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Vendor Jake Ashford and Street Sense Featured in The Wall Street Journal , page 18
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Where the Washington area's poor and homeless earn and give their two cents July 15, 2006 -- August 14, 2006
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Volume 3, Issue 9
www.streetsense.org
Regional Homelessness Total Count: 12,085
Prince William: 498 Loudoun: 184
Frederick: 212
Fairfax, Falls Church: 1,766 Arlington: 477
DC: 6,157
Alexandria: 336 Prince George: 1,291 Montgomery: 1,164
Homelesssness on the Rise in DC Area By John Stauffer
See
COUNT, page 5
By Katharine Zambon In Washington, D.C., there are just 48 beds, in two confidential shelters, for women and children fleeing domestic violence. And in any given month these shelters may turn away 350 families due to lack of space. Often times these women simply return to their abusive relationships, according to Women Empowered Against Violence (WEAVE) executive director Thia Hamilton. “We know that fear of an inability to find housing” is the biggest reason women stay in violent relationships, Hamilton said. Many of the other women and families simply end up on the streets, in a similarly vulnerable situation, because they do not have the means to find housing on their own. In fact, more than 1,300 homeless individuals in D.C. reported be-
ing victims of domestic violence in a 2005 survey. These staggering numbers have prompted advocates to challenge laws that unfairly penalize victims, and demand that the City Council increase the number of confidential shelter spaces available to domestic violence survivors. “Domestic violence victims in D.C. continue to be trapped in violent relationships because they have no other options for shelter or housing … . For an individual who is in a violent relationship and already living in poverty, this harsh reality often means that she literally must choose between life with her abuser or life on the streets,” said Naomi Stern, a staff attorney with the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty (NLCHP), at a recent D.C. City Council Judiciary Committee hearing.
Stern manages NLCHP’s national domestic violence program and heads up the D.C. Working Group on Domestic Violence and Housing. She has advocated for the past several years for changes in the city to help survivors, and said that the three most necessary changes are funding to increase confidential shelter space, affordable housing opportunities for victims, and legal protections for victims facing eviction or breaking a lease. Local legal and social services providers have reported that domestic violence victims “are often evicted or expelled from their homes or shelters, or denied or turned away from housing or shelter, because of domestic abuse committed against them,” according to the NLCHP. Additionally, domestic
See
VIOLENCE, page 7
Affordably Zoned
Linda Wang
The homeless population in the D.C. region surpassed the 12,000 mark in 2006, and while the number of homeless families dropped 5%, the number of individuals increased more than 20% across the region, compared to 2004. These numbers come from the recently released 2006 Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments (COG) Homeless Enumeration Report, prepared by the Homeless Services Planning and Coordinating Committee and based on a one-day count on Jan. 25, 2006. Despite the increases, some find hope in these numbers. “As large as the number in this report is, it is not so daunting when we consider that it means less than 3 in 1,000 of all people living in the region are homeless, and this is a problem we can solve,” said Stephen Cleghorn, an author of the report and member of the Homeless Services Planning and Coordinating Committee. Still, in the District alone the number of homeless people totals 6,157, or more than 1 in 100, compared with the city’s entire population. Outside of the District, Fairfax
County had the largest homeless population, with 1,766 individuals. And despite improvements made in many of the Northern Virginia jurisdictions, Loundon County reported a full 100% increase from two years ago. The Maryland suburbs likewise saw a troubling rise, with double-digit percentage increases in Montgomery and Prince George’s counties. An increase in the suburban counties shows that people can become unemployed in the suburbs just as easily as they do in the District, said Michael Ferrell, executive director for the D.C. Coalition for the Homeless. “Homeless persons in the suburbs face the same set of circumstances as the homeless in the city,” he added. Across the region when it came to homeless individuals versus families, the trends were notably divergent. In the District alone, individual homelessness increased 14% over the past two years, while persons in families had decreased by 8% over the same time period. In Montgomery County, the inequality proved even more extreme: individual homelessness increased
Huge Shelter Shortage for Domestic Violence Victims
If the D.C. Zoning Commission has its way, new condo buildings, like this one at 14th and V streets, NW, will soon be required to include a certain percentage of affordable housing. Story on page 7.
Inside This Issue
LOCAL
REVIEWS
ONE DC looks to build 92 units of affordable housing, page 5
Vendor Francine Triplett eats at 21P in Dupont Circle, page 12
INTERVIEW
LOCAL
EDITORIAL
Candidates voice opinions on economic development, page 6
A look at how nonprofits are using their budgets, page 4
Franklin residents voice their concerns and plans, page 16
Mayoral Candidates
Housing in Shaw
Nonprofit Efficiency
Yum, Yum, 21P
Shelter Speak Out