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Sunday, August 16, 2020

Coronavirus and its implications

    LGBTQ+ Youth are always at a distinct risk for struggles, due to their treatment within society. Oftentimes, being ostracized or bullied by peers can lead to exacerbation of mental health difficulties, and even physical ones. This can make it difficult to keep gainful employment, as well as continue to operate socially and keep in touch with friends.
    All of these struggles are significantly increased during the Coronavirus pandemic. In addition to the stress which they must deal with on a day to day basis, houseless individuals have no option to quarantine or stay safe within a room of their choosing. In many cases, all that resources can provide for them is a bed within a room filled with other individuals. When considering trans identity, it may become a choice to stay at a location which doesn't adequately address gender of the individuals staying there, or stay nowhere at all. 
    All of this stress builds, and can lower the immune system, which means a lower capacity to fight infections. These issues can snowball into one another, and a problem in one environment can potentiate the problems in others. One of the best ways to care for these individuals is to donate funds to them, in order to provide them with adequate shelter, and a place to be able to rest and recover. This virus does not discriminate, and all humans deserve to have access to ways of keeping healthy.

Stretched thin

 


I lived for four months in 2019 without a home. There were a variety of circumstances that led to my situation, but primarily I attribute them to financial hardship and debilitating mental illness. It was a difficult period in my life, and I’m thankful that I was able to find support through friends and family, and eventually work my way out of that mode of living. 


When I first moved to the Pacific Northwest, I was amazed at the sheer number of homeless and transient people who occupied the cities and towns here. My first taste was living in Eugene and seeing the tent camps lined up on sidewalks, or hearing the late-night outbursts and recycling bin rummagings. It occurred to me that these people lived in such a visible way, but were also largely invisible to people around them. They were “just another bum.” I never agreed with that sentiment even before I experienced homelessness for myself, but it was most certainly echoed by neighbors and friends. I have a name and a life, why should the people who live on the street be denied theirs? They should not be considered as some faceless, nameless mob undeserving of compassion or thought. I hope the few experiences I share will help change some of that.


I did not live on the street, or sleep in a tent. I was fortunate enough to have a vehicle to exist in, and that did provide me with some degree of privacy and protection. I had the comfort and ease of quick travel, and a way to escape a bad situation if needed. I had a roof over my head and a door to lock for safety. Some might think that I was not truly homeless, and that may be the case. However, I do think that much of what I experienced is the same, emotionally, psychologically, and physically.


Weight gain: With little money, cheap and easy food became my only option. Fast food, or convenience stores were the only option available, and many of the products there are low in nutritional value (the cheap stuff), or high in fat and sugars. 


Weight loss: Not having enough money meant that sometimes I would go more than a day without eating. Plenty of days I would survive on a single 20oz soda, something with sugar for energy and carbonation to calm a nauseous stomach.


Hygiene: I did not have easy access to showers. Towards the end of my period of homelessness I was able to shower at a friend’s place, maybe once or twice a week. For the first three months I probably took a total of three showers. The result of this led to skin and fungal issues as I was sweating a lot in the summer heat and I developed rashes and fungal problems. It also made me smell! The combination of these affected me psychologically and I tended to become even more reclusive and less likely to interact with people who could potentially help me. It also made finding work or any sort of income difficult. The lack of shower access also meant lack of bathroom access. Finding a public bathroom in the city that you don’t have to pay for was extremely difficult. Sometimes I would have to wait an hour or more in order to relieve myself. Other times in desperation I would go to a park at night and do my business in the cover of trees. Portland does offer a few 24/7 public bathrooms around the city. However, at night these places are not well lit, if at all. Apprehension about who might be in them or lurking around them would also cause anxiety. Cleaning myself afterwards wasn’t particularly easy either, and there were some hygienic issues associated with that as well.


Sleep: Where do you sleep when you have no home? Again, I was fortunate to have a vehicle to sleep in. I did not have to find shelter out in the city. However, there were challenges with sleeping in a car. First, I had to find a place where I would not be hassled either by private business, or by the police. If I was able to sleep, I was either too cold or too hot. I certainly couldn’t waste precious gas to regulate the temperature of my vehicle to be comfortable. I had many nights where I would wake up constantly shivering and cold with damp clothes. When I finally could get to sleep, I would often sleep late into the morning. Because I was fearful of my own safety and security, all my windows would be closed and the car would lock. In the summer I would often wake up completely drenched in sweat and dehydrated. Sometimes the inside of the car would be over a hundred degrees. Muscle pain and stiffness was also a factor because of the cramped nature of sleeping inside a vehicle. I developed bruises on my legs and hips from the pressure of the seats and other interior pieces jabbing into my body while I slept. 


