Gilbert Arenas and other celebrities shoot Hoops for the Homeless, page 4
$1.00
Suggested Donation
June 1-14, 2007 - Volume 4, Issue 12
www.streetsense.org
STREET VOICES
Looming Crisis: Senior Housing By Brandon Lichtinger
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Senior, page 5
By David Pirtle
T
DANIEL JOHNSON
It’s 9:30 a.m. on the Friday before Memorial Day, and John Monte is busy ladling homemade mushroom soup for diners at the Dinner Program for Homeless Women, or as the serves casually call it, “The 9:30 Club.” Monte, 68, has worked as a cook for most of his adult life and has worked in this kitchen for eight months. He is also homeless, and is staying with one of his sons until he can find affordable housing in the D.C. area. “It’s difficult,” Monte said. “We can’t pay [D.C. rent], especially on a fixed income. The rent is too high.” Monte’s younger brother, George Eskridge, volunteers at the Lutheran Church when he is needed there. Eskridge, 58, has worked in construction, retail, and the food industry in the past. He is also homeless. He takes temporary work when he can get it, and mostly works construction and janitorial jobs. “The cost of living keeps going up, while our salary is not,” Eskridge
said. “If you’re not a professional, with a professional career and a job, you can’t make it.” “Terrifying,” is how Eskridge describes being homeless and facing his 60s in the District. And Eskridge is not alone in his fears. With the cost of housing increasing much faster than the minimum wage and Social Security income, and with two of the District’s largest elder care facilities slated to close, many senior citizens – both homeless and housed – are worried about future housing. One diner over 60, who wished to remain anonymous, said getting housing in D.C. as an elderly homeless person is extremely difficult. “A majority of people directly associated with certain programs like Section 8 have problems,” he said. “The list is either backed up or the housing is unaffordable.” Section 8 is one of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s housing assistance voucher programs for low-income
Heat Doesn’t Have to Kill Homeless
John Monte, 68, prepares a meal at First Trinity Lutheran Church as an assistant chef for the Dinner Program for Homeless Women. Monte, like a majority of homeless elderly, struggles to find affordable housing in the D.C. area.
Metro Gigs Leave Street Artists Playing the Blues By Jennifer Jett Starting this month, District commuters will be treated to live performances at select Metrorail stations as part of the MetroPerforms! program. But some longtime street performers who play for tips believe the new program will cut into their finances. More than 100 local performers auditioned last month before a panel of judges from Metro’s Art in
Transit and the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities. “We had a very broad cross-section of genres, ages,” said Michael McBride, program manager for Art in Transit. “There was a gentleman there and he played, I think it was like six instruments at once. He was a one-man band.” The one-year pilot program will cover Metrorail station entrances in the District of Columbia. Other local arts councils are planning to
expand the program into Maryland and Virginia as well. Performances begin in mid-June and run through October, beginning again during the holiday season. Performers receive a stipend and are not allowed to ask Metro customers for money. “We’re looking for a lot of variables,” said Lisa Richards, arts program coordinator for the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities. “Technique, ability to
draw a crowd, presence – those are the three main things.” But some musicians are concerned that official Metro performers will push out long-time street performers who are not part of the program, and that the stipend policy restricts earning opportunities. “If I go to work and there’s somebody playing in my spot, what can I do?” said Carlton Duane Moxley,
See
Artists, page 4
he Franklin School is the only men’s shelter in the downtown corridor. It is also the last thing Corbin Newcomb III saw before dying during D.C.’s worst heat wave of 2006. The District ruled Corbin’s death a result of his liver disease, but I was there. I lay 20 feet away as he begged for relief from the oppressive heat, eventually pulling off all of his clothing before expiring in his bunk. Unlike the majority of shelters in D.C., Franklin had no air conditioning last summer, and the city has made no move to fix this problem as this summer rapidly approaches. If you were to ask District officials why, they would tell you that Franklin’s electrical work doesn’t allow for the type of power consumption that would be required to cool a building of that size. However, Rich Bradley and Chet Grey from the Downtown D.C. Business Improvement District have offered to help the city work around this problem, at least until decent wiring can be installed at the facility. They are willing to work with the District to install a generator, hooked directly into the power grid that could be utilized to power portable air conditioners or chillers. The BID has organized many events that required similar measures to be taken, and they would be happy to lend their expertise to the city. Of course, this would only be a temporary solution. If we are indeed going to keep the Franklin School open as a shelter, we need to com-
Project2:newsletter
5/29/07
See
10:14 PM
Page 1
Free Gift
$15 value
Prison Tracks music CD
Heat page 4
Over an hour of music made in prison by outstanding inmate guitarists Dennis Sobin and Steve Andrew. Receive this free gift with your purchase of $10 or more at the following two locations that feature original prison art, prison art prints, sterling silver justice jewelry, handcuff key chains, famous mug shot playing cards, prison art clothing, and much more. Prison Art Gallery 1600 K Street NW, Suite 501 Washington, DC Open every day until 5:30 PM 202-393-1511
Outdoor Prison Art Exhibit Corner of K Street and Connecticut Ave NW Washington, DC 202-393-1511 Mon-Fri 11am to 6pm
Art for Justice is published monthly in conjunction with Street Sense.
Sponsored by Prison Art Gallery with support from Art Appreciation Foundation June 2007
LOCAL
EDITORIAL
Thousands of District residents have avoided eviction through new program, page 5
Vendor Leo Gnawa says the way to solve racism is to fight hate and bigotry. page 13
VOLUNTEER PROFILE
POLITICS
NEW FEATURE →
John Gates has been tutoring Mekdes Abiy at Good Shepherd Ministries, page 3
Planning isn’t enough to solve the nation’s mental healthcare problems, page 6
A new monthly insert featuring art from prisoners from around the country (insert).
Inside This Issue Tutor Adds to Success
Rental Program Rescues
Mental Health Dilemma
A Moment by Cannon Hubbard
Snake River Correctional Institution, Oregon Soft pastel on canvas, 11x14 (Suggested donation $400)
Who Should be Accountable? All art can be viewed and purchased at the Prison Art Gallery, 1600 K Street NW, Suite 501, Wash DC or purchased by phone 202-393-1511 or email (PayPal payment address Dennis@PrisonsFoundation.org). Please add $10 shipping and handling for each order. All major credit cards accepted. Thank you for viewing and purchasing this beautiful art in support of our program of prisoner rehabilitation and reentry and victim assistance. Your tax deductible donations are greatly appreciated.
Art For Justice ISAAC HAYES by Paul Miller Iona Maximun Facility, Michigan Colored pencil on paper, 18x11, (Suggested donation:$80)
THE VOGAGE HOME by Richard Hasselburg, Prairie Correctional Facility, Minnesota Oil on canvas, 24X36 inches (Suggested donation: $500)
HEARTBREAK HOTEL by Samuel L. Harris, Estelle Prison, Texas Colored pencil and oil pastal pencil on artboard, 15x20 inches (Suggested donation: $75)
HEARTBREAK HOTEL by Samuel L. Harris, Estelle Prison, Texas Colored pencil and oil pastal pencil on artboard, 15x20 inches (Suggested donation: $75)
TOO LITTLE TOO LATE by Russ Luncs ford, Clarinda Correctional Facility, Iowa Pen and pencil on 70 lb paper, 18x24 (Suggested donation: $800 framed)