
16 minute read
Sheltering the unsheltered is controversial, expensive
news The cost of COVID Sheltering the unsheltered is controversial, expensive
BY CORY VAILLANCOURT S TAFF WRITER G lobally, more than 2.5 million people have contracted the coronavirus since its identification earlier this year. The hardest-hit country, the United States, has reported 802,159 cases as of April 21. Of those, 685,679 cases are still active.
Of those that are no longer active, there are only two classifications: recovered and dead. The U.S. now counts more than 43,000 dead, good for a 37 percent mortality rate among those who no longer have an active case of COVID-19.
As communities across the country and across the state of North Carolina await the disposition of the other 685,679 active cases, so-called “stay home” orders designed to stem the spread of the coronavirus offer some degree of protection, especially for vulnerable populations — the elderly, the immuno-compromised and those with underlying conditions.
The unsheltered — those without homes or reliable places to sleep — are among the most vulnerable populations but carry the additional complication of being a much greater danger not only to themselves, but also to the general population, because how do you “stay home” when you have no home in which to stay?
Awareness of the Coronavirus Pandemic among the unsheltered in Haywood
County isn’t as low as one might think — they see the television, they read the news, they hear the radio, but without the basic sanitation and shelter that most others enjoy, they’re nervous.
“I know it’s a bad disease,” said Alice Marie Scott, who’s been on the street for more than a year. “It’s fixin’ to take everybody off the earth if we don’t stay clean.”
Standing near the pocket park in Frog Level on a recent sunny Saturday morning, Scott and her companion Lonnie Shelton said they’ve been doing everything they can to avoid contracting the virus.
“You gotta keep your hands clean,” Shelton said. “Your hygiene is most important, more important than anything.”
With most businesses and government facilities shut down, it’s a challenge to keep hands clean; Scott said she uses feminine wipes or baby wipes when she can — neither kills the coronavirus — but Shelton revealed another method.
“In the creek,” he said. “I wash mine in the creek.”
The lack of bathrooms available to unsheltered individuals makes the sanitation problem worse. Although the CDC says COVID-19 has been detected in the feces of some patients, it’s still not known if it’s transmissible in that fashion. Regardless, the fecal-oral route is a well-known method of transmission for many devastating diseases.
“It’s terrible using the bathroom on the street and cleaning up after yourself after that,” Scott said. “Tell you the truth, I went in a bag, cleaned myself up, done it just like you would a puppy dog, put it in the trash. It’s like you’re a little dog, a puppy dog.”
The bathroom issue has been addressed, but it’s far from resolved. Last week — more than five weeks after Gov. Roy Cooper placed North Carolina under a state of emergency and more than three weeks after he issued a statewide “stay home” order — the Town of Waynesville decided to spring for two portajohns and a hand-washing station in Frog Level, to the tune of $170 a week.
What has yet to be addressed is why people like Scott and Shelton are still on the streets at all. Shelton said he sleeps “wherever I can lay my head,” and Scott was just as cryptic about where they bed down for the night.
“Here and there, secret spots that we can’t tell,” she said. “You can’t reveal them because everybody else will be trashing your place.
BEE PACKAGES

LIMITED SUPPLY / RESERVE NOW COST: $129 • SIZE: 3LBS • QUEEN: SASKATRAZ
AVAILABLE: 2nd & 4th WEEK IN APRIL
A man takes a nap in an alley in Frog Level on the afternoon of April 18. Cory Vaillancourt photo
But, you know, you gotta do what you gotta do and try to stay away from everybody else but the ones that you’re close to.” G overnment response to those who’ve been affected by the Coronavirus Pandemic has varied from swift and effective to lethargic and futile.
The effort to remove people like Scott and Shelton from the streets lies somewhere in the middle despite the fact that poor sanitation practices and the unrestricted movement of unsheltered individuals poses a greaterthan-average risk of virus transmission to those who are otherwise abiding by state and local stay home orders.