Fear: People. They were always my biggest fear. At first I felt relatively safe in my vehicle, that was until my second week. I awoke during the middle of the night face to face with a shadowy man, his face pressed against the glass of the car I was sleeping in. His eyes penetrated me and he was smiling at me in the most unfriendly way. I was frozen with fear. I couldn’t move, couldn’t speak. We stared at each other for almost five minutes until he slapped his hand against the glass and slowly moved away and back into the night. I’m not sure what his motivations were. Whether it was a friendly reminder that he was out there, or if it was to intentionally scare me. Maybe he was suffering from mental illness. I don’t really know. Whatever his motivations, it shattered any notion of safety and security I thought I had. After that night, paranoia and anxiety ruled my sleep. I had many more encounters with people bothering or intimidating me while I was sleeping. Some situations required me to drive off as soon as they woke me for fear of my own physical safety. Sleep does not come easily when you’re homeless. 


There’s much more I could add to this about my experience, but at the moment I’m not really sure how much more I feel comfortable disclosing. I hope that even after this class is over, perhaps I can edit this post to say everything I want to say. The process of writing this, and all of the remembering and cataloguing of experiences was difficult for me. I’m not ashamed to announce that I was homeless for a time, in many ways I think it was a valuable experience. But, I was also lucky to climb out of it, and I received a lot of help to do that. I hope that anyone who reads this takes the time to consider what it means to have a home, and the comforts and safety that come with it that are often taken for granted. I took them for granted. I hope too that I can inspire people to act and help those who are in need, and to empathize with those who are homeless. 


Saturday, August 15, 2020

LGBTQ Youth Homelessness is a Crisis

                    

         Did you know that a significant percentage of LGBTQ people in the United States face family rejection and homelessness because of homophobia and transphobia? According to a recent article in the Washington Post, that’s exactly the impossible struggle that tens of thousands of LGBTQ young people find themselves in every day. Rejected by their families and owed no support by the state because of their age, these vulnerable teens find themselves on the street, facing a daily struggle to find a place to sleep and food to eat.

                    For me, the struggle begins with awareness. Unless people know about the problem, they aren’t going to be likely to help fight it. In order to do my small part, I’ve shared a fiction series to illustrate the crisis of today’s homeless queer kids in my social network. I’m hoping to foster some empathy and distill some love. While stories that I've shared are fiction, everything it wrote is real. Yes, it may seem impossibly horrible and over the top, but everything I’ve shared has happened to people I know, and is still happeningeven now.

                    Please think hard about the issues I’m writing about. Think hard about how you can help. Thank you!

 

A human touch- the power of distribution



If there is one pithy thing that can be said about our churn-and-burn era of disposable goods, it’s that future archeologists will be most grateful for all the data points.

We learn much from studying the waste and refuse piles of ancient civilizations, and in some cases these leavings are all that remain; such sites can provide a rich ‘cultural snapshot’ of a people’s lifestyle. With-in the materials they choose to eschew, is a story about how people spent their time, what they ate, what they like to craft with, and how they related to their environment.

It is hard to know what someone might make of our garbage, as it is certain to be a pungent and eclectic mix of consumer goods, asbestos, CDs, VHS, eight-tracks, industrial waste, vinyls, bio-medical waste, a few wax gramophone cylinders and a million, million little plastic baggies of all shapes and sizes (many which will include a neatly preserved sample of our canine companion’s poop.) An epic and utterly ambiguous time capsule, really- future crypto-archeologists will likely spend hours, or years, trying to decode the information contained on VHS copies of ‘Whose the Boss?’ or ‘Reno 911!’

This is assuming, of course, that the climate crisis does not cause our extinction first.



It is hard to move without leaving a mark nowadays. Every transaction with society now seems to involve some plastic, or gas, electricity, if not directly, then by proxy of some service provider who relies on industry. It is inevitable that We make a footprint: how can we determine its ultimate impact?

It may be too much to get people to stop littering, even accidentally. In developing nations where there is no organized trash service, the fragments of industrial goods fill the ditches and swales (in Haiti, even water is sold by the quart in little factory sealed plastic bags.) People cannot keep track of so many little things- all the little extras that come with consumer products. In the western world we pay someone to throw it out of sight, and I can’t help but wonder if people here would be more activated about our ecological crisis if they had to look at their mess every day.

Littering- leaving behind that which we don’t need, is an ecological process: it is one of the many ways that nature redistributes material. When the scraps are fragments of biodegradable materials, we actually contribute to the ecosystem by transporting these goods (rich in calories, or rare minerals, or nitrogen.) to organisms who might not otherwise have access. City rats and crows depend on this ‘spill over.’ However, it will take millions of years for a species to evolve a practical use for industrial spillover- oil or plastics or heavy metals, save for a few hermit crabs who have found a container that was made to fit (incidentally.)

