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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
US: Homeless die in frigid weather
By Jeremy Johnson
2 February 2004
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While the US news media has provided ample coverage of the
near-record cold wave, very little is being said this winter about
the loss of lives and suffering among those forced to live on
the streets. The toll has been particularly harsh during January,
which has seen ice, snow and subfreezing temperatures settle in
over much of the eastern half of the country. The severe weather
has brutally exposed a deepening social crisis of poverty and
unemployment that has left record numbers homeless.
Homeless shelters from Maryland to Colorado and throughout
the Northeast have been filled to overflowing. In New York City,
the homeless population has set new records, with over 38,000
people seeking aid from the city. In Kansas City, Missouri, the
largest homeless shelter reported that it was filled and attempting
to collect extra mattresses on Saturday.
In Omaha, Nebraska, a homeless shelter administrator told KETV
Channel 7 News that it was feeding as many as 1,000 homeless and
poor people a night as temperatures fell below zero. Frankly,
were maxed out, said the administrator, Candace Gregory.
When its this cold, they do come in off the streets
from living in their cars or under the bridge or in the campground.
An administrator at the homeless shelter in the town of Salisbury
on the eastern shore of Maryland told the local paper, the Daily
Times, We turn a lot of people awayabout 200 to
250 a month. Of those denied shelter, he added, 60 percent
had come together with their children. He attributed the growth
in the homeless population to recent layoffs at a Tyson Foods
plant and the shutdown of a Black & Decker factory.
Among those turned away and those who do not make it into the
shelters, there have been a mounting number of fatalities.
In Chicago, a homeless man became the eighth known victim of
hypothermia in the city since October. Pradeep Dameras frozen
body was found on January 22 on the Bank One Plaza downtown. The
33-year-old man had been reported missing some two weeks earlier
by relatives in the central Illinois city of Bloomington.
Dameras death follows on the heels of two others. On
January 18, children playing in the snow came upon a lifeless
Raymond Greenwald, thought to be in his forties, under a footbridge
in River West Park. The next day, an unidentified homeless man,
estimated to be between 45 and 55, was found in the stairwell
of a West Belle Plain Avenue apartment building. An autopsy determined
the cause of death to be cold exposure and alcohol intoxication.
In nearby Milwaukee, Wisconsin, two homeless men have died
in the cold this month. Ira Porter, age 44, was found dead in
a trash bin on January 20, and four days later, John MacDonald,
age 53, was found dead in a truck.
Further loss of life can be expected sooner rather than later,
as temperatures dove below zero degrees Fahrenheit across Chicago
Friday morning, the coldest temperatures in over four years there.
Along the East Coast, the bitter cold persists as well. New
York City, for instance, has seen the coldest January since 1977.
On January 16, the temperature plunged to 1 degree Fahrenheit,
tying a 110-year-old record for the date. There have been eight
days so far this month when the mercury fell into the single digits,
with wind chills of 25 degrees below zero and lower, creating
conditions in which frostbite can set in on bare skin after only
10 minutes.
Four homeless men are known to have frozen to death in New
York City during the last month. Other cases may simply have gone
unreported.
Police divers pulled the body of the 23-year-old Miguel Flores,
a homeless immigrant from Honduras, out of an icy lake in Brooklyns
Prospect Park on January 24, six days after neighborhood dog-walkers
had seen him fall through. He presumably had been unable to read
the warning signs posted about the thin ice.
Nobody reported him missing from the nearby shelter where he
had been staying since December. Officials explain the lack of
any report or search by saying it is common for homeless people
to miss their curfews. Flores had lost all of his papers when
his wallet was stolen. His body was identified by a card bearing
his name and the name of the shelter where he was staying.
On January 16, an unidentified man was found frozen in the
Van Cortland Village section of the Bronx. A few days earlier,
a homeless New York man died after starting a fire in a vacant
Brooklyn warehouse to keep warm. The fire ended up killing him
when it got out of control.
On January 11, another homeless man was found dead in an outdoor
encampment built under a Bronx expressway that about a dozen people
called home. Two days after that, Mayor Michael Bloomberg ordered
the encampment torn down, saying at a press conference that the
outdoors was no place to sleep.
Bloombergs concern is not for the homeless people themselves,
a number of whom refuse to be relegated to the citys overburdened
and underfunded shelter system. Rather, he is concerned about
the image presented of a city run by billionaires like himself
teeming with the poor and homeless.
In a separate incident, a woman died when her attempts to fight
off the cold with a space heater and candles set her New York
City apartment ablaze. Similarly, in Baltimore, a woman died of
carbon monoxide poisoning from improperly vented space heaters
that were being used to fight the cold.
Calls to a special city hotline for complaints about New York
City apartments lacking heat and hot water reached a record of
more than 5,000 a day during the recent cold wave. In response,
the city has provided tips for residents on how to
live without heat.
In Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the body of an unidentified
man in his forties was found on January 17 near railroad tracks
in the citys Fairhill section. His body temperature was
measured at 67 degrees. The low temperature that morning was 7
degrees Fahrenheit.
There have been three other victims of hypothermia in Philadelphia
in January, all found dead in unheated homes.
The Bush administration has pushed through sharp cuts in federal
funding for a program that provides assistance to low-income households
in paying heating bills.
Death from exposure is not a phenomenon limited to the Northeast
and Midwest. In December, a man known as Rick died outdoors in
downtown Denver, Colorado, on a night when the temperature fell
to zero. He was estimated to be 55 years old, and he had lived
on the streets there for at least 10 years.
The mans death triggered a demand for more shelter beds,
which one advocate pointed out were fewer today than 10 years
ago, even though the number of Denvers homeless people has
risen from 1,985 in 1990 to 9,725 in 2003, according to a study
by the Denver Homeless Planning Group.
Last week, the Denver City Commission approved a plan to create
a tent city to house the homeless on a temporary
basis. Portland, Oregon, and Fort Lauderdale, Florida, already
have set up tent cities, and Key West, Florida, is reviewing a
similar plan.
The erection of tentspromoted as stopgap
measures to deal with the emergency posed by homeless people being
out on the streetsis a stark admission of the failure of
the profit system to provide for the basic need for shelter. Far
from being temporary, such tent cities will no doubt become a
permanent feature of life in American cities, as has the phenomenon
of widespread homelessness itself.
See Also:
Behind the economic
recovery: Hunger and homelessness in US continue to
rise in 2003
[27 December 2003]
Homeless, poor freeze
in US cold wave
[5 February 2003]
Deaths in US capital
highlight homelessness crisis
[11 February 2002]
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