Guidance on how to deal with unsheltered individuals has been issued by the U.S. Integrated Council on Homelessness, an interagency assembly that includes input from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
That guidance, however, doesn’t call for the wholesale housing of all unsheltered individuals — only those suspected or proven to be infected.
A joint statement emailed by Haywood County Emergency Services PIO Allison Richmond April 20 explains how the county is following USICH guidance.
“As within the general population, there are individuals in the unsheltered population who need to have a place to shelter for isolation (if suspected of being COVID-19 positive) and quarantine (if tested as positive). Haywood County is committed to providing that place for isolation or quarantine.”
As suggested by the CDC, the county’s plan also addresses transportation, communication and nutrition needs of the unsheltered who’ve subsequently been isolated or quarantined per what’s known as the “Person Under Investigation” protocol.
But as it turns out, the county has also refused to pursue public monies that would provide temporary shelter for all unsheltered individuals.
“The county made two grant applications from foundations, but none for public monies,” reads the joint statement.
Those public funds include a 75 percent FEMA reimbursement and 25 percent state reimbursement for costs related to the noncongregate sheltering of vulnerable populations in hotels.
Eligible populations include vulnerable individuals who have tested positive for COVID-19 or are suspected of exposure to COVID-19, individuals that should isolate as a precautionary measure due to underlying health conditions and, according to an April 8 press release by Cooper’s office, may also include “those whose living situation makes them unable to adhere to social distancing guidance.” Haywood County’s joint stateF

g BY CORY VAILLANCOURT S TAFF WRITER A fter more than a month of COVIDrelated social distancing, self-isolation, business and school closures, travel bans and enforced quarantines for non-residents, some Western North Carolina residents are saying they’ve had enough.
“I think they should reopen,” said David Almquist, a Haywood County man who led a procession of more than 30 vehicles across the county’s streets in protest of the state and local “stay home” orders.
“There’s a lot of good people that have small businesses, in this county especially, that have been forced to close,” Almquist said from the cab of his truck in the parking lot of the Haywood County Health Department. “If they keep it closed any longer, well I’m just afraid that they won’t be able to come back.”
The “Car rally to reopen Haywood County” organized itself in the parking lot of Belk, in Hazelwood, around 2 p.m. April 19 before departing en masse in vehicles with slogans written on their windows and signs taped to their doors.
Some cars had tinsel and glitter attached, while others displayed American flags. Honking and waving, the group proceeded through the Walmart parking lot before heading up Waynesville’s South Main Street, then turning north on Russ Avenue to visit the Publix and Ingles grocery stores.
From there, the group drove through the parking lot at Lowe’s, and then to the headquarters of Haywood County’s Health and Human Services Department, on Paragon Parkway.
Cheryl Hillis, owner of Buffalo Creek Vacations in Clyde, was part of the procession and said the effect on her business — which includes several guest cabins and two retired train cabooses in a scenic, isolated party of Haywood County — had been “horrible.”
“We’ve been shut down since March 15, and we had to cancel all our reservations and everything, and we’d just like to get people coming back out to North Carolina,” said Hillis from her van as she idled through the DHHS lot several cars behind Almquist.
Hillis said she felt it would be an appropriate time for her business to reopen, despite the more than 630,000 active coronavirus cases in the United States.
“For us, we’re on a 65-acre ranch, where people want to just stay secluded in the mountains, but if they go out and use a mask and stuff like that — all the people at Walmart, they’re not social distancing, so I think all the smaller businesses should be open, too,” she said.
The group completed its route by driving through the adjacent parking lot of Food Lion but planned to re-trace the entire route several more times.
North Carolina’s stay home order is valid through April 30, while Haywood’s is valid through May 5. Both can be lengthened, shortened or abolished altogether at any time.
g l g ment correctly points out that the FEMA/state funding is not a grant given ahead of time in anticipation of disaster-related expenses — “they are reimbursements for county expenditures for disaster relief ” requiring immediate outlay by the county to vendors or service providers.