Even animals litter! Those who have tended chickens know: a gang of these single minded omnivores will scatter a large, tasty, bug infested brush pile in only a few hours. ‘Chaotic’ or ‘noisey’ distribution processes feed every layer of the food chain.

What does this mean for us? To try and ‘prevent’ nature, human or otherwise, is like trying to bat a rainstorm away, and yet we are also reaching a ‘critical mass’ of plastic contamination, where it is in the air, the water, the soil. Actually this is a false dilemma: the plastic tends to make its way into nature whether or not we litter (as mentioned, trash cans are simply taken to garbage piles.) The notion that this problem is solely in the hands of consumers is the result of a successful spin campaign by the petroleum industry in the 70’s, which put the responsibility for the noticeable build up of non-biodegradable goods on ‘litterbugs.’ (rather than the companies who decided that plastic fragments everywhere was an acceptable ‘externality’ in their profit model)

The truth is, we will lose fragments and scraps from time to time whether we want to or not. Littering is a natural ecological process, as unpreventable as the tides. Our consumer goods must be made of ecologically neutral materials, or better yet, we could leverage this widespread natural tendency to some advantage:

For example, some organizations have decided to pursue solutions for a particularly pernicious sub-group of litterers: smokers. There are many billions of smokers, and many hundreds of billions of plastic filters which enter the environment every year.

“Green-Butts” (www.green-butts.com) is a research and development company which is investigating designs for a biodegradable hemp filter. These degrade in as little as seven days, as opposed to the 5-10 year ‘groundlife’ of a typical filter.

“Karma-tips” (www.karmatips.in) offers a similar handcrafted product, and has innovated a ‘Butts to Buds’ filter design which houses wildflower seeds. Plains and forest fires are a natural part of the ecological cycle, such that some plant species use heat as a signal to start growing (as the competition has likely been leveled!)

Other alternative products have become more visible in consumer products: anyone who has recently attended an outdoor event will notice the new organic utensils and plates. Larger goods are being created by artists who pour a mix of fungal precursors and sawdust into a mold which, with time, grows into a robust chair or table; just think, not more lonely abandoned furniture left to die in shame allow residential roads or in ditches. Instead the owner can break up the product and incorporate it into the soil, or into another mold with more fungus food to grow something else.


In our journey towards peaceful co-existence, a theme continually re-emerges: shall we resist nature’s tendency (destructively, but sometimes necessarily, as in the case of cancer), or be carried by it, just as a sailor catches the wind. By harnessing our natural tendencies, we harness nature’s energy into emergent capacities, unlocking hitherto unconceivable solutions. Just as nature gathers, so it distributes… As a natural and unavoidable consequence of our gathering of natural resources from the sea/earth/land, there will be an equal and opposite level of redistribution. Rather than trying to ‘cease’ or ‘kill’ this process, we should be asking ourselves with earnest curiosity: “what things are useful to redistribute? And where do they need to go?”

If we then ask, “who goes there?” and “what are they already distributing naturally?”, we suddenly identify a network of material transfer which could, with little infrastructure or centralized organization, be deployed as a massive ‘many-hands’ labour force (under the right conditions.) To what end? As ecological change continues to accelerate, I believe that there will be many problems that require similarly decentralized solutions.

Fresh Starts- Margins and Gray Markets





The intersectionality of the LGBQT+ and houseless experience is broad in scope, as LGBQT+ individuals are a vastly over represented group among our houseless peoples (like other marginalized groups.) Both factors in combination will affect every area of an individual's life: how they earn money, where they take shelter, who they find as friends, what their daily routine is, and when they have time to pursue opportunity (if at all). For those without direct experience in these significant lifestyle aspects, understanding the pragmatic implications of such intersectionality is not easy or intuitive.

If we first challenge our sneaky preconceptions about houselessness, then the data concerning LGBQT+ houselessness (including youths) starts to make more sense, and a more discernible ‘lifestyle narrative’ emerges from the studies. Predictably, the public tends to associate houseless populations with the most visible signs: active and abandoned campsites, trash piles, burnpiles, shopping carts, human waste. cans, theft, drug paraphernalia etc. Yet while these things can surely be correlated with drug abuse, homelessness/houselessness is a much broader experience: for every person you see pushing a shopping cart, there are many more in the supra-group known as ‘invisible homeless.’ These are people and families who are living in impermanent situations: on the couches of relatives, or in their basements, camping in backyards, living in RVs or motels, or quietly on the street. Individuals from this group are often the most vulnerable, and so make every effort to avoid notice.

