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April 03, 2008 issue 21 Loquitur

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Womens Softball

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Cabrini Music Scene

Thursday, April 3, 2008

TIHE LOQUITUR YOU SPEAK, WE LISTEN

Radnor, Pa.

CABRINI COLLEGE

50 Vol XLIX, Issue 21

www.theloquitur.com

A desperate need for change: struggling with homelessness JAMIE HUFNAGLE NEWS EDITOR JLH729@CABRINI.EDU

Hyacinth King became homeless after being diagnosed with schizophrenia. King left the home she shared with her parents after the voices in her head told her that her parents were going to harm her. Before finding a life on the streets, King worked for her parents who were very successful owning a Thrift Way Supermarket. King went to college for business, but encountered problems with her mental illness, which affected her studies. “Getting my degree was a big struggle since my symptoms appeared during my junior year,” King said. Because resources were sparse, King had to compete with the people she referred to as friends during the day for the shelter she needed at night. “I lived in my car until it died,” King said. “Then I got a big cardboard box from a store and made it my home during the night, but I had to be careful that another homeless person wouldn’t take it.” Center City’s street population, 85 percent of whom are mentally ill or addicted or both, is the highest in 10 years, according to an article in The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia’s homeless system has grown to a point that leaves many shelters filled to the capacity and many people still left on the streets. According to an article in The Philadelphia Inquirer, homeless experts say the numbers will keep increasing unless the city gets to the root of the problem, which is currently a severe shortage of supportive housing for the mentally ill.

“I lived in my car for about a year, turning on the heat in the winter and turning on the air in the summer,” King said. “When my car broke down and I took to the cardboard, I lived on the streets for three years.” King was transferred from a mental health facility to a drug rehabilitation site after being dual -ly diagnosed with a drug problem and a mental health problem. King found herself at Project H.O.M.E. (Housing, Opportunities for Employment, Medical Care, Education) in Philadelphia, Pa. after her case manager at the drug rehab facility recognized that she needed more treatment. Project H.O.M.E. is a nonprofit organization that empowers people to break the cycle of homelessness, address the structural causes of poverty and attain their fullest potential as members of society. The program is designed to specifically overcome chronic homelessness and deals with the complex issues of people with special needs such as mental illness and addiction. The program consists of street outreach, a range of supportive housing from entry-level to permanent housing and comprehensive services, including health care, education and employment, according to projecthome.org. Laura I. Weinbaum is the director of public policy at Project H.O.M.E and works to educate the public about homelessness. Weinbaum stressed the difference between the 1970s and the present. “What is wrong with this picture and what has not changed?” Weinbaum said. “To me it’s this question of the dissection between housing costs and benefits or minimum wage.” According to Weinbaum,

there needs to be a big change in the system in order to come up with permanent solutions. “We live in America, the richest country in the world. Nobody should be living on the street,” Weinbaum said. “There is real leadership needed right now. The emphasis needs to shift to what we call the back door from homelessness, the way out of homelessness, to permanent housing in a lot of different forms.” Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter addressed the homelessness situation before stepping into office, but has not yet laid out a specific plan on his intent to address it. “There is going to have to be a restructuring away from this emergency shelter situation and maybe converting some of those resources to the longer term which is more cost effective,” Weinbaum said. According to King, the responsibility for change is something that Nutter should follow through with. “He said he wouldn’t put his dog in our shelters. We need to hold the mayor accountable to his promises before he was elected,” King said. King now works 40 hours a week at Project H.O.M.E. and volunteers in the advocacy department. King went to school for computer repair and passed the certification test. She uses her own experiences to reach out to the homeless. “Now that I am working and volunteering and doing whatever anyone needs, I don’t feel sorry for myself anymore,” King said. “I have my self esteem and pride back.”

JONATHAN REA/GRAPHIC DESIGN/HARVEY FINKLE/PROJECT HOME

Residents of Project H.O.M.E. pose for a picture above. A crowd gathered at the opening of 1515 Fairmount Avenue, now a residence for 48 formerly homeless individuals, after a four year legal Not-In-MyBack-Yard (NIMBY) battle that went all the way up to the US Department of Justice Individuals. People gathered to ask questions at a 1999 Mayoral candidates’ forum – the best-attended forum of that election cycle.

Minority students stand strong to face diversity CHRISTOPHER R. BLAKE ASST. NEWS EDITOR CRB724@CABRINI.EDU

“I feel like slavery was a week ago and segregation was yesterday,” Alicia Blanding, a freshmen biology and pre med major, said. “The civil rights movement occurred only so many years ago. People are not going to change overnight.” Blanding is an African Ameri-

can who has lived in several states during her life. While living in a town in Maryland she felt discrimination as she had to constantly fight for the grades she deserved. Just as the number of hate groups in the United States has grown dramatically since 2000 the number of hate crimes directed at minorities, specifically Latinos, has increased. According to a report called “The Year in Hate” released by

“” If you don’t know me, then don’t call me something i am not.

-Miguel Amaya

the Southern Poverty Law Center the number of hate groups in the United States has increased from 602 in 2000 to 888 in 2007. “Unfortunately not only me but some of my peers of both black and Hispanic races were discriminated against,” Blanding said about times when she was growing up. “Sometimes people either mistakenly or knowingly call me a Mexican. Maybe because they feel I fit that stereotype

but that does not make it right,” Miguel Amaya a freshmen finance and Spanish major, said. Amaya was born in El Salvador and immigrated to the United States with his family when he was 9. He expressed that overall his transition to the United States was easy but some

HATE GROUPS, page 3


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