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WSWS : News
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Homeless, poor freeze in US cold wave
By a team of WSWS correspondents
5 February 2003
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The recent cold spell in the central and eastern US has claimed
dozens of lives and led to widespread hardship among the poor,
the elderly and the homeless. After several exceptionally mild
winters, the weather has returned to more normal patterns. The
impact of the seasons cold wave highlights the desperate
conditions facing millions of people in the United States confronted
with rising unemployment and the relentless slashing of social
services at the federal, state and local level.
The very limited assistance provided to the poor and the homeless
is inadequate in many cases to even maintain the bare essentials
of life. In cities across the US the winter of 2003 has brought
scenes reminiscent of the nineteenth century: people huddled in
unheated homes or sleeping on the floor in overcrowded homeless
shelters; thousands seeking refuge on door stoops, in alleyways
or under bridges.
* In Chicago a reported 19 people have died due to the cold,
including at least one homeless man. The city has received scores
of calls daily from people needing assistance because of utility
shutoffs or malfunctioning heating systems.
* In Philadelphia, three elderly people were found dead from
hypothermia and heart problems in unheated homes. Bobby Rivers,
77, Betty Clark, 66, and Delia Brown, 70, were found dead on January
24. Temperatures had been below freezing in Philadelphia since
January 14. As of January 13 some 4,322 Philadelphia Gas Works
customers had their heat shut off. Pennsylvanias major energy
provider claims a computer problem is behind a delay in the processing
of some 69,000 applications for federal heating assistance.
* In northwest Detroit a 50-year-old homeless man, Larry Andrews,
froze to death January 22. A neighborhood resident found his body
under a large cardboard box in an alley. He had attempted to create
a shelter under the box, using blankets as walls. He was the second
homeless person reported to have frozen to death in Detroit this
winter. In December a 70-year-old homeless man died from the cold
in southwest Detroit. His body was found in the yard outside a
house.
* On January 8 police found a homeless women frozen to death
underneath a bridge in Pascagoula, Mississippi. Annie Abrams,
55, had been living underneath a highway bridge in the center
of town since November.
While few figures are kept about cold related deaths of homeless
people, the limited statistics available paint a harsh picture.
For example, a homeless advocacy group in Boston says a shocking
151 homeless died in that city last winter, including a two-month-old
baby. An official for the Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless
estimates that 60 homeless people die from the cold each year
in the Atlanta, Georgia area, a region which enjoys a relatively
mild climate compared to the northern US.
These deaths are only the most obvious and striking examples
of the suffering inflicted by the cold. In addition, low-wage
workers, those on fixed incomes and the homeless in particular
face the danger of frostbite and illness. Detroit Receiving Hospital,
for example, reported a number of admissions of homeless people
for treatment of frostbite during the week of January 20, including
one involving an amputation. In Omaha, Nebraska doctors amputated
one hand and the fingers on the other hand of a homeless man suffering
frostbite. The man is reportedly in danger of losing his feet
as well, as is another homeless man in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Evictions into the cold
Clifford, a Detroit resident, recently
became homeless when the city evicted residents of the apartment
building where he was staying. The evictions were part of a drive
by the administration of Democratic Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and
wealthy investors to drive the poor out of downtown areas to make
way for upscale development.
Clifford told the WSWS, A lot of shelters are standing
room only. Some people huddle in doorways with blankets or sleep
in cardboard boxes. But in this cold a blanket is not going to
do any good. The cold makes your mind become disoriented. The
only thing that is going to help in this kind of weather is to
be inside a warm building.
The shelters do what they
are designed to do, get you out of the cold. They give you a bowl
of soup or grits. Then they get you up at 5:30 or 6:00 in the
morning and send you out. Its freezing that time of morning.
Youre only thought is to find a place to stay warm, but
there is nowhere to go. No one wants to let you inside.
The way places are charging rent, it is out of my income
range. With rent and security deposit it is almost $1,000 to get
a place. If you are getting $600 a month, you cant afford
that. Some places want $15-25 just to fill out an application.
Some want you to get a police clearance.
Clifford added, I was a veteran. I served from 1971 to
1973. Being a veteran and dealing with the government I see the
corruption. In Iraq, what makes them think we can force our way
on another country? We wouldnt let them come here and do
that to us.
In Pittsburgh, 109 people were recently jammed into one emergency
shelter that normally holds 50 to 80 people. One homeless provider
reported that he is running out of cots because his supplier,
the military, needs them for a possible war against Iraq.
Donna Shaw heads Action Housing Homeless Family Services in
McKeesport, Pennsylvania near Pittsburgh. She said, There
has been a definite increase in the number of homeless. Last year,
the cold weather shelter [an emergency shelter that opens when
temperatures drop below 32 Fahrenheit] was getting half the number
of homeless that are coming in this year. There are 120 people
there every night and that makes things pretty crowed.
A homeless man from Pittsburgh, who goes by the name Skimmer,
commented, I am getting ready to go out and try and make
some money to wash my clothes and buy my cousin some medicine.
He is sicker than a dog. I think he might have influenza. He has
been sick for two days.
We dont have any insurance, so we cant see
a doctor. The only way you can go get any help is if you have
a body part falling off you. Otherwise, they ask if you have insurance
and if you dont they dont want to see you.