LGBQT+ individuals will often fall into this category: houseless, but not so that anyone would notice. THE RESEARCH indicates that many survive by forming informal networks of work and companionship- sharing opportunities for material and psychological survival. There are certainly dangers that come with living ‘off the grid’, and predators may use this network to find potential victims, however it is important to remember that neither of these hazards are explicitly related to sexual orientation: all individuals using these informal networks must navigate such risks.

This observation is important to deciphering the layers of intersectionality: though many houseless individuals identify themselves as LGBQT+, there is nothing about one’s sexual orientation which can be implicitly linked homelessness (unlike, say, head trauma and PTSD, which create functional challenges for participation in mainstream society.) Instead, it is the (over)reaction of society, of friends and family, which forces young LGBQT+ people to flee into the streets. The connection between LGBQT+ and houselessness is incidental, and artifact of racist/homophobic societal norms, rather than a literal causal connection. This is important to understand, when trying to grasp the lifestyle experience of LGBQT+ youth on the streets: they are living simultaneously in two worlds, which are connected (incidentally), but not the same. These two factors will certainly involve compounded risk, and each makes surviving the other more difficult.

However, we can find ways to provide support from somewhat of a remove, where we don’t necessarily need the same expertise as a social worker or psychologist. With simple material support, we can prevent young people from being forced into desperate decisions. How do we distribution this material?

An answer will be forthcoming, but in general we know that, in order to be accessible by by homeless-LGBTQ, and others, the mechanism of distribution will need to be convenient, ubiquitous over the area off interest, non-discriminatory, and non-binding (non-contractual, one-off, ‘pay as you go’.)

With a nuanced appreciation for the differences between lifestyle factors, and how they affect an individual, we can find ways to help a population of interest (in this case youth-LGBQT+ experiencing houselessness) by then looking at commonalities, or ‘meeting points,’ where both factors co-mingle. We might ask, what are the commonalities of experience and lifestyle between LGBQT+ and houseless populations? The question might seem a bit absurd, but the answer is pragmatic: historically, both groups have often depended on informal ‘gray markets’ to meet their living needs.

During the era of anti-gay laws in New York, individuals wanting to make safe space (bar, club etc) for LGBQT+ peoples had to use less-than-legitimate rentals/leases from landlords willing to turn a blind eye (for an exorbitant cost.) Similarly, while houseless struggle to find a safe space merely to sleep, cities invest in ‘hostile designs’ which make underused public spaces inhospitable with spikes or rocks. As a result, the houseless are forced into increasingly smaller areas, which become controlled by gangs who extort ‘rent’. In both cases, these groups are forced to interface with illegal activities in order to meet their various hierarchy of needs (in particular, community/support/love in the former case, and shelter/safety in the latter.)

Houseless individuals will typically lack the resources to take advantage of opportunities which emerge, while LGBQT+ are more actively discriminated against, however the practical consequence in both cases is that a person must rely on informal social and economic networks. If we understand that both groups are depending on these same networks, it is easier to know where/how to allocate resources.



Whether houseless, or LGBQT+, or both, the ability to ‘earn your own way’ is key to positive self regard (in most cultures.) People, particularly those who struggle to work with-in the system, absolutely want and need a sense of autonomy and empowerment- the ability to live, and even thrive, on their own terms. There is a deeper human dilemma here: there have always been, and always will be, those people who ‘don’t fit’ into the conventional lifestyle modes (for internal or external reasons; mental illness or discrimination etc.) In our mechanized society, there is a tendency to look at these situations with the linear ‘problem->solution’ paradigm of an engineer, where we try to ‘fix’ the person as we would a broken component. With-in this frame, there is an implicit assumption of the righteousness or validity of the dominant culture. Erudite readers will know well the dangers of such unquestioned assumptions.

The US was built by successions of ‘outsiders’: the working classes on colonist ships were often represented then dregs and outcasts of society. When east-coast settlements were established, after the pathogenic genocide of indigenous people, it was the outcasts and rebels and individualists who chose to walk west, away from civilization as they understood it (with all its cruelties and hierarchies.) These ‘homeless’ often found better company with surviving inland natives, who lived with greater freedoms (sexual and otherwise) than the western immigrants. These survivalists built homesteads, which served as trade depots and resupply points for other settlers- a foothold which, ironically, allowed the gradual expansion of the civilization they were attempting to escape.

America has profound traditions of nomadism, and ‘off the grid’ living, however the frontier is no more. Many of the houseless/homeless we see today would be far more successful ‘roughing it’ in wilderness country, however, all the land is spoken for (owned/private), and the forests are denuded of game to hunt. And so, ever adaptable, they are ‘urban survivalists.’

