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Vol. 1 • No. 1 December ‘07
All Profits Benefit Our Vendors
www.nashvillecontributor.org
Inside this Issue:
Mr. Lee Veteran on the Edge of the Streets
Who are We? . . . . . . . 2 Theology . . . . . . 5 Food . . . . . . . 6-7 Lee Stringer . . . . . . 8 Arts . . . . . . . 8-9 Book Review . . . . . . . 10
BY STEVE SAMRA Formerly Homeless Writer contributorsteve@comcast.net
Briefs . . . . . . . 11
Ever think about how a person might become homeless? Consider the case of Mr. Lee, a 78 year old honorably discharged Korean War veteran who’s owned the same house off of Dickerson Road on McAlpine Street for the past 52 years. Mr. Lee worked as a skilled tradesman until he retired at the age of 65, when he began collecting the monthly sum of $594 from his Social Security benefits after spending $182.54 a month for supplemental Blue Cross Blue Shield insurance. Over the years, Mr. Lee’s property taxes have increased from $200 to $2,055. Each increase brings with it a greater hardship on his daily existence. Mr. Lee saves a little out of each month’s social security check in order to put enough away to be able to pay the bill at tax time. Already below poverty level, Mr. Lee can barely afford the basic necessities of life, let alone any luxury items or home repairs.
Death . . . . . . . 12 Cartoon . . . . . . . 14 Self-Deprecator . . . . . 14 Photo by Steve Samra Mr. Lee’s roof has been leaking since 2003. He doesn’t have enough money to cover the cost of the repair, and each year the leak gets worse. Now the water is beginning to damage things inside the home, like his ceiling, computer and floor. Mr. Lee contacted the Metro Housing Commission at the urging of Congressman Jim Cooper. Metro Housing handed Mr. Lee off to the Metro Action Committee. They came out to his house, performed the weather-stripping and insulation upgrades and informed him that they’d be out to fix the roof shortly.
A few weeks later a company hired by Metro Action called about performing the roof repairs. Unfortunately, It seems that Mr. Lee’s ex wife’s name was on some document related to the property and according to Mr. Lee, “this company from somewhere out of state said I was ineligible for the repair.” Exasperated, Mr. Lee didn’t know where to turn. His health was failing and his wallet was nearly empty.
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The Nashville Homeless Power Project critiques the Nashville Rescue Mission BY TOM WILLS WillyWonkaIs@gmail.com names of these two organizations pretty much sums up the conflict in old style colonialistic terms. The Mission is here to save souls and the souls being saved are exercising their personal power to not be defined by the crusade.
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Provider Map . . . . . . . 16
Food Not Bombs Set to Explode BY RAY PONCE DE LEON Homeless Writer thecontributorstaff@gmail.com For a few years we’ve seen them every Sunday at War Memorial Plaza, sharing a vegetarian picnic with their homeless friends. Well, our local chapter of this international pacifist organization is about to explode with a quantum expansion of their services. As popular FNB member, Laura Barnett, explains, “We are negotiating to purchase another FNB house near downtown. We’re picking up where the old Firebrand group left off, since we have similar objectives and goals.” Besides the ever-popular Free Store, the growing FNB compound will be offering all of the Firebrand programs.
Disrobing or Mudslinging?
On Halloween day the Nashville Homeless Power Project launched an all out siege on the institution that Nashvillians think of when they think of homeless outreach, the Nashville Rescue Mission. Known on the street as the “Power Project” and “the Mission” respectively, the short hand nick
Hoboscope . . . . . . . 15
Photo by Steve Samra
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