Those FEMA reimbursements have, historically, been slow in coming and there’s always a chance that they never materialize, but those red flags didn’t stop Haywood County from passing a $100,000 budget amendment on April 6 to pay for various coronavirus-related costs like new part-time workers, overtime, personal protection equipment and cell phone service.
In bringing the budget amendment to commissioners, County Finance Director Julie Davis said that some of the expenses “could possibly” be reimbursed by FEMA.
“But at this point, we’re just not sure,” she said. “So we’re just going to go ahead and move this and take it from contingency, and if we get reimbursed it probably will be in the next year anyway.”
In the county’s joint statement, an estimate of $120 per person per day was given as the approximate cost to shelter people like Alice Marie Scott and Lonnie Shelton; a February 2019 point-in-time count estimated the number of unsheltered individuals in Haywood County at 95 people. The math adds up to about $11,400 a day, or about $342,000 a month to shelter the county’s entire homeless population.
Both Scott and Shelton said they’d heard of the movement to get them sheltered, but neither were surprised it hadn’t come to pass.
“The people out here, in this county anyway, they look down on us homeless, the people that ain’t got nowhere to stay,” Shelton said. “They said the town or the government had turned down a place for the homeless to get in a motel. I don’t know what the outcome of that is. Most of us try to just lay our heads wherever we can, you know?”
According to two separate sources with specific knowledge of the situation who spoke to The Smoky Mountain News on condition of anonymity due to fears of professional retaliation, a number of small “mom-and-pop” lodging establishments are both willing and eager to participate in the effort to minimize COVID-19 transmission risk by sheltering the unsheltered, and are especially eager for the income it would provide them — Western North Carolina’s hospitality industry has been devastated by travel bans, and the vast majority of their beds are empty.
Shelton said he recognized that serving the unsheltered population isn’t a high priority even during the best of times, so he’s used to doing what he has to do to survive, even amidst a deadly global pandemic.
“Us homeless people out here, we’re just survivors,” he said. “We’ll try to survive and beat this, beat this virus by ourselves.”
SENIOR RATE $ 32 M-F REGULAR RATE $ 36 M-F $ 40 Sat-Sun



176 COUNTRY CLUB DRIVE
FISH DAY! IT’S TIME TO STOCK YOUR POND! FISH WAGON To Place an Order Call 1-800-643-8439 www.fishwagon.com DELIVERY WILL BE: Wednesday, May 6 Franklin 11:00-11:45 @ Seays Farm & Garden
Sylva 12:45-1:30 @ Bryson Farm Supply Lake Junaluska 2:30-3:15 @ Junaluska Feed Center Asheville 5:15-6:00 @ Southern States Thursday, May 7
Fletcher 7:30-8:15 @ Fletcher Lawn- Garden & Hardware Mars Hill 9:15-10:00 @ Parker Farm Supply
written by Ingles Dietitian Leah McGrath Ingles Nutrition Notes

#QUARANTINE KITCHEN DON’T THROW THOSE VEGETABLES OUT!
Fresh vegetables won’t last forever in your refrigerator, and if the ones you’ve purchased are looking a little sad and soft or limp, it’s time to use them. SOME IDEAS Here are 7 ideas of what you can do with those vegetables so you don’t waste money by throwing them out. • Frittatas, omelets or quiche are great vehicles for a number of different vegetables when combined with egg and cheese and perhaps some chopped ham. • Pizza - Top your frozen cheese or homemade pizza with vegetables. • Stir Fry or Fried Rice - Combine vegetables with rice and tofu, chicken, shrimp, pork or steak • Tacos or Quesadillas - Chop up vegetables and add to a taco or quesadilla along with fish, ground beef or chicken. • Smoothies or Juices • Roasted vegetables - This works well with root vegetables as well as broccoli and brussel sprouts. • Soups or stews - Making a soup or stew at home? Add in more vegetables before you have to toss them.

