09 14 2007

Page 1

Ivory Wilson weaves a dark fable about power, betrayal and rats on Capitol Hill, page 10

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Where the Washington area's poor and homeless earn and give their two cents September 14, 2007 - September 30, 2007 • Volume 4, Issue 19

AN OPEN LETTER

Yours Truly, An Ex-Addict By Eric Olander

D

Drugs, page 13

By Melanie Lidman Last fall, employees of the U.S. Department of Transportation donned outlandish costumes and colorful helmets, hoisted themselves onto tricycles and zoomed across L’Enfant Plaza in the First Annual Department of Transportation Tricycle Derby. Around the same time, the undersecretary of commerce sat in a dunk tank and offered federal employees the opportunity to dunk him. Other gover nment officials dressed as George Washington and rang bells like town criers. Every fall, a little bit of craziness comes to the Washington area with the advent of the Combined Federal Campaign, a fundraising drive that encourages all government employees to donate money, pretax, to any charity they choose. With such a high concentration of federal employees, the Washington area runs the nation’s largest campaign, according to the official

Web site of the Combined Federal Campaign of the National Capital Area. Last year, the drive raised more than $59 million for nonprofit organizations in the D.C. area. Federal departments can get creative with how they encourage employees to participate in the campaign. The transportation department’s tricycle derby raised more than $800 for the campaign by providing the opportunity to see typically staid bureaucrats pedaling furiously on tricycles made for people half their size. And only employees who had donated through the campaign got a chance to dunk the undersecretary of commerce. Despite the creative fundraising events organized by federal offices, charities in the Washington area still face an uphill battle making their organization stand out from among the thousands of others competing for funds from government workers. With more than 3,600 charities

See

JEFF BROWN/CFCNCA

See

Federal Fundraiser Has Charities Hopping

A tricycle race by employees of the U.S. Department of Transportation raised $800 for Washington area charities last year. No word yet on an encore.

Charity, page 5

Rates of Mental Illness Higher in Women’s Shelters By Robert Blair

COURTESY OF CALVARY SHELTER

ear drugs and alcohol, Yo u a r e p r o b a b l y expecting me to spew a venomous diatribe about how much I hate you for what you have done. I don’t hate you – I love you. That’s the problem. In the beginning, I was leery of you. I had heard the excited whisperings proclaiming your virtues, but I had also heard voices advising caution. You were new and exhilarating, attractive and sophisticated, and your peculiar attractiveness was even more alluring because you were forbidden. After getting to know you, I couldn’t help but fall in love. Just thinking about you made me feel groovy. You were cool incarnate. I was shy and insecure. But as long as I kept you close to me, I liked myself and took pleasure in the company of people. I was funny and charming and friendly. I thank you for all that you did for me in those first years. You saved my life. Until you came along, I had no way to deal with the hatred I had for myself. You were what made my life bearable. This is why I couldn’t possibly ever hate you. Although I had been warned of your craftiness and the disease you bring to some of your relationships, I refused to listen. Some say that you are evil, or the work of the devil. I don’t share that view. You are not evil. You just are. It was naive of me to think that I would be immune to your seduction. I thought that we could simply remain friends. And we did. For a while. You helped me survive some emotionally taxing trials. You were my savior, my deliverer from a hellish existence. Thank you ever so much. Young and foolish, I began to believe that I couldn’t live without you. My friends and family became concerned about the amount of energy I was putting into our affair. To appease those who were closest to me, I separated from you.

www.streetsense.org

Although women are less likely to be homeless than men, data shows that residents of women’s shelters have a higher rate of mental illness.

Inside This Issue Focus on Mental Health LOCAL

Out of every five people who stay at a Washington emergency shelter, only one is a single woman. Yet single women make up almost half of all emergency shelter clients with severe mental illness in Washington, according to an analysis of federally collected data. This finding of high rates of severe mental illness among single women confirms the empirical observations of mental health and social work professionals who work with the city’s homeless population. “While overall the number of homeless women is smaller than the number of homeless men,

there does appear to be a large prevalence of (severe mental illness) among homeless women,” concluded Tom Fredericksen, a research analyst at the Community Partnership for the Prevention of Homelessness who sifted through data from the federally funded Homeless Management Information System, which collects information on the homeless across the country. Women have a higher incidence of depression due to violence they have suffered, and many of them have a substance addiction because of efforts to cope with and

See Women, page 4

EDITORIAL

PROFILE

It’s Normal To Me

Calvary Shelter for Women

David Pirtle describes his journey through the world of schizophrenia, page 5

The facility offers case management and support services for 25 residents, page 3

A Shift in Strategy

FEATURES

POLITICS

A Fetid Swamp

The District awards a contract for on-site mental health services for the homeless for the first time, page 4

Veterans Corner

Poet David Harris finds even his psychiatrist can’t lift the murky mist from his mind, page 8

Several bills on the Hill focus on increasing housing options for veterans, page 7


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09 14 2007 by Street Sense Media - Issuu