New Health Director Seeks to Improve Outreach to the Uninsured, page 3
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Where the Washington area's poor and homeless earn and give their two cents Aug. 6 – Aug. 19, 2008 • Volume 5, Issue 20
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Numbers of Chronic Homeless Decline Nationally By Mary Otto America’s homeless crisis has been mounting for three decades. But according to federal officials, nationwide approaches to ending chronic homelessness may now be stemming the tide. A new report found 32,000 fewer chronically indigent people living
in the country’s streets and shelters last year. Between 2006 and 2007, the chronic homeless population dropped about 20% to 123,833 according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s third annual Homeless Assessment Report to Congress. “This is the news we have been
waiting for the past 30 years,” said Philip F. Mangano, executive director of the Interagency Council on Homelessness, charged with coordinating the federal response to homelessness. The newly released study, which includes data compiled from annual homeless surveys conducted by local communities across the coun-
try, charted a continuing decline from 2005, when 175,914 homeless people were counted. Some homeless advocates gathered for a national convention in Washington, D.C., July 28 to 30, greeted the findings of the new report with skepticism. “I’d ask for a recount,” said Bonnie Bramwell, of the Freder-
ick Community Action Agency in Maryland. “It’s really hard to believe that our numbers are lower.” But Mangano and other federal officials attributed much of the drop to the development of more than 40,000 units of permanent
See
National, page 4
Editorial
Serving the Poor At the Pentagon on a recent hot Monday morning, Kathy Boylan, Mike and Eda Uca-Dorn and Art Laffin from Washington, D.C.’s Dorothy Day Catholic Worker movement stand behind metal barricades to protest the Iraq War. Kathy holds up a sign that reads: “Refuse Orders to Kill!” and Eda calls out, “ I t ’s n o t too late to be a conscientious objector! Put down your guns!” Nearby, a Buddhist monk drums out a s l ow, rhythmic call to peace as hundreds o f Pe n t a gon employees file past. The group, known as Dorothy Day or Catholic Worker, calls to mind parishioners providing food, shelter and clothing. To help me fully understand their mission, the D.C. Catholic Worker community invited me to dinner at their residence where they live and work. We gathered around the table for
The Catholic Worker Movement Celebrates 75 Years of Resistance and Protest as an Act of Mercy
See
Mercy, page 12
Photo by Max Nepstad/Street Sense
By Denise Wilkins
Franklin shelter residents protest closing
On Sunday, July 27, nearly 100 people marched in steaming hot conditions protesting the planned closing of the Franklin School Shelter on Oct. 1. See story and more photos, page 7.
Inside This Issue COLUMN
Saving for Change How you can support your election candidates, page 10
EDITORIAL
POETRY
PHOTOGRAPHY
Street Sense volunteer Jerry W. gives some advice for the newly homeless or about-to-be-homeless, page 13
Poems by two recent young victims of violence, page 9
Street Sense’s own Cliff Carle recently received recognition for his photos, page 8
Gotta Go, Now What?
In Memoriam
Cliff’s Clicks