Rather than trying to explicitly ‘solve’ or ‘eliminate’ these individuals, it would be more humane (and more economic) to make sure the sufficient resources were always being channeled to the margins of society- into the ‘grey markets.’ Then those that wish to leave the margins may have more economic/social mobility, and those who are committed to their survivalist heritage will not be forced into desperation.



With-in the various strata of houseless society, one may notice a portion who seem to always be hauling a load of cans. If you are extra-empathic, or have experience in canning yourself, you may pick up on the quiet dignity with which they go about their work. Collecting cans is not ubiquitous among houseless, nor particularly easy (especially for seniors.) There are other, less legitimate ways to score money, with less work, but the can collectors have chosen a path of sweat and sore feet; doing the rounds, from neighborhood to neighborhood, street corner to back alley, quietly and dutifully performing a consecrated public ritual of performance recycling.

The programs which allow individuals to turn scavenged and reclaimed goods into income are a fantastic example of a wealth distribution mechanism that is convenient (easy to use), ubiquitous (exchange sites everywhere), non-discriminatory (machines perform the exchange) and non-binding (individuals are not burdened social/economic status of ‘employed’ with all its paperwork.)

We can help LGBQT+ youth directly by strengthening/expanding these programs: after being exiled from their family unit, finding a way to reintegrate with another family takes time, but in the interim they desperately need means to independently support themselves.

We are only limited by our creativity, once we understand what is possible through incentivising aggregate group processes: currently you will find no loose cans nor glasses on the streets of portland- rarely, at least, if at all. We have incentivised their collection. What else might be encouraged with income exchange?

Tear Gas and Portland's Homeless Population

             As the summer of 2020 draws to a close, it’s nearly impossible to recap the rollercoaster ride that is the national narrative. But one story making national news has its cradle here in Portland, where federal officers were sent to protect the downtown courthouse, resulting in an escalation of protests that had been simmering for over 2 months at that point. Born of nationwide protests demanding systemic change in the police force after the death of George Floyd, the Portland protests have become a fixture throughout the last few months of the civic unrest boiling under the surface of our quarantined population. However, little attention seems to be getting paid to the people who live in the battlefield that has become Portland’s downtown streets.  


The houseless population in Portland, caught in between protestors and police, has suffered disproportionately from the repeated use of tear gas, flashbangs and other riot dispersal technologies in the places they live. Reports from VICE, Willamette Week and the Oregonian detail the situations people find themselves in, such as leaving behind all their belongings to flee flashbangs and advancing crowds or finding themselves coughing and wheezing when they try to return to a regular safe spot later. Even people in homes are reporting that the walls and windows can't fully keep the chemical agent out. Some reports have caught tear gas canisters going off in homeless encampments unaffiliated with the protest, covering not only the living space but the people and their possessions with heavy, irritating chemicals. The amplification of harassment and environmental dangers has only spiked with the careless and sometimes malicious use of these devices.

 

Racial Injustice Portland Tear Gas

It's hard not to underestimate how much gas is released in a single night. AP Photo


Besides the acute impacts of being chased from their own places of living, Portland’s homeless are suffering from the environmental impacts of living in streets that are routinely tear-gassed. Tear gas is a heavy chemical irritant that sinks downwards after being deployed, creating a sharp cough for days after deployment. Oregon Senators Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, along with Representatives Earl Blumenauer and Suzanne Bonamici, have already petitioned the EPA for a comprehensive review of what this type of damage can do long-term, since the effects aren’t well recorded. Meanwhile, homeless populations in Portland are already suffering inordinately from COVID-19, a respiratory illness that can only be compounded by exposure to tear gas or other toxic airborne particles. Before deploying tear gas as a short term way to disperse protesters, federal agents and PPB must both factor in that wanton overuse has direct effects on our most vulnerable populations. 


- Mark Fogerson

Programs through Education Arts and Recreation

 

When I was very young, walking through New York City with my parents on my first visit to the city, I saw my first instance of a person without a home. I remember asking my parents why they were sleeping on the sidewalk. They explained to me that this person was not as fortunate as we were and did not have access to all the things a house or employment might offer. I don’t think I understood what this really meant until much later in my life. To me, homelessness was an absence of work and housing, two broad encompassing concepts that I didn’t care to explore. But as I grew older, and experienced homelessness for myself, I realized how many things are left unconsidered when growing up in a privileged life in a middle class family. The opportunities and experiences afforded to adolescents go unnoticed by those who get to enjoy them. For homeless youths, these luxuries are unavailable to them. However there are programs that are doing good work to rectify this situation. In Portland, p:ear is one such organization. 


