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02-08-2006, 02:42 PM
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GreekChat Member
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Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: somewhere in richmond
Posts: 6,911
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this whole thing is a cluster f. We are a/the super power. Come on, I know we can do this.
I think this will get better though, it has to.
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01-23-2008, 01:37 PM
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GreekChat Member
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Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: freakin' out
Posts: 1,729
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bumping
Quote:
Morning Edition, January 23, 2008 · Austin Earl is so poor that the only place he could find to sleep at night was a spot of hard grass in a city park.
Earl has few possessions. But even when you have almost nothing, it's still not safe to live on the streets of New Orleans.
"I got robbed about a week ago," Earl says. "Broad daylight, coming from the grocery store. Two youngsters.
"They took the money I had. Took my cigarettes, my lighter. I found my wallet about a block away. You know, to rob the homeless is something I really couldn't understand, but there's guys that does it. "
Earl, 52, has been on the streets for four years — even before Hurricane Katrina. He has a mental illness, but it's been a while since he's taken the medications he needs. He's one of an estimated 12,000 chronically homeless people in New Orleans.
Housing Plan Emphasizes Support
Since Katrina, the city's homeless population has doubled, according to groups that work with the homeless. Almost all the city's affordable housing was destroyed.
So Louisiana came up with a bold plan to house the most desperate and hardest-to-help homeless people like Earl. The state is building thousands of new apartments and houses.
They're for "permanent supportive housing." The idea is to give the most chronically homeless people a permanent place to live.
Unlike in other programs, these people are not required to get off drugs or alcohol, or to get their mental illness under control before they can move in.
Just getting them off the streets is considered therapeutic.
According to the plan, when the homeless have found a permanent place to live, the state will offer them whatever social services they need to succeed in that house, from substance-abuse counseling to simple help in learning how to shop or how to balance a checkbook.
Congress gave the state of Louisiana millions of dollars to provide the social services the people need when they move into the new apartments.
It also gave millions of dollars of tax breaks to developers to build housing for homeless people. In return, the developers agreed to give low rents to the poor and to set aside at least 5 percent of their units to the most chronically homeless.
The first of those new homes and apartments will be available in the next few weeks.
No Money to Move In
But there's one problem: Homeless people are not moving in.
That's because Congress never got around to coming up with the third part of the program.
"What we don't have are the rent subsidies that will help people pay their rent," explains Ann O'Hara of the Technical Assistance Collaborative, a national housing group for people with disabilities.
For the last two and a half years, she's made dozens of trips from Boston to help Louisiana build these homes.
"We're at an incredibly critical point," she says. "Because if we can get the funding for the rent subsidies from Congress, then Louisiana will have a 3,000-unit permanent supportive housing system that will be in place for years and years and years. If we don't get these subsidies, then the whole program could fall apart."
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the rest here
__________________
you don't need electricity to cut pineapple.
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01-23-2008, 06:43 PM
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GreekChat Member
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Atlanta area
Posts: 5,382
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So let me get this straight? You'll build me a new place to live and then you'll pay for me to live there, and I don't have to hold a job, get off drugs, or take my medicine if I'm mental ill.
And this in going to decrease the number of people receiving social services? I'm going to need to see that math.
(Now, I don't begrudge the people described in the story the help, but it's hard for me to see how this is going to work long term. It's going to seem like a pretty sweet deal to people who are currently working themselves really hard to provide for themselves.)
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