Homelessness
is America's Attitude Problem
The reasons
people live under bridges, in doorways, under makeshift shelters is a complex
set of issues. If it were not, we would have solved it by now and there would
be little cause for writing about it. Someday readers may have to dig in the
Internet archives to find the obscure reports, studies and plans which had been
prepared to address and eradicate the scourge of the 21st Century.
The root
causes of people sleeping outside of a personally controlled self-contained walled
space are two-fold. Economics and one's intellectual inability to function within
the constraints of such a domestic arrangement. Both factors collapse into one
which can be labeled as Society's Attitude.
Sociologists
may disagree with the statement: The natural base state for all people is subsistence. At the minimum people will do the least
amount of organization and create the least amount of structure necessary to
get by. Cities, towns and even temporary accommodations require massive amounts
of planning, command and control, bureaucracy, behavior control and
cooperation. All of that effort cost money. It requires the will to address the
problems.
The economic
factors which lead to there being huge numbers of tents and shack made of
salvaged materials are not new. In the mid-1930s Hoovervilles sprouted up all
across the nation as the consequence of massive unemployment created by a
collapsing economy.
Huts and unemployed in West Houston and Mercer
St by Berenice Abbott in Manhattan in 1935
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Today we
have the ironic convergence of economic structural unemployment and an entire
demographic sector who have been left unaffected by the poor jobs situation. When
gainful employment is lost due to automation, outsourcing, constrained wages,
disability or illness, the people do not just disappear. They go somewhere.
Like the Okies of the Dust Bowl era, they are given the bum's rush out to the
town limits where they resettle or move along. Vagrancy laws made being present
and "not having a visible means of support" into a criminal act. Anti-loitering
laws made a person subject to arrest for merely standing on the sidewalk.
Telling a
person to "get a job" doesn't cut it anymore. The job they can get
will probably not provide sufficient income to even pay for a one-bedroom
apartment. When unsubsidized housing costs in the range of $400-$600 per month
ones choices are limited.
This
economic homelessness scenario assumes the person is both capable of working a
40 hour/week job at minimum wage and has the intellectual capacity to occupy
their own place. Many people are not so predisposed.
There are
elderly, blind, otherwise disabled persons, people with addictions, behavior
challenges and medical needs. The Olmstead Act (1999) codified mental illness
as a protected disability under the definition of the Americans with
Disabilities Act (1990).
The Mental Health Systems Act of 1980 (MHSA) was United States legislation signed by President Jimmy Carter which provided grants to community mental health centers. In 1981 President Ronald Reagan and the U.S. Congress repealed most of the law." Wikipedia
The goal of
deinstitutionalization was to protect the rights of persons who traditionally
had been locked away in isolated institutions. President Jimmy Carter signed
legislation which freed people from that fate. The next year the next
President, Ronald Reagan, signed legislation repealing the community supports
which the MHSA was designed to include. It was the shifting attitudes of the
prevailing Congress and Administration which left tens of thousands of vulnerable
people on the street, without financial supports, no plan and no way back to
safety.
America had
been moving closer to a caring society where people received what they needed
regardless of their ability to exchange their labor for dollars. The Great
Society of the Johnson Administrations was intended to develop those
improvement. Attitudes got in the way. The implementation of those social
programs became subverted into yet another means of compartmentalizing social
and ethnic differences.
The Great Society was an ambitious series of policy initiatives, legislation and programs spearheaded by President Lyndon B. Johnson with the main goals of ending poverty, reducing crime, abolishing inequality and improving the environment.
The acronym NIMBY (not in my back yard) says a
lot about why we have homelessness in every city in the nation. Nobody wants
economically deficient people in their neighborhoods. Central Business
Districts rely on paying customers to populate their sidewalks, not cardboard
shelters and shopping carts with wonky wheels. Yet at the same time they do not
want to place housing for such people anywhere near their
"backyards." Humans are not singular in their presence.
Humans bring along with them odors, bodily
wastes, bugs, dirty clothes, collections of everything they possess in bags and
wheelie carts. Any solution for homelessness needs to address the human
factors. The people who fall into this category of homelessness are beyond the
reach of easy solutions. They could not perform a full time weekly job
regardless of how much they were paid. They could not care for a personal
dwelling no matter what the cost.
The homeless demographic wants much the same
as anyone else wants. They want to be
dry when it rains, warm when the winter comes, safe from assault, close to a
doctor, proximal to where the money comes from, near where they can get food.
This sounds the same as every suburbanite in their rancher on the cul-de-sac.
The attitude arises when governments act to
give away "free stuff" and the people on the other side of the
economic borderline say "What about me?" What about them? They may
work hard for their rewards and feel the other guy is getting away with being
lazy. Claims of "they refuse to work." Claims they should be drug
tested to receive SNAP money. These are
reactionary attitudes and mostly are falsely held.
For a single mother to work, there must be
child care. Working and earning too much might terminate rent subsidies and Medicaid
not the mention SNAP. There must be public transportation between all the
destinations one needs to go and one dwelling. Without these amenities doing a
job for a wage is counter-productive. Not having society provide for them is
the recipe for homelessness.
Most businesses and people who are gainfully
employed would rather the homeless people go away. They can't. Pushing them out
to the City Limits only relocates the homelessness and makes it all the more difficult
to see and remedy. There is a solution but it will cost money. There is a
solution but we must change our attitudes about the people who are homeless and
those who will become homeless.
The global economy is changing to one where there
will be fewer gainful paying jobs to have. The rest of the world has already
been dealing with these factors for decades. Americans and our Legislators need
to realize how far down the wrong road we have already traveled and do an about
face to change our future. Doing this starts with a new attitude.