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"We are not animals, we are human beings"
Record numbers swamp New York Citys homeless shelters
By Jeremy Johnson and Bill Vann
15 February 2003
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The record growth of homelessness in New York City is the starkest
indication of the deep social crisis and the yawning gap between
wealth and poverty in the US financial and corporate capital.
According to the citys Department of Homeless Services,
the number of people flooding municipal shelters is the highest
since records were first kept 20 years ago. For December 2002,
an average of 38,039 people stayed in municipal shelters each
night, an increase of 25 percent in only one year.
The recent cold spell has only swelled what was already a flood
of people into the citys shelter system. This included 16,633
children, fully 44 percent of the shelter population, while another
13,439, or 35 percent, were adults in families. Families constitute
the fastest growing segment of the homeless population, and the
number sleeping in shelters has doubled in the last four years
alone.
During Januarys cold snap, one homeless man, 60-year-old
Arthur Cafiero, froze to death on the church steps in Manhattan
where he had been sleeping for the last three years. Like many
homeless, he preferred the streets to the shelters.
With New York facing a prolonged period of sub-freezing temperatures,
large numbers of families are showing up at the Emergency Assistance
Unit (EAU) in the Bronx, the only place in the city where homeless
families may go to apply for shelter.
The intake center has been the subject of recurrent lawsuits
over the citys failure to provide even minimally humane
conditions. A judge found the city in contempt of court last summer
for having families it was unable place in shelters sleeping on
benches and floors at the EAU.
The citys billionaire Republican Mayor Michael Bloomberg
responded with a plan to move families directly from the EAU to
a nearby abandoned jail, where they were placed into cells in
a facility ringed by barbed wire. This blatant criminalization
of homelessness sparked heated protests. The city was ultimately
forced to abandon the plan after it was discovered that the old
jail was contaminated with lead paint, placing the health of the
children housed there in serious jeopardy.
Most recently, the city announced that it is considering a
scheme to float the homeless off shore on derelict ocean liners.
Bloomberg plan to evict homeless from shelters
In the wake of its recent settlement of a long-standing lawsuit
brought on behalf of the homeless, the Bloomberg administration
is seeking the power to further penalize them. He has asked the
courts to give the city the right to evict homeless families from
the shelters if they are found in violation of shelter or social
service rules or if they refuse the first offer of permanent housing.
The families could be denied shelter for as long as 180 days,
with parents thrown into the streets and their children placed
in foster care.
Families who spoke to the World Socialist Web Site at
the EAU earlier this month complained of receiving spoiled food
that made their children sick, filthy toilets and abuse at the
hands of security guards. Placement in shelters for many comes
so late that their children get little sleep and are unable to
attend school.
These conditions have in turn triggered a severe child health
crisis. Fully 40 percent of the children in the shelter system
suffer from asthma, the highest childhood asthma rate reported
anywhere in the world.
Many of those applying for shelter are employed, but their
salaries are inadequate to meet New York Citys soaring rents.
Attempts to make do by doubling up with family members inevitably
break down.
I am working at a McDonalds
in Brooklyn, said Gary Martin, 25. I have to get up
at 4:00 a.m. to get there by 6:00 a.m., and then come back here
by 4:00 p.m. to wait until midnight or later to be placed for
the night. I sometimes get only one hour of sleep, never more
than four. I make $6.00 an hour and work a maximum of 26 hours
a week. If I rent a room for $100 a week, I cant even afford
that. We were living in Flatbush in a room with my mother, but
the landlord forced us out, saying we were using too many utilities.
Garys wife, Migdalia Roman, told the WSWS that her husband
suffers from asthma and that she has seizures. She complained
that they were getting sick from the food in the shelters. Why
do they have to feed you like this? Just because we are homeless,
we are not animals, we are human beings.
Nikisha David said that after losing
their apartment, she and her husband had slept on subway trains
and abandoned buildings before coming to the EAU. I actually
believe we were better off in abandoned buildings, she said.
The places they put you have rats; some places are filthy.
You have no privacy. The guards can see you in the mirror when
you are taking a shower. My husband lost his job and Im
six months pregnant with twins. We came here on the 11th of January,
and I had to sleep on the floor.
Caught between bureaucracy and police
For many, the search for shelter is an endless treadmill, with
long delays after which they are found ineligible
because of a lack of documentation or their supposed ability to
move in with relatives.
