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The Man Who’s Trying to Clear the Tents from SF’s Streets

The Man Who’s Trying to Clear the Tents from SF’s Streets

San Francisco Chronicle 
By Kevin Fagan
August 12, 2016

The man tasked with leading the most ambitious effort in years to clear San Francisco’s streets of tents began his mission on his knees.

Jason Albertson knelt the other day before a wary crowd of hard-core homeless campers along the waterfront near Cesar Chavez and Indiana streets after asking them to gather together for a few moments, and as he opened his mouth they didn’t really know what to expect. They knew he’d come to tell them they had to tear down their sprawling camp by the end of August. But they’ve heard orders to clear out before, here and at other camps.
Would this just be a quick heads-up followed by an army of police and street cleaners tearing down their tents?

 

Not this time. What Albertson, head of the newly created city Encampment Resolution Team, brought to this colony of about 50 people was something new: a straight-up splash of reality, on-the-spot offers of shelter and counseling, and promises to help them get ready for the clear-out day.

 

Click here to access the full article.

A Formula to Get Homeless Individuals Off the Streets

A Formula to Get Homeless Individuals Off the Streets

San Francisco Chronicle 
By Jeff Kositsky
August 9, 2016

 

Across America, unsheltered homelessness has become an increasingly visible and persistent challenge. San Francisco is far from alone in this — Los Angeles, San Jose, Las Vegas and cities around the country are facing similar challenges. San Francisco has an estimated 3,500 people living on the streets on any given night — up less than 3 percent from 2013.
Accurate data on the size of the encampment population are lacking, making claims about recent growth speculative. However, we all agree that there has been an increase in the visibility of homelessness and encampments. There is a strong relationship between encampment visibility and the city’s ongoing “building boom.” Areas that previously had high concentrations of encampments have either been made inaccessible by development or have become less desirable because of activity in those areas. As people relocate, encampments have begun forming in areas that had previously never seen them. With increased visibility and more elaborate structures, these encampments have elicited growing concern.

 

Click here to access the full op-ed. 

Homeless People are Older & Sicker than Ever Before

Mother Jones: Homeless People are Older & Sicker than Ever Before

June 30, 2016 

“Everything,” Tom Wesley answers when I ask what’s ailing him. Diabetes. Multiple heart attacks. Chronic liver failure. “They’ve told me I’m dying.”

Wesley, a towering man in a salmon-colored corduroy shirt buttoned just at the top, is only 54. But for most of his adult life, he lived on the streets. He refused to stay in shelters because he didn’t like the structure; he says he also spent a significant time behind bars for heroin possession. “You could say I was using heroin,” Wesley says with a smirk. “But I don’t know who was using who—it sure used me up.”

He quit a few years ago—after losing two wives to overdoses. Around that time Wesley’s health problems started getting worse. Last year, a terrible pain in his abdomen brought him to San Francisco General Hospital, where he says he was admitted, via the emergency room, seven times in a matter of three months. At that point he was already used to the ER, having relied on it instead of primary care. “I wasn’t one for doctors,” he says.  Click here to read the full article. 

Navigation Center in San Francisco Provides Housing, Hope for Homeless

ABC 7:  Navigation Center in SF Provides Housing, Hope for Homeless

June 27, 2016 

Like you, we here at ABC7 are frustrated, confused, and dismayed at seeing the problem of homelessness in San Francisco. We want change. This week, ABC7 News joins more than 70 other local news agencies to highlight the problem and encourage our leaders to do something about it.
Here’s a closer look at one of the many programs looking to solve the homeless crisis by doing the seemingly impossible — providing housing.

They’re the ones among us who have fallen, or maybe crawled into the cracks. They have little hope of getting back out. Especially after a long, long time.

“Probably about eight years, eight or nine years,” said Jose Maya, who’s just another resident of the tent city squeezed into and around Cesar Chavez Street in San Francisco. Maybe you’ve driven past and kept going. But not everyone.

Click here for the full story.

/for-more-than-100-years-soma-has-been-home-to-the-homeless/

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