Rise in heating costs
For every person who is homeless there are dozens more who
are barely able to keep a roof over their heads. In many cases
the high cost of natural gas and heating oil makes it impossible
for low-wage workers and those on fixed incomes to both heat their
homes and pay rent. The Massachusetts Division of Energy Resources
recently estimated the average cost of heating oil in the state
to be $1.41 a gallon, a 26 percent increase over the average price
last winter of $1.12. The federal Energy Information Association
estimates that if prices stay at the same level a typical heating
oil customer could pay about $500 more to heat his or her home
this winter in the US.
Elderly people are being particularly hard hit. It is not unusual
for older people with inadequate savings or pensions to turn down
or turn off their heat during the winter to save money, putting
them at risk for hypothermia and illness. The danger is compounded
due to cuts in the federal Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program.
Only on January 24 did President Bush authorize the release of
an additional $200 million of $300 million in emergency federal
heating assistance available to the states. The funds released
by Bush represent only a fraction of the $500 million cut from
heating assistance in the 2002 US budget.
All me and my daughter can do is sit in the bedroom under
blankets, Kimberly Pinkett told the Philadelphia Inquirer.
She is one of thousands of families who have had their heat shut
off this winter. Even for those eligible for federal heating assistance
it often takes a month or longer from the time people apply until
the time they receive help. Pinketts supply of heating oil
ran out in mid-January. Her attempts to get assistance got the
runaround, she explained. She is now being told it
may be eight weeks before she can get help.
These conditions are the product of a decades-long assault
by big business and their political representatives on jobs and
social services. Over the past 25 years, hundreds of thousands
of relatively well-paying manufacturing jobs have been destroyed
in Detroit, Chicago, Pittsburgh and scores of other major US cities.
For the most part they have been replaced by low-paying service
jobs, some paying only minimum wage.
Virtually no new public housing is being built. The housing
stock that exists in inner-city areas of former Midwest industrial
centers is in a state of advanced decay, posing health and fire
hazards. Instead of being replaced or renovated, older dwellings
are simply left to collapse. Where older housing is being replaced
or renovated, such as in central Detroit, it is to make way for
upscale development.
The National Low Income Housing Coalition estimates that in
no region of the United States, unless one includes Puerto Rico,
is it possible for a person earning the minimum wage to afford
even the most modest one-bedroom apartment. In a survey of 25
major US cities, a January 13 report issued by the US Conference
of Mayors cited the lack of affordable housing as the primary
cause of a 19 percent increase in requests for emergency shelter
last year. The same report states that families with children
comprise 39 percent of the homeless population in the surveyed
cities and that 22 percent of the homeless are employed.
Housing funds cut
Despite this crisis situation, the US Department of Housing
and Urban Development (HUD), citing the need to correct internal
accounting errors, is planning to cut funds to housing agencies
by 30 percent in fiscal year 2003. In addition, the House appropriations
bill for fiscal year 2003 would cut $938 million from the housing
voucher program. This program provides low-income families with
vouchers to defray the cost of renting private housing. The cuts
would result in a net reduction of 125,000 housing vouchers below
the 2002 level.
Marilyn Sullivan works at the Bethlehem Haven in Pittsburgh
which serves homeless women. There have been a lot of cuts,
she said. Both the VA and the HUD subcommittees in the Senate
have cut funding for the homeless. Six million dollars was just
cut from the shelter-plus-care program. That program provides
money for shelters and provides care that homeless people need.
Another program being cut is the SHP; that is through
HUD. People who are homeless have a lot of different issues and
they need supportive services. If you just put a homeless person
in a home, a lot of them will end up losing it. Many of them have
mental health or physical health problems and they need supportive
services to survive.
The problem is that they are cutting a lot of human services
and sending the money for defense.
Donna Shaw noted, Public housing used to be an option,
but now there are so many stipulations that most of our homeless
cant qualify. If you have bad credit or a criminal record
then you cant get low-income housing. Many homeless have
substance abuse problems and thus have criminal or credit problems
that prevent them going into public housing.
The homeless population is getting older. We are seeing
more people in the 35- to 60-year range. There are so many factors
that are causing the growththe downturn in the economy,
welfare reform, the five-year time limit, and the fact that most
men cant receive welfare at all.
Thomas spoke to the WSWS while
waiting at a soup kitchen in Pittsburgh where he had come for
lunch. I have been homeless for three months, he said.
My wife and I separated and I dont have enough money
for my own place. I have been going to shelters at night or staying
with friends. It is the most miserable feeling, not having a place
to go.
A few weeks after I became homeless, I saw a woman with
three kids get put out on the street. I guess she didnt
pay her rent. I felt real sorry for her, but there was nothing
I could do. The kids were little, maybe 8, 9 and 10. I dont
know where she went or what she did. Every day people are being
put out and there is no place for them to go.
The budget cuts are just making things worse on the streets.
A lot of people depend on programs to survive and they are not
going to be there. The politicians are just for themselves, all
of them. They dont care about the homeless, the poor, the
lower class of people.
See Also:
New US pension rules to cut
benefits for millions of retirees
[3 January 2003]
Los Angeles businesses
press for expulsion of downtown homeless
[31 December 2002]
Mass eviction of Detroits
poor
Tenement to be turned into upscale apartments
[18 December 2002]
Unemployment benefits
running out for over 3 million US jobless
[2 November 2002]
Youth commits suicide
in New York City homeless shelter
[13 August 2002]
Millions of poor
US families face utility shutoffs
We live in America ...but its like a Third World
country
[12 July 2002]
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