Wilbert Reed told the WSWS: I have been coming here for
four months. They keep finding me ineligible. They say I am able
to stay with my daughter, but Im not because my name is
not on the lease. She and her boyfriend are living in a one-bedroom.
She can get thrown out if the landlord finds me there. She worked
33 months to get that apartment, and Im not going to get
her thrown out.
I have had to go to court four times because they say
I am ineligible. Each time the court sends me back here to go
through the whole process all over again. I lost my job because
of these people. I started working in December as a security guard
in a warehouse store, but I missed too much time with all this
running back and forth. My daughter missed a month of school.
You cant get much sleep; and the kids are throwing up because
the food is bad. I just want a stable condition where I can go
on with my life.
Even for those who do receive placement, conditions remain
precarious. The slightest brush with the police can result in
being thrown back on the street.
I was in Tier 2, which is like an apartment of your own,
for four months, said Sonia, aged 39. On January 23,
I was arrested for trespassing and spent the weekend in jail.
When I didnt show up at the shelter by midnight, they put
my two kids out in the street. They went to my older daughters
house. She had just gotten out of the shelter system herself.
When I was released from jail, they told me at the shelter that
I was discharged.... They packed my things and put them on the
steps. Then I had to come back here and apply all over again.
Sonia was caught up in one of the NYPDs periodic sweeps
against the homeless. She said that when she was arrested, most
of the people brought to Central Booking were homeless, picked
up on the same charge of trespassing. Its hard, if
youre a single parent, and the kids are crying to go home,
but you dont have a home to go to, she said.
Michelle, 18, was at the EAU with her mother and her five brothers
and sisters, ranging in age from five to 13. We have been
16 days going through this procedure, she said. We
are supposed to stay in the same shelter for at least a week,
but we keep having to come back here every day. Kids leave from
here at midnight or one in the morning. A lot of kids are missing
school. If you miss too much school, they call ACS (Administration
of Child Services) and take your kids away from you. The food
here is jail foodcold bologna sandwicheskids dont
like to eat that. Babies are vomiting because they give you spoiled
milk.
Affordable housing, jobs and aid scarce
Senior Policy Analyst with the New York City Coalition for
the Homeless Patrick Markee points to three main reasons for the
rise in homelessness: a severe shortage of affordable housing,
cutbacks in government housing assistance, and the economic recession.
The number of apartments renting for under $500 a month declined
by 51 percent in the decade of the 90s, and has dropped
further since. Real estate values, driven by the demand for luxury
housing for the citys wealthy elite, have continued to escalate
even as the stock market crashed. Meanwhile, the city reported
losing 82,300 jobs last year, six times the number it lost in
2001.
A state program to build supported housing for the severely
mentally ill, which reduced shelter stays for its participants
by 86 percent, has not been renewed since 1999. Currently there
are 1,800 approved applicants for some 200 vacancies. A small
Family Rental Assistance Program designed to help working homeless
pay market rents is now on the chopping block in Mayor Bloombergs
latest budget revision.
While cuts in welfare funding and other forms of assistance
have been a major contributing factor to the rise in homelessness,
Bloombergs Department of Homeless Services budget includes
nearly $9.2 million for a plan to increase public assistance
enrollment for families in the shelters. The aim is to secure
state and federal revenue for the city as reimbursement for welfare
expenditures. The result will be increased pressure on shelter
residents who are working to sign up for welfare instead. Under
current regulations, they will then be obliged to work for their
benefits.
Alexander Peña, 30, was waiting at the EAU to be placed
with his wife, who is eight months pregnant, and their three-year-old
daughter. I am capable of working, but I cant work
with the way the system is here, he said. Today was
supposed to be my first day at a new job, but we arent placed
yet, and I cant leave my wife alone. I had to call to say
I wouldnt be coming in, and I will probably have to call
in again tomorrow. If you work, they make it harder for you to
get help from the system. They would actually rather have welfare
take care of your assistance, because the city gets those moneys
back.
The shelters are overcrowded. You have to wait for a
family to be ejected to get a place. Last August I lost a house,
my wife went back to live with her mother, and I stayed at a rooming
house. Now DHS wants to break up my family. They say I can stay
with my mother-in-law, but I am not welcome there. I would have
been better off coming here right away with my eviction notice,
rather than trying to work things out on my own.
Ive been working since I was 14. At one point I
was holding down three jobs. Now that I need the system, its
screwing me over.
See Also:
Homeless, poor freeze in US cold wave
[5 February 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]
Youth commits suicide
in New York City homeless shelter
[13 August 2002]
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