From the p:ear website: p:ear has identified a strong model for working with homeless youth: assist them to recognize themselves as capable people while providing truly supportive relationships and opportunities for growth while they navigate the personal and difficult journey out of street life.


p:ear offers programs in education, arts, and recreation. Specifically I wanted to mention the arts programs they offer as a way to support and connect with the homeless youth population in Portland. They offer workshops and classes in both analog and digital methods, as well as providing gallery space for the public to view the youth’s work during Portland’s monthly Art Walk. This is an opportunity for children to reach out to the public and make their stories heard, as well as helping them develop their “ emotional, motor and cognitive skills” in a safe environment. Adolescents are also given a venue to sell their work as means of income. 


Here is a link for more information about the programs they offer. 

https://www.pearmentor.org/programs/


If you’re looking to help p:ear, you can find more information here:

https://www.pearmentor.org/help/






Friday, August 14, 2020

Minorities in the Homeless Population

Have you paid attention to those you see on the side of the road, often holding a cardboard sign? Sure, you probably notice them, but what do you notice about them? 

Something that has probably passed many by is the glaring racial disparity among the homeless population. This graphic provides a helpful summary of the proportions of minorities who make up the homeless population in America versus the general population. 


What does this discrepancy tell you about systemic racism and our economy? In our efforts to eliminate homelessness, we must also eliminate racism from all parts of society. Why else would there be such disparity between the two kinds of populations? 

For more eye-opening facts about racial disparities in homelessness, visit the National Alliance to End Homelessness and the National Coalition for the Homeless.

Myths about Homelessness



Photo by Steve Knutson on Unsplash

What do you think about when you heard the word homeless? You may think of tents, cardboard signs, addiction, sickness, shelters, hunger, cold, helpless, dirty, vulnerable, and likely many other words. But, what if your impression of homelessness was skewed?

Here are a few myths of homelessness that people all too easily believe.

Myth: Homeless people are addicts.

Truth: Only a portion of homeless people actually struggle with substance abuse. According to SAMHSA (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration), only one third of the homeless population struggle with substance abuse. https://www.vox.com/2015/1/15/7552441/homeless-facts-myths


Myth: Homeless people have mental illnesses.

Truth: Mental illness is definitely higher in the homeless population – about 1 in 4 homeless people struggle with severe mental illness. This statistic only reflects those living in shelters, not to mention those who are still living on the streets. While mental illness is prevalent, it is not the main cause of homelessness. Unaffordable housing, unemployment, and poverty are the top three causes of homelessness. (http://www.usmayors.org/pressreleases/uploads/2014/1211-report-hh.pdf)


Myth: If homeless people get a job, they will no longer have to be houseless.

Truth: While getting a job may certainly help someone’s situation, housing prices are so expensive that even when working full time at a minimum wage job, someone could still not afford to rent or purchase a housing unit for themselves. The National Low income Housing Coalition found that someone would have to work between 69-174 hours a week to pay for an affordable two bedroom rental unit as the federal government defines “affordable” as 30 percent of a person’s income. “A full-time minimum wage worker couldn't afford a one- or two-bedroom apartment at Fair Market Rent, a standard set by the federal government, in any state.” (https://www.vox.com/2015/1/15/7552441/homeless-facts-myths) Many homeless people do some paid work, but not enough to help remove them from their situation. Lack of permanent address, access to showers, and transportation also make it difficult to maintain regular work. (https://www.homelesshub.ca/about-homelessness/homelessness-101/myths-and-questions-about-homelessness)

For more information on other myths and facts, visit:

https://www.homelesshub.ca/about-homelessness/homelessness-101/myths-and-questions-about-homelessness

https://www.vox.com/2015/1/15/7552441/homeless-facts-myths

Reducing LGBTQ+ Homelessness Starts With Acceptance

With the constant harboring of conservative families and lack of proper education on parenthood, queer youths and adults are being thrown out on a global scale for trying to be themselves. If you are someone with any sort of privilege (i.e. being straight/cisgender, male, white, financially stable, etc.), it's important to understand the trials and tribulations that minorities face on a daily basis. What you can do to address this situation is seek out accessible resources, digital or analog, that provide unbiased information about LGBTQ+ communities, both local and online. Below is some basic information about common attributes and traits that queer people associate themselves with. There is plenty more information to be learned in the long run, and people are indeed capable of learning it, but consider these as a start for your path to understanding and accepting queer culture.

