Archive for May, 2009

Come to Coalition on Homelessness May Day +1 Fundraiser

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Come join us for an evening of fun, dance, music, and entertainment.

The Coalition on Homelessness has been Fighting for Justice for the Poor and Homeless in San Francisco for 20 years.

Musical performance by Antioquia

Admission is on a sliding scale: $10-25. Free parking available.

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The Runaround: Report on Hurdles to Shelter Access

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Anybody who is homeless in San Francisco and trying to reserve a bed in City-funded shelters is likely to be turned away an average of six times within a month. Chances are they’re just as likely to wait one day as well as over a week to get a bed. And they also believe the shelter system could be improved by fixing the reservation system, improving staff training, and creating more beds.

These were just some of the findings in a study of shelter seekers the Coalition on Homelessness will release this month. The survey of over 200 homeless city residents included in The Runaround also revealed that they had an even-money chance of having favorable or unfavorable experiences finding a haven in the shelter system.

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No On Proposition 1E

Friday, May 1st, 2009

You’ve been hearing it on the radio, and perhaps you vaguely recall voting for the Mental Health Services Act (2004’s Proposition 63), but maybe all the budget mayhem going down in Sacramento makes all this rather confusing. So here’s the skinny: The MHSA is a special tax levied on the wealthiest Californians that provides funding for county-level mental health programs. Proposition 1E would reallocate somewhere between a quarter and a third of the money used for these programs to the state’s “general fund”—that section of the budget which our elected officials can allocate as they like.

Opponents of Proposition 1E make a lot of good points:

It Cuts Services to Those Who Need Them: In a time of social crisis, we need to provide our communities with more support, not less. MHSA funds have provided healthcare for over 200,000 people. This number will necessarily be reduced by Proposition 1E reductions.

The First Cut is the Deepest: There has already been discussion on the state level of moving all MHSA money to the general fund. Given that political will, we need to be careful not to set a bad precedent. If this recession continues, and our politicians continue to value other expenditures over social services, we will most likely see proposals of further cuts to core mental health and other poor people’s services.

It’s Unnecessary: MHSA funds amount to less than a quarter of a percent of the state budget. The potential impacts in other budget sectors of the loss of services could well amount to more than this.

There’s No Accountability: While the MHSA had strict auditing and accountability requirements, Proposition 1E will move hundreds of millions of dollars to a legislature that can spend without any special recession-period restrictions.

None of us benefits from living in a state that can’t balance its books: We need a sane state budget. But we cannot ask our society’s most vulnerable members to bear the burden of our legislators’ profligacy. For this reason, the Coalition on Homelessness and the Street Sheet join with organizations across California in asking you to vote against Proposition 1E, and to thereby save mental health services for the people who this recession is hitting the hardest.

Most arguments made in this article come from the California Council of Community Health Organizations, but factual claims have been checked against existing and proposed law.

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May Day in a Sinking Economy

Friday, May 1st, 2009

We have come a long way since 1886 when police in Chicago’s Haymarket Square fired on people demonstrating in support of striking workers who were demanding eight-hour workdays. Many years have passed, and people around the world still commemorate May 1 as a day on which we celebrate the right of people to work and to do so with basic rights. But what does it mean to celebrate May Day in 2009? What does it mean to celebrate May Day during a deep recession or depression? What does it mean to celebrate May Day when so many people are losing their jobs?

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Family Homelessness & the Name Game

Friday, May 1st, 2009

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In the face of the growing numbers of families losing their homes, of having to split up for survival’s sake, and even of some children’s ending up in the hellhole of the Foster Care System, what is our Federal government doing? Unbelievably, what it seems intent on doing is systematically creating obstacles to families trying desperately to find a roof over their heads.

On April 2, the House (HR 1877) and the Senate (S 808) both reintroduced legislation entitled the Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing (HEARTH) Act of 2009. If this bill becomes law, as many people fear, thousands of destitute and poor families will fail to “qualify” for services funded with Federal homeless assistance dollars because they will be deemed not to be homeless enough.

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Uncle Anonymous’ Tour of Heck: No Glasses, Homeless/Poverty Disconnect Half Empty

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Several months ago Tenderloin Neighborhood Development Corporation and other entities sponsored a Tenderloin visit of a mobile optical clinic to help poor folks get new glasses, etc. The flyer advertising the event said it was to be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., which encouraged me to break the first law of getting any benefit offered to poor folks—get there early and get whatever it is.

So I thought a noon-ish visit to the van was doable. It wasn’t. What also wasn’t were the facts that only the first 100 people seen would get served, that those people were supposed to return beginning at 2 p.m., and anyone else who wanted to see if there were any “no-shows” (people who didn’t show up for their appointment) could be there then too and maybe get served.

This isn’t the only disconnect between entities with services and folks who need them, but that experience and several others lead me to a bit of ye olde rant and rave.

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From Hobos to Street People: A Historical Exhibit Explores Representations of Homeless People from the Depression and Today

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Homeless Go Home

Terry “Tresa” Chandler stood in the vaulted art gallery. Her tiny 4’11” figure was dwarfed by the colorful painting of a boy walking to school past a rotten tomato splashed against graffiti on a wall, ordering, “Homeless Go Home.” He is protected by four adults as he walks to a school for homeless children. Artist, Nili Yosha, crafted the work after Norman Rockwell’s illustration of guards escorting a small black girl into a newly integrated Little Rock school.

Terry tilted her head, peering at me with a shy, sardonic smile. “When people say this,” she observed, “they are doing it to be mean.”

“It’s good that homeless people get to see [this show] too. Then we can tell you if it’s real or not.”

“The best thing about this show is it makes people think.” Her voice echoed slightly, “I live it. It’s so real. All this is so true.”

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A$$-Kicking Medical Bill$ & Conditions Prey on People in Poverty

Friday, May 1st, 2009



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