How I joined the ranks of Brooklyn's homeless... NOT one of my life's great ambitions, believe me. I'm expanding this blog to include resources, solutions, and much more, and plan to collaborate with other homeless folks I've met along the way... the homeless population is far more diverse than popular opinion might acknowledge. Calling 311 for help is pretty much useless; I've found out more from talking to other homeless people over the past 6 months than from any other resource around.

Saturday, December 1, 2007

I GUESS YOU HAVE TO BE REALLY "OUT" WITH YOUR HOMELESSNESS TO GET PAID ATTENTION TO...

Not to sound heartless, but I wonder, after reading this article, whether there aren't a lot of less obvious homeless people around the Slope area who are having a heck of a time getting services because they don't have the same kind of "high profile" as the fellows mentioned in this piece. I also wonder whether these guys are getting services offered them now because they're seen as public nuisances to be gotten rid of quickly because a few well-placed folks are getting annoyed with them.

Either way, it's really cold out there tonight... nobody should have to be homeless during the winter of all seasons.




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December 1, 2007 / News / The Stoop / Park Slope
Pastor and rabbi unite to help Slope homeless
By Dana Rubinstein
The Brooklyn Paper
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The Brooklyn Paper / Nicole Braun
Rev. Daniel Meeter (left) and Rabbi Andy Bachman discuss ways to help the homeless, several of whom spent the summer sleeping at Meeter’s Old First Reform Church.

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The three homeless men who sparked a flurry of soul searching in Park Slope — and the ire of a local pastor — after refusing to moderate their drinking and noise-making have abandoned their long-time hangout on the steps of the Old First Reformed Church, but they have left a legacy behind.

Rev. Daniel Meeter, Rabbi Andy Bachman of Congregation Beth Elohim, and the Park Slope Civic Council have formed the “Park Slope Coalition for the Homeless,” which will be devoted to improving the well-being of the dozens of homeless who flock to the Slope for its wealth of, well, wealth.

The incipient group was borne from a Nov. 20 meeting with the city’s Department of Homeless Services.

The next day, Bachman posted the Coalition’s four basic principles on his blog, www.andybachman.com: “Acknowledge with dignity those who are homeless. … Work for their dignity and safety. Connect them to the variety of homeless services in the city. Support the provision of services to these people.”

It’s not as though Meeter hadn’t been trying to do just that.

As The Brooklyn Paper reported last month, three men had taken up residency on the steps of the Old First Church this summer: Robert Royster, who’d been an on-and-off visitor for years, Will Franklin, who drank on the stoop yet slept elsewhere, and Frank Silano.

Meeter first tried to help, getting Franklin a job at a local Key Food — a job he soon lost. The pastor also gave the men leftover food and offered to help them get treatment. His deacon knitted them scarves.

But nothing helped. After the men “started urinating and losing self-control,” Meeter said he asked them to leave.

“There was a week in July when I said, ‘Hey guys, it’s over,’ and I started throwing their stuff out and chasing them away. Problem was, they’d come back — and now they were hostile.”

But Meeter said the final kicker was Sunday, Oct. 21, when he discovered that the men had hidden a steel bar behind the church wall.

“I saw the steel bar as a weapon. It was all beyond tolerance,” said Meeter.

After Meeter wrote about the situation on his blog, www.oldfirst.blogspot.com, the story became the talk of Park Slope, with plenty of people defending Meeter’s right to get frustrated by the homeless men on his doorstep, but others questioned the pastor’s inability to turn the other cheek.

“I thought that the church was about the awesome, unrelenting, compassionate, power of God,” wrote one person on Meeter’s blog. “I guess…the world is changing.”

Later, Bachman wrote to Meeter and, with the help of the Park Slope Civic Council, set up a meeting with the city to create the new organization.

It’s already bearing fruit, Meeter said.

“I saw Robert Royster walking up Carroll Street,” Meeter said. “I told him, ‘Robert, I’m going to call Common Ground [a homeless services organization], and they’d like to come and meet with you to determine what services they can provide.’ We met him outside of Key Food. He’s now in their system for medical care and permanent housing.

“Today, I talked to another homeless guy I know near the Q train on Flatbush Avenue.”

Not bad for the organization’s first week. Not that the rabbi hasn’t been pulling his weight, too. On his blog, Bachman wrote about his efforts to help a “chronically homeless man,” prompting responses ranging from congratulatory to skeptical.

“I admire everyone’s optimism in this effort, but know many social workers and others in this community [who] have personally made intense efforts to connect various homeless individuals with appropriate services over the years and have been rebuffed,” wrote a woman named Janet.

Be that as it may, Meeter and company are determined to try. It’s not as though the homeless problem is going away anytime soon.

“There’s been a homeless problem in Park Slope for decades, and we expect it to continue for as long as there is wealth here and relative safety,” said Meeter. “Today, I encountered four homeless people just between the Q train on Flatbush and the church.”


©2007 The Brooklyn Paper


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I guess that to receive help in avoiding becoming homeless (or help once you actually become homeless) - or even get NOTICED as needing help, you really have to act out in public... atrracting all sorts of attention to yourself.

The article talks about organizations and social worker types who offer help to people facing this sort of crisis, and yet, if you just happeh to be a college-educated white women who's over 45 with a small child, the organizations and social workers don't seem to think you need help as badly - in spite of being totally broke, in spite of needing the help just as badly as a bunch of guys who hang out on a very busy street in a very well off part of Brooklyn.

Oh well. HRA and Common Ground and a whole raft of other charities, social service agencies, etc., certainly haven't been at all helpful to me when I've actively reached out and requested any sort of help - and I've been very strenuously and actively jobhunting for over a year (and I have quite a few qualifications that would work in several types of jobs, and I don't mind taking "survival" jobs.

Take a look at what I've been going through:
http://homelesschronicle.blogspot.com/
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I've contacted the Public Advocate's Office (212-669-7250) and explained to the intake worker what was going on; they may be able to help me work more quickly through the maze of Public Assistance and finding a new home. But, of course, since it's Friday, I won't be hearing back from them until next week.

The Church of St. Paul (263 W. 86th Street) has an Urban Justice Center; call 646-602-5600.
They also have legal clinics in different boroughs.

Coalition of the Homeless has an automated information line at 212-776-2000, and offers a variety of services. They're located at 129 Fulton Street in lower Manhattan, near Nassau Street; they take walk-ins, but recommend that people be there before 9 a.m. because they can only see the first 30-50 people on line (first come, first served).

I wish I were a cat...

I wish I were a cat...
I'd have a better chance of getting help or "adopted"