Sexual Orientations:
Gay - https://www.dictionary.com/browse/gay
Lesbian - https://www.dictionary.com/browse/lesbian
Bisexual - https://www.dictionary.com/browse/bisexual
Pansexual/Omnisexual - https://www.dictionary.com/browse/pansexual
Demisexual - https://www.dictionary.com/e/gender-sexuality/demisexual
Asexual - https://www.dictionary.com/browse/asexual

Gender Identities:
Cisgender - https://www.dictionary.com/browse/cisgender
Transgender - https://www.dictionary.com/browse/transgender
Non-binary - https://www.dictionary.com/browse/nonbinary
Gender-neutral - https://www.dictionary.com/browse/gender-neutral
Gender-fluid - https://www.dictionary.com/browse/gender-fluid
Agender - https://www.dictionary.com/browse/agender
Two-spirit - https://www.dictionary.com/browse/two-spirit

Pronouns:
He/him - https://pronoun.is/he
She/her - https://pronoun.is/she
They/them - https://pronoun.is/they/.../themselves
Ze/hir - https://pronoun.is/ze/hir
Ze/zir - https://pronoun.is/ze/zir
Xey/xem - https://pronoun.is/xey/xem/xyr
Other pronouns - https://pronoun.is/all-pronouns



The Importance of Community and Mentorship

 


Maslow’s hierarchy of needs argues that an individual cannot begin to prioritize their social needs before feeling secure in their ability to procure the basics of survival. Without base of sustenance, shelter, and safety, it is not impossible but very difficult to to work on fully making the connections that humans need in order to maintain their mental health. Furthermore, these relationships are incredibly important to the development of young people both to aid their brains in socially maturing as well to model healthy relationships in the future. However, if an individual—or family unit—is preoccupied with taking care of their physiological and safety needs, then they may have less energy to put towards taking part in a community. This can take a toll on long-term mental health. 

This demonstrates the importance of programs that emphasize in community building and establishing meaningful relationships among houseless youth. Providing an area where there is access to resources such as food and hygienic products(addressing the first tier of the hierarchy) coupled with an understanding team and opportunity to interact with their peers(second and third tier) is a crucial combination in creating a ‘safe space’. 

One of these programs offered in Portland, Oregon is Friends of the Children. Full time employed staff, known as “friends” are assigned to individual children and meet with them on a regular basis to aid in their education as well as establishing a mentor connection with them. As long as the youth is enrolled in the program, they are guaranteed their “friend” for 12.5 years (the duration of the K-12 education track). They have a fantastic success rate and have been established for around 25 years. Programs such as Friends of the Children are a great example of acknowledging the importance of basic needs when also working on community building.


Learn more about Friends of the Children

More PDX youth programs and shelters

Providing a Space for the Arts

At this point it is a fairly well-known concept ago introduce avenues for creative work early in youth education. Providing classes and in class time for artistic learning from Pre-K all the way through high school has a great deal of benefits to students who are able to participate. Early involvement in the arts is a fantastic source of creative expression for young people, but it also can help with self-confidence, stress relief, and overall problem solving. 

However, many public schools suffer lack of funding that result in under-funded arts programs, and at times classes may require fees from their students for supplies. Some programs even require time to meet outside of school. While these obstacles aren’t put in place specifically to make students lives particularly difficult, they can prevent opportunities to those who might not be in the position to pay fees or coordinate transportation despite their interest in the program. In fact, the ability to make it to school for access to such programs might not even be attainable in some cases. 

Creative expression is too often an unattainable privilege for houseless youth because of these barriers. This demonstrates the importance of projects like p:ear, who hold classes and workshops in the arts specifically for houseless youth. Some of their subjects include graphic design and screen printing. Participants also have the chance to display and sell their completed work in p:ear’s own gallery, which is refreshed every month for Portland’s monthly art walk. P:ear does not require fees of their students; instead they rely on donations from the public (this includes art supplies, but ranges from snacks to hygienic products as well). 

Donate supplies to p:ear here

See artwork at the p:ear gallery

More about p:ear

Turing COVD-19 Emergency Measures into Long-Term Solutions for Homeless Communities

Throughout the COVID-19 crisis, city directors have been moving faster than ever before to protect residents experiencing homelessness, by converted vacant hotels, unused recreation centers, and empty convention halls into shelter locations fit for social distancing. Cities such as Los Angeles and London have committed, in ways that would have seemed unimaginable just two months ago, to bring defenseless people living on the street inside in some way. Others are stepping up their outreach to those living on the street by giving facemasks, giving meals and handwashing stations, and supporting “safe camping.”

Cities acted fast because homeless are among the most vulnerable populations when it comes to COVID-19, and are at high risk of not only contracting it themselves but also spreading it to others.


Now, it’s time for city leaders to make these emergency measures into long-term strategies and make a giant leap forward in how we handle homelessness in the United States. To do that, cities will need to be creative about how they use federal recovery dollars, and seek silver-lining opportunities in the decline of the hotel industry to create new permanent supportive housing. And above all, they’ll need to keep up the surge of innovative thinking that has powered the first two months of response.


