ANNIVERSARY ISSUE: Street Sense Turns Three, Hires Vendor Manager, page 3
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Where the Washington area's poor and homeless earn and give their two cents November 15, 2006 - December 14, 2006
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Volume 4, Issue 1
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On The Road
Woman Accused of Housing Locator Scam A Farewell DCRA said she did not deliver on apartment but kept homeless people’s money. By Daniel Horner
Laura Thompson Osuri
In February 2006, Alexis Twyman, looking for help in finding a place to live, went to the Virginia Williams Family Resource Center, the District’s central intake office for families requesting emergency shelter assistance. From a flyer at the center, she learned about a woman named Jasmine Worthy who claimed she could find housing for homeless families. Twyman met with an associate of Worthy’s and soon turned over $600 plus a $25 application fee with the promise that the company would find an apartment for her in about two to four weeks. After that Twyman said Worthy “gave me the runaround.” She said Worthy showed her a number of apartments, but it turned out that
Bennie Freeman and Sarah Bennett paid $1,000 in April after calling the number on these flyers. But they still do not have housing or their money back. all of them were occupied or some- asked for the money back. one else was ready to move in. After Worthy did not return the “I kept asking her what she was money, Twyman said she eventugoing to do,” but Worthy didn’t ally sought help from the Washinggive an explanation, Twyman said. ton Legal Clinic for the Homeless, “Then I got tired of it,” she said. a nonprofit that provides free legal Around the beginning of April, she services to homeless individuals.
According to documents from the Legal Clinic and the D.C. government Worthy has taken thousands of dollars from homeless people such as Twyman and failed to deliver on her promises. Worthy denies that she has done anything wrong. A February 2006 report from the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (DCRA), said that Worthy “targets her services to persons with HIV/AIDS, ex-offenders and shelter populations.” “Unfortunately, for her clients, Ms. Worthy did not find them an apartment and kept their money,” the report said. Worthy was “unresponsive” when they asked for their money back, according to the DCRA. However, the recorded message at Worthy’s office number says, “We’ve been fighting the war on homelessness, and I think we’ve been winning.” In an interview, Worthy said she was “serving the community” by finding affordable
See
HOUSING, page 5
Homeless Youth “Sofa Surfing” for Shelter By Peter D. Cohn The average age in Washington, D.C., shelters is in the low 30s, area service providers say. As a result, most services there are aimed at adults who have an employment history, chronic health issues and family problems involving their own children and partners. However, there is a growing population well below this age, with little experience on the streets and little help available for its specific needs. These are the adolescents, “sofa surfing” through Washington. “We have young people who are
homeless [in other areas], but not the multitudes that we have here in DC,” said Darryl Sanders, director of outreach at Sasha Bruce Youthwork. “It has a lot to do with the medical system here, the school system, the lack of services that are available to young people. It’s really a tough situation to be homeless, and to be an adolescent is even worse.” Millicent Ugo, the program coordinator for Latin American Youth Center’s (LAYC) Transitional Living Program, has also seen this adolescent phenomenon. She moved here from New York, and said the youth homeless problem is “more noticeable.”
Inside This Issue LOCAL
Jobs and Clean Streets A program at Central Union Mission is keeping the streets of DC clean and giving jobs to homeless people, page 7
According to experts at a 2006 Community Summit on Youth and Homelessness sponsored by Stand Up for Kids, the primary cause of homelessness among youth is family issues, including sexuality issues, physical and mental abuse, and the lack of a stable family. Experts at the Summit said the current foster care program in Washington is unreliable, and does not offer children the social services they need. They cited a study showing that more than half of the youths interviewed during shelter stays reported that their parents either told them to leave or knew they were leaving and did not care.
Just how many older youths are homeless? Members of all of the organizations represented at the Summit agreed that statistics on youth homelessness in Washington, DC are inaccurate, in part because many of them drift from one place to another and often stay with others. “Young people in the Washington metro area are not sleeping under bridges or in bus stations, they are sleeping on someone’s couch” said Joseph Williams, director of street and community outreach at Cov-
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FEATURES
The first ever Nonprofit Congress brought together the sector to plan ahead, page 9
Vendor Wendell Williams examines the Skins in this first-ever sports column, page 15
REVIEWS
PROFILE
Vendor Chris Sellman enjoys some tasty Italian food, page 12
A profile of the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless, page 18
Sorriso Sensation
By August Mallory
I
want to start off by saying thank you to everyone who has supported Street Sense and who has supported me as a vendor. This is my last edition of On The Road. As much as it hurts to leave all of my loyal readers, I must bid you farewell. I will be leaving for Seattle, Wash., and I will probably be there for quite some time. This story comes from Pittsburgh, Pa. As I arrive I check into the very beautiful Hilton Hotel in downtown Pittsburgh. Late Saturday evening I set out to interview some of Pittsburgh’s homeless and check out some of the local service providers here. I found
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IRON CITY, page 16
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