Leah McGrath, RDN, LDN Ingles Market Corporate Dietitian @InglesDietitian Leah McGrath - Dietitian 800.334.4936 Ingles Markets… caring about your health


Cass Herrington (left), reporter and ‘Morning Edition’ host for Blue Ridge Public Radio in Asheville. Martin Anderson (right), music director and host at WNCW in Spindale.
WNCW and BPR bridge gaps within listenership
BY GARRET K. WOODWARD S TAFF WRITER W alking down the empty hallways of the WNCW studios on the campus of Isothermal Community College in Spindale, Martin Anderson passes by silent offices on his way to broadcast in front of a microphone for all of Western North Carolina to hear.
“With the coronavirus, we’re monitoring the situation closely. Right now, we’re down to maybe a third of the staff that’s normally here,” said Anderson, the music director and a long-time popular host at WNCW. “We have longer shifts on-air, with some of us prerecording our programs at home. We wipe down all of our shared equipment, with finding enough bleach wipes becoming a real predicament.”
Though WNCW has a fiercely loyal audience, its programs have pushed even more into the forefront of our daily lives in recent weeks. Amid the current coronavirus pandemic and state-mandated shelter-in-place orders, most folks are finding themselves sitting and waiting until normalcy might return, usually with the radio turned on.
“There definitely is more active listening from our folks. We’re certainly noticing that from our listener feedback and from the significant increase in our web streams and online traffic,” Anderson said. “Folks are telling us that not only do they have more time on their hands, but they’re lonely, too. They need companions, and it breaks my heart to think of so many people home alone and feeling the loneliness.”
Those sentiments are also held by Cass Herrington. A news reporter and host of “Morning Edition” for Blue Ridge Public Radio (BPR) in downtown Asheville, Herrington can’t help but think of all of those faces listening from the other end of her broadcasts.
“It’s this urge to almost reach out and hold people’s hands through the microphone because there is so much anxiety, and on so many levels,” Herrington said. “It’s hard to be in a studio and not see the people who are listening — however the ability to convey that comfort [in our programming] is fundamental.”
Herrington points to other beloved National Public Radio (NPR) hosts as touchstones of familiarity and stability during times and moments of crisis.
“I think about Sept. 11 or the Boston Marathon bombing, where I was so close to my radio because there were [NPR] voices like Melissa Block or Robert Siegel — it was soothing,” Herrington said. “There’s something so personal about the human voice. And when you have these familiar [radio] voices, it’s comforting during scary times to know those voices are still there, still maintaining some sort of normalcy or routine.”
— Cass Herrington, Blue Ridge Public Radio
For Anderson, it’s about being keenly aware of what song to play or mood to set the tone for someone’s day or night — those melodies at the heart of our closely held memories with loved ones, either near or far during this quarantine period.
“Some of our hosts are focusing on playing some feel-good music to allow for people to find a sense of normalcy,” Anderson said. “But, for me, I’m really trying to play songs that reflect what’s on people’s minds. And it’s been nice when we hear acknowledgement of that from our listeners, that the music is helping them.”
Anderson noted the recent death (due to complications from coronavirus) of iconic singer-songwriter John Prine as a prime example of the importance of WNCW and its programming.
“With John’s passing, normally people would gather and do a tribute concert or go to a bar, have a beer and talk about his music with their friends,” Anderson said. “But, with everyone not about to do that right now, the only real outlet folks have is WNCW to mourn the loss of one of their favorite musicians as we play his music all day in remembrance.”
And with the coronavirus pandemic, another issue has emerged — a lack of available information for the Hispanic population and communities within Western North Carolina.
To mitigate this, Herrington, who is fluent in Spanish and has an extensive background in reporting on race and immigration topics, launched “BPR En Español,” which provides online news and story content in Spanish for its audience.
“The loudest response I’ve gotten in these past few weeks has been from my sources in the immigrant and Latinx community,” Herrington said. “They’re concerned and alarmed that there is not enough information — whether that’s news or a public service — in Spanish. With this new platform at BPR, we’re hoping to expand it as we go along.”
Both WNCW and BPR have programming budgets that rely on F