02 06 2008

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Valentine’s Special: The Street Sense team on romance, dating and Feb. 14, page 7

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Where the Washington area's poor and homeless earn and give their two cents February 6, 2008 – February 19, 2008 • Volume 5, Issue 7

VENDOR VOICES

www.streetsense.org

Childless Couples Lack a Spot in Shelters

Street count

Being in a Relationship While Being Homeless By Jeffery McNeil

See

Voices, page 13

Courtesy of Pathways to housing

My editor asked me what it is like to have a relationship while being out on the street. To me this topic is very difficult because someone who wants to date you has to be willing to see the potential you might have. That significant other can’t be judgmental and must keep an open mind about your situation. To be honest, I really don’t approach many people about dating because I really wouldn’t want to do that to another woman. I’m an independent person who likes to take care of myself, and I don’t feel comfortable asking for things I don’t work for. My only income now is selling newspapers. I know in my relationships I like to be the provider and I couldn’t feel good if my girlfriend was paying the bills until I found myself. Another reason I don’t really date is the quality of women you have to choose from. When you are in the shelter system, the only people you usually encounter are from shelters and they bring baggage from their past addictions, children, abuse, STDs, and neglect of their bodies – all the drama of being in the homeless environment. My dad used to say that two dead batteries can’t jump start a car and two people that are homeless aren’t going to do anything but satisfy short-term needs and lust. Right now, I’m content not having

By Brittany Aubin

From Jan. 24 to 27, communities across the country conducted regional homelessness surveys. Washington, D.C. and Montgomery County were among them. Above: Each team of three working on the Washington, D.C. street count gets a clipboard, a tally sheet with columns for age, gender, medical condition and location, and a map showing the area to cover. See stories on pages 4 and 5.

Deadline Approaches for Purge of Housing Assistance Waiting List By Noelle Wood More than 10% of the population of Washington, D.C. may be waiting for public or subsidized housing. In January, the D.C. Housing Authority sent out letters to everyone on the waiting list. Anyone who does not respond by March 11 will be removed from the list. “We know that people have m ov e d o u t o f t h e a re a , h a v e changed addresses without contacting DCHA or have passed away during that period. We want to ensure that we have accurate records and can reach people who need housing assistance when we have openings,”

said DCHA Deputy Executive Director Karen Moone. But homeless advocates are worried that people who are homeless, who move often, who are illiterate or have health problems, may not receive the letters or respond in time. The homeless, who are given preference on the list, often wait four to five years before they get housing assistance. For a person who has been on the list for five years, being removed because of the update “could mean another five years of your life,” said Anne Smetak, a staff attorney for the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless.

The waiting list was last updated in 2001. WLCH outreach worker Mary Ann Luby and her colleagues said they have met many people who joined the waiting list in the 1990s and were removed in 2001, but didn’t find out they were removed until years later. Luby said she was concerned that the DCHA’s desire for efficiency would mean that many people would fall through the cracks. She and her colleagues said that there should be an extension of the deadline and a more concerted effort to reach those who don’t receive or

See

Purge, page 6

PHOTOGRAPHY

POLITICS

A new feature debuts as vendor Bobby Buggs takes us through his travels in D.C., page 8

The Economic Stimulus bill being debated in Congress may help the poor, page 6

Stacy from Malibu

EDITORIAL

PROFILE

Part 1 of Ivory Wilson’s latest story features a private detective getting more than he bargained for, page 10

Vendor Jeffery McNeil talks about what we can learn from The Patriots, page 13

A local group uses theater, dance and music to talk about addiction, page 3

Inside This Issue FICTION

A Day in the Life

Sports as a Metaphor for Life

On the Hill

Acting Out

February is the season of love. Convenience stores peddle chocolates, greeting cards whisper sweet nothings, furry stuffed toys croon Sinatra in electronic notes. Outside, frigid winds howl and gray skies threaten. Yet a heart in love is always warm. Except perhaps a homeless one. For many D.C. homeless couples, cold winter weather means a choice between life alone in the shelters or together on the street. Homeless residents seeking services fall into two groups – those with children and those without, said Andy Silver, a staff attorney at the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless. Couples or single parents with children are considered family, eligible to apply for shelter as a unit. Childless couples are classified as individuals, and regardless of marital status, must apply to shelters separately. The Homeless Services Reform Act of 2005 dictates the current definition of a family, said Darlene Matthews, a policy analyst at the Community Partnership for the Prevention of Homelessness. Without a change to the legislation, publicly funded shelters must follow the categories set forth by the District. As of January 2007, there were 6,911 homeless individuals in the greater Washington region and 4,851 homeless residents classified as members of families. No one knows how many of those individuals are childless couples searching for shelter in the city. “The law prescribes how we count that,” Matthews said. Lacking data, advocates and outreach workers cannot estimate the extent of the need. The Community for Creative Non-Violence, the only publicly funded shelter for individual men and women in the District, allows

See

Couples, page 7


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