led to arrests or to
confiscation of the belongings of the homeless. The numbers of
homeless continue to grow, however, and with cold weather approaching
some continue to try to sleep under the highway.
On the morning in question, a large sanitation dump truck came
to the area along with a front-end loader, a machine with a bucket
on the front that scoops up trash and materials such as old tires
and mattresses. At about 2:45 a.m. the dump truck driver noticed
movement in the bucket of the front-end loader. The body of the
homeless man was then discovered, and he was pronounced dead an
hour later at the local city hospital.
This death was one of a series linked to homelessness and poverty
that were reported in the local press over a three-day period.
Six people lost their lives in three separate incidents between
November 18 and 21, in each case the direct consequence of the
search for shelter and warmth as winter approaches.
On the same day the gruesome death of the homeless man took
place, three members of another family lost their lives about
15 miles away, in the west Bronx. In this case the victims were
not homelessat least not yet. However, they had just had
their electricity shut off by Consolidated Edison. The apparent
victims of carbon monoxide fumes from a gas generator, they included
Erna Dennis, 54; Patrick Williams, 26; and Patricia Williams,
2 months old, the daughter of Patrick. The 19-year-old mother
of the baby was taken to the hospital in serious condition.
A spokesman for the utility company said that the family of
Jamaican immigrants was deeply in arrears in payments.
The company claimed it had tried unsuccessfully to contact the
family, and that Con Ed policy is not to shut off service if there
is a child under the age of two living in the home.
The onset of cold weather in mid- to late autumn is regularly
accompanied by deaths from carbon monoxide poisoning, as families
who lack other means of heating their homes use generators that
have not been properly serviced. In the space of one month last
year, nine people in the New York City region died in similar
incidents.
In the third related tragedy, a homeless couple that had been
squatting in a vacant city-owned building in the Bedford-Stuyvesant
section of Brooklyn died in an electrical fire on November 18.
The couple, who were not identified, collected bottles and old
clothes to redeem for cash. One neighbor said that the man was
known as Little Mike, because he was only 5 feet 4 inches tall.
He was a nice guy, a very nice person, the neighbor
said. About 43 years old, he had grown up in the neighborhood,
had children and used to work for the city.
Ironically, on the same day as the deaths of the homeless man
under the Brooklyn highway and the Bronx family killed by carbon
monoxide, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced that
his administration was setting up a task force to end chronic
homelessness in the next 10 years.
We find ourselves at a painful impasse, the mayor
declared. We keep focusing on crisis management, on how
to deal with who shows up that night. It is time to look at causes
and see if we cant prevent people from showing up at all.
One local reporter noted that Bloombergs announcement
was long on philosophy and short on details. In fact
the plan was very short in both departments. The latest
announcement is a pathetic response to the record number of homeless
now in the citys shelter system. The figure has reached
40,000, and includes a record number of families and children.
The homeless crisis festered through the boom years of the 1990s,
with about 25,000 in the shelter system on any given night. In
the last two years, however, the crisis has deepened drastically.
The budget for the homeless services agency, now about $580 million
a year, has jumped by $244 million since 1999.
According the citys homeless services commissioner, We
need to look at those considerable resources and see how we could
spend them more wisely, toward supporting housing, rental assistance
and permanent community.
Advocacy groups such as the Coalition for the Homeless called
Bloombergs response woefully inadequate. The time
for study is long past, said Mary Brosnahan Sullivan, executive
director of this group. We have a proven track record of
what works. We desperately need more capital dollars for bricks
and mortar, and we need more resources, beginning with the federal
government.
Growing long-term unemployment and the continuous onslaught
on social welfare spending are certainly major contributing factors
to the crisis of homelessness in New York. There is another major
element of the crisis as well. While the poverty rate has remained
stubbornly high (even by official standards) and tens of thousands
of workers have lost their jobs in the last several years, the
city and state authorities have continued to dismantle what remains
of the system of rent regulation that was first established decades
ago.
The old system of rent control, which covered more than one
million apartments, has given way for the most part to rent-stabilization,
in which an official board votes periodically on allowable rent
increases, a process that has led to huge increases in housing
costs in recent years. The campaign to do away with all forms
of rent regulation continues, however. The New York State Legislature
began this process about ten years ago, and about 105,000 of the
citys one million rent-controlled or rent-stabilized apartments
have been removed from the rolls.
A recent study showed that at least 32,000 housing units, about
3 percent of the total of stabilized apartments, had been lost
between 1999 and 2002. This figure is widely considered to be
understated, but nevertheless represents a major escalation of
the pace of rent deregulationonly 6,000 units were removed
from regulation in the prior three-year period, from 1996 to 1999.
The process of deregulation takes place through a variety of
means. When apartment rents reach $2,000 monthly, they are automatically
excluded from regulation and can have their levels set by the
market. Another category of rent regulation covers the 140,000
apartments built under the states Mitchell-Lama program,
which subsidized the construction of middle-income apartments
and cooperative units in the 1960s and the first half of the 1970s.
Mitchell-Lama contained provisions allowing landlords to buy their
way out of the program and charge market rents after 20 years.
17,000 of these apartments have done so, and thousands of others
may follow in the near future.
In many areas of Manhattan, there are plenty of those who are
willing and able to pay monthly rents of $2,000 and much more.
Market-rate rents in Manhattan now average from $2,250 for one-bedroom
apartments to $3,400 for three or more bedrooms, compared to about
$1,000 for rent-stabilized units. In the outer boroughs of the
city, there is also a difference between market-rate and rent-stabilized
rents, but it is much smaller. In Brooklyn, for instance, two-bedroom
rent-stabilized apartments average $700, while market rates for
two bedrooms average $800.
The significance of these numbers is obvious. Just when the
crisis of affordable housing is sharper than ever and calls for
emergency measures to provide shelter for workers and the poor,
government policy is moving in the opposite direction. Even if
Bloombergs empty phrases and new task force lead to some
new spending on rental assistance, more homeless are being created
every day, as a result of long-term joblessness and the destruction
of tens of thousands of units of affordable housing in order to
cater to the needs of the wealthy.
See Also:
Criminalizing the victim
New York City: Children die in house fire, mother charged
for being at work
[28 October 2003]
US: More than 1 million more
in poverty in 2002
[13 September 2003]
Youth commits suicide
in New York City homeless shelter
[13 August 2002]
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