05 15 2006

Page 1

$1.00

Deputy Mayor Brenda Donald Walker Starts A New Monthly Column, page 5

Suggested Donation

Where the Washington area's poor and homeless earn and give their two cents May 15, 2006 -- June 14, 2006

Volume 3, Issue 7

www.streetsense.org

The Complex Link: Mental Illness and Homelessness Health Care for the Homeless There are more than 9,000 homeless people on the streets in Washington, D.C. and most of them have their own sets of problems and challenges. And while most of these difficulties were contributing factors to their homelessness, one common problem is both a catalyst and a result of life on the street: mental illness. In D.C. alone, 15% of the homeless people that use the city’s homeless services are “severely mentally ill,” according to the Community Partnership for the Prevention of Homelessness. These psychiatric illnesses include schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depression,

post-traumatic stress syndrome, and obsessive-compulsive disorder, all of which can cause significant disability. Nationally, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has reported that 40% of people nationwide who experience chronic homelessness have substance-abuse disorders, 25% have some form of physical disability or disabling health condition, and 20% suffer from serious mental illness. In July of 2005, the National Coalition for the Homeless found that 20% to 25% of the single adult homeless population suffers from some form of severe and persistent

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MENTAL, page

7

Vendor Voices

By Brenda Karyl Lee-Wilson

Rules Do Not Apply Here

For two years and almost three months, I have been homeless within the District. During this time I have also become a member of a sorority that did not exist when I went through “rush week” at the University of Texas in Austin, at the ripe age of 16. Unlike them with their Greek symbols and mathematical names and the recruiting process to get your blood line associated into a lifetime organization, this one requires no pedigree, education or money. We are the “Sisters of the Shelter System” and like all sorority sisters we are bound to each other for life through that which we have experienced as members. Although we on the whole, do not like all our members, I have noticed we sisters

are there if possible, to assist each other no matter what the dilemma as our hearts know the same pain of homelessness. Therefore, I am obligated to bring to light the plight that we continually encounter from many Catholic Charities (now called Catholic Community Services -- CCS) employees and their total disregard for us in the public shelters that they claim to manage on our behalf. What we sisters all have in common is that we have all lost the foundation that is necessary for one’s ability to function in this world. Secondly, we have now become dependent upon services that we use to provide for ourselves, making us more vulnerable to our

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RULES, page 17

Kris Thompson, the executive director of Calvary Women’s Services, assists a client in her office. Thompson is just one of dozens of homeless service provider executives that are making less than their peers elsewhere.

Local Service Provider Executives Shortchanged on Compensation By Trish Savage “They’re making a million on us,” a District homeless man was recently overheard commenting on the directors of nonprofit organizations. But after a close evaluation of the data, millions is hardly the case. Most all of the heads of the 62 D.C.-based homeless service providers surveyed, particularly those of the smaller nonprofits, are underpaid and many of them are nearing poverty levels themselves. The average CEO salary for local homeless service providers in 2004 was $76,408, according to analysis of the most recently available data. This is 45% lower than the average for all nonprofits in Washington, D.C., and nationally it’s 7.6% lower than the average for nonprofits serving the homeless, according to CharityNavigator.org, an online ser-

vice that rates 501(c)3 organizations throughout the country. When you break down the numbers even further into budget sizes, the smaller nonprofit executives in Washington D.C. are losing out even more when it comes to compensation. The average for the 27 nonprofits that serve the homeless with budgets between $500,000 and $3.5 million was $60,531, compared to the average of its peers throughout the country of $69,207, according to CharityNavigator.org, which does not look at nonprofits below $500,000. And for all nonprofits in Washington, D.C. in this budget range, the average was $116,154. To be sure, the local midsize homeless service providers are faring better than those in other parts of the country. The local average for nonprofits between $3.5 million and $13.5 million was $109,484 and the median was $95,385. Nationally

for homeless service providers these figures were $97,707 and $91,337, respectively. Still the average for all nonprofits in this budget range is $169,702. These low executive salaries come despite the fact that the Washington, D.C. metropolitan region ranks fourth when it comes to income per capita for all workers with $46,782, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics and that “very lowincome” for the D.C. area is defined at $54,000 by the District’s Comprehensive Housing Taskforce. So why are nonprofits serving the homeless getting so shortchanged when it comes to their national peers and other local nonprofits? Sandra Miniutti, director of external relations for CharityNavigator.org, said that it’s a mix of image, donors and the long history of those

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SALARY,

page 4

INTERVIEW

EDITORIAL

Canidates voice their opinons on affordable housing, page 6

August Mallory travels to Birmingham to observe homelessness there, page 16

Budget Update

NATIONAL

FEATURES

The D.C. Council approved a new budget with lots of new affordable housing and homeless services, page 7

Evacuees in the D.C. area are still struggling to find permanent housing, page 9

Cliff Carle ask readers about the leading cause of homelessness, page 15

Inside This Issue LOCAL

DC Mayoral Candidates

Katrina Housing

Back to Birmingham

Vendor on the Street


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