Student overcomes homelessness, gets into art school, page 3
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Where the Washington area's poor and homeless earn and give their two cents July 23 – Aug. 5, 2008 • Volume 5, Issue 19
Activism
Organizing Ourselves By Eric Sheptock
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Organizing, page 12
Number of District Homeless Increases By Mary Otto The homeless population of the District has increased since last year according to the findings of an eighth annual survey, compiled for the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments. The count found 6,044 homeless people living in District streets
and emergency and transitional shelters, a 5% rise over last year. But some involved in the effort say the numbers do not fully reflect the size and complexity of the District’s homeless population. They are calling for more dedicated efforts to better document the homeless and their needs. The recently released figures
were gathered Jan. 24 by service providers and volunteers who canvassed shelters, meal centers, transitional and supportive housing programs and outdoor campsites. However, a shortage of volunteers to help conduct the survey this year left many homeless people undocumented, said Mary
Ann Luby, of the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless. “Southeast wasn’t counted,” she said. “We need to do something far more organized involving park police, fire, and Metro. We need to engage the universities.” The annual enumeration is
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Number, page 4
D.C. Child Protective Agency in Crisis Cases Backlogged, Director Resigns By Robert Blair
Photo by Lee davis/Street Sense
Many are they who could tell you of just how disenfranchised the homeless often feel. They frequently receive promises from politicians, especially during election season. All too often those promises are broken. Even the cabinet members that are appointed by elected officials tend to make and break promises. Then there is the shelter staff to deal with. Some have a genuine concern for the people that are placed under their care. Others couldn’t care less about their homeless clients. Then again, there are the homeless advocates who care but have limited resources and influence. All in all, the homeless have good reason to feel disenfranchised and to assume that there is no way out of their predicament. I was a facilitator at a meeting which was held at One Judiciary Square on Dec. 9, 2006, by members of Mayor-elect Adrian Fenty’s transition team. The purpose of the meeting was to gather the concerns of the homeless community and take them to Mayor-elect Fenty. More than 80 homeless people showed up. The 15 people in my group were rattling off their concerns so quickly that I had measurable difficulty writing them all down. I also have comments from multiple Interagency Council on Homelessness (ICH) hearings in my e-mail account. (I’m always glad to send them out upon request.) Nonetheless, at the ICH meeting on June 12 of this year, I heard complaints from the homeless community that are identical to those mentioned in 2006 and 2007. These comments have yet to be addressed. The homeless have come out in force and spoken up for themselves. They’ve waited patiently for the DC government to act on their behalf. They’re still waiting. It’s h i g h t i m e t h e y m ov e d
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Trying to bring energy prices down
A handful of demonstrators carry signs at a “Stop the War on the Poor” rally on Capitol Hill last week. The protest was organized by Americans for American Energy, a group that supports drilling for oil in offshore areas as well as in Alaska. Many of the 15 speakers, including Harry Jackson, senior pastor of the Hope Christian Church in Beltsville, Md., emphasized their view that domestic drilling will help the poor by bringing energy prices down.
Inside This Issue FICTION
Hypothermia Be careful which van you get a ride from, page 10
At an oversight hearing, called in response to the death of a sixmonth-old boy, officials heard that the District’s Child and Family Services Agency is in crisis and is unable to deal with an increased volume of child welfare investigations by its Child Protective Services (CPS) division. The hearing was called by Tommy Wells, chairman of the City Council Committee on Human Services, following the June 25 death of six-month-old Isiah Garcia. Garcia had been the subject of a child neglect report to the CFSA three months earlier. That report came while the child’s mother, Morgan Herrera El, and her four young children, were staying at a shelter for abused women in D.C. Testifying was Judith Meltzer, deputy director of the Center for the Study of Social Policy, who also serves as a court-appointed monitor for the CFSA. She spoke of roughly 2,000 non-completed
CPS neglect and abuse investigations and called upon the City Administrator and CFSA director “to acknowledge the emergency and immediately activate emergency measures.” Unless bold steps are taken now to reverse patterns of operation that have proved ineffective,” Meltzer cautioned, “my experience suggests that the problems will grow rather than decrease.” In January of 2008, national publicity from the Banita Jacks case, in which four young sisters were found dead and their mother was arrested for their murders, resulted in a huge increase in hotline calls to CFSA and new open investigations. The agency came under attack when it was found to have prematurely closed its investigation of Jacks’ children’s situation. Six social workers were fired in the aftermath. The subsequent death of Isiah Garcia in June came in the wake of CFSA’s revised standards on investigations – reforms that
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Child, page 4
EDITORIAL
POETRY
NEWS
Street Sense vendor Jeffery McNeil talks about how he got started as a Street Sense vendor, page 12
A powerful poem by Anthony and Tyrone, page 9
Hiding the homeless, cracking down on stolen recyclables and other news briefs from around the U.S., page 6
Homeless, Not Helpless
Five Little Kids in the Struggle
In Other News