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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 27, 2015)
S tre e t R oots • F e b r u a r y 2 7 - M a r c h 5 , 2 0 1 5 Commentary P age 13 Open Wapato Jail to homeless on tenants’ own dime I think you can first give homeless people a place to get everything needed to get back up. I will show you how tax dollars could be ociety wants homeless people to get saved and the county can make a profit. up, and they would prefer that they do First thing on everyone’s mind is where it on their own. Yet, homeless people will the money come from? A lot of are spending so much time in line that they homeless people have jobs! They just can’t have no time to get their high school afford an apartment. There are a lot who get equivalency diploma (GED) or job training. government checks, but, yet again, not It s like you are in a flat bottom boat, with a enough to get an apartment. What do they big hole in the bottom, and you are so busy do? They go to a motel and stay as long as trying to bail out the water that you can’t the money holds out, and then it’s back out row the boat to shore. until the next paycheck. Some say that the problems are easy, but Across the country, that’s a lot of money; you just need to look at the problems in money that could be used more wisely. My reverse. Take a person who had been proposal is to take Wapato Jail and the sleeping under a bridge, but has managed, grounds and open it up for the homeless. For sleeping, have a huge night shelter open by himself, to finally get into his own place. What did it take to get him there? He had to every night. Have mats on the floor to sleep on. save money for the deposits, first and last months’ rents, and work one to four weeks There are 525 beds; some could be before he got his first paycheck. Before that occupied by couples, others by singles who he may or may not have had to get a GED share a room. Have on the outside a tent or job training. Before that he may or may city with large tents for the people who don’t have their own tents, and a place for not have needed drug and alcohol those who do. Have a section that is like treatment. During all. of his time unhoused, Dignity Village. If you sleep in the village he needed to shower regularly, wash his section, you pay $25 per month per person, clothes, have a place to store his plus you do sweat equity, i.e. security,' belongings, and have a place to eat and to cleaning, maintenance. If you have a bed in sleep. the main building, you pay $200 per month. In looking at the homeless, I see several Everywhere else one can sleep will cost a types of people. Some would give anything dollar a day. to get inside and are faying hard to get back That gives everyone meals, showers, into a home but can’t find a way. There are lockers for storage,1 laundry and a place’lb those who with a little help, or a lot of help, sleep. can get up. There are those who have If you have, let’s say, 500 people who are disabilities, mental and or physical. These each paying a dollar a day. That is $15,000 are the ones who need housing — meaning per month. If you have 525 beds and each government-sponsored housing. That leaves of them bring in $200 per month, that is the people who have given up. BY JOHNNY WILLIAMS C O N TR IB U TIN G C O L U M N IS T B Johnny W illiams is a Street Roots vendor a n d a periodic colum nist fo r the newspaper. $105,000 per month. That’s $120,000 a month. The money is being paid by the homeless, not the taxpayers. And that’s not counting the $25 each from those who live in the village. To feed everyone, I would have everyone turn over his or her food stamps. By using the food stamps, you could buy in bulk to save money with all of the money going to good nutritional food. No resources would be Haw, spent on soda, chips, a lly Wlllagm II yea sleep la the ice cream and such. villa ge seet!ear yea pay $ 25 Also utilize the food banks to further per laaath per pers©ay plus yea subsidize the cost of d© sweat equity^ he. security^ food, which saves eleaaiag r malateaaaee« XI yea money. have a bed la tbe m ala balld- Also, I would move lag, yea pay $2©© per month. all the self-help Everywhere else ©ae ©an sleep programs that are w ill east a dolla r a day, available all over the city for GED, and the drug abuse programs, parenting classes, job training and such. Move them to one location; that way there would be no transportation issues. By moving the programs from the other locations into th e one place, where there is no rent or extra utilities to pay, that saves tax dollars. Now, the county owns the property so there’s no rent to be paid, after the insurance and the utilities are paid, the rest is profit. That would go to the county. People will be able to straighten out their lives, and that will do nothing but help the economy. Sisters Of The Road a non-profit cafe in Old Town since I B NW Sixth Ave. Portland, OR 97209 All are welcome. Monday - Friday 1Oam-2:3Opm main: 503 222 5694 http://sistersoftheroad.org Read up on the news that’s important to you at news.streetroots.org