For more information visit: https://www.bloomberg.org/program/public-health/cities-addressing-homelessness-during-covid-19/#overview

Thursday, August 13, 2020

Coping with COVID-19 while experiencing homelessness

 


Photo by Tim Mossholder from Pexels

COVID-19 has touched every corner of this planet, affecting the lifeways and practices of almost every person. Masks, face shields, social distancing, frequent handwashing and cleaning of surfaces are increasingly commonplace. 

But what happens when you don't have access to running water? What happens when you share an encampment with many others, with no way to socially distance? Where do you get masks if you can't afford them?

3 most common problems in the Summer garden

3 most common problems in the Summer garden


It’s summertime and everyone’s garden has been set up and planted. Many lucky gardeners have had their first harvest of lettuce, strawberries, and peas. Now everyone is patiently waiting for cucumbers, tomatoes and zucchini and other vegetables. However, this is the time of the year when gardeners face several problems that, if not taken care of, result in very little or no harvest. Three most common problems of the Summer garden are:

  • cucumber or zucchini plants produce flowers but then dry out without maturing into fruit;

  • harvesting broccoli: when is the right time;

  • tomato blossom end rot.



Since Spring the cucumber and/or zucchini plants were thriving, happily weaving up the trellis. Finally, there are flowers and tiny baby fruits. Every gardener at this point is dreaming about fresh salad they’d make with them soon! But then… oh, no! Why did all the tiny flowers and baby fruits dry out? This might be due to the number of problems: hot weather, pollination problems, or insects (fruit fly). If you suspect that flowers dry out due to the hot weather, this can be fixed by spreading a layer of bark dust around the root of the plant. Burk dust will keep the moisture in the ground and surface will not be too hot for the plant. 

Another reason is lack of insect-pollinators. All cucumber and zucchini plants have male and female flowers. Male flower is a regular flower on a short stem and it produces pollen. Female flowers have a small “fruit” behind the flowers and inside of it you’ll see the stigma. Often many male flowers fall off of the plant, but if you notice female flowers falling off as well, that usually means there’s a pollination problem. To fix this problem this summer you can try to cross-pollinate the plants yourself by getting some pollen from one flower and gently moving it inside the other flower. Try this and you might still harvest several zucchini and cucumbers this season!

https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/edible/vegetables/cucumber/cucumbers-not-straight.ht



Every gardener gets disappointed when they see young still green tomato fruit that is rotten on the bottom. This is a very common problem that affects at least half of the fruits in the early season. Even though there is no cure to blossom end rot, you can still make changes in your gardening to alleviate and control this common problem. First of all, you need to make sure that your tomatoes are given adequate and even amounts of water. In addition, a layer of mulch can help retain moisture around the plant. Adding calcium to the soil will not hurt, but not necessary. Every gardener needs to be aware that almost every tomato variety will be hit by blossom end rot at some point in the season. However, the majority of plants recover from it before the season is over with no significant ill effects. Also, the tomatoes that get affected by rot can still be consumed with the rotten parts cut out. It won’t hurt you.

https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/edible/vegetables/tomato/tomato-blossom-rot.htm

Broccoli are the plants that grow better in the early Spring - they are the cold weather crop. However, if you happen to plant them later in the Spring, they would do better in the partial shade, because constant sun causes broccoli flowers to bloom faster. The most difficult part of growing broccoli, especially for the first time growers, is picking the right time to harvest them. The trick is to observe the plant often and cut it as soon as the crown reaches the size of your variety, usually around 4-7 inches in diameter. You can also look at florets on the outside of the head: they should look large and full. Don’t wait too long! When they begin to turn from green to yellow, this is a sign that they’re beginning to flower, and past their peak. 

https://gardenerspath.com/plants/vegetables/grow-broccoli/

It is my hope that the beginner gardeners will find these suggestions useful and be able to fix these common problems in their garden before the season is over. If not, there is always the next Spring!


Portland Therapy Center: Therapists who specialize in LGBTQ+ issues.

        

While supporting the LGBTQ+ community in homelessness issues was the focus of our project this term, I could not help but notice all of the underlying risk factors that the community faces that ultimately lead to that situation. When coming out or transitioning many members of the LGBTQ+ community lose their support groups or even worse are kicked out onto the streets. This causes a plethora of problems that those in that community must face and it is important to let them know that they matter and there are people out their that care. That is why I think it is important to highlight an organization called Portland Therapy Center. They focus on issues that many members of the LGBTQ+ community face. They have local experts that are equipped to help. Here is more from their website: 

                                

Individuals who identify themselves as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered or questioning sometimes face challenges unique to the LGBTQ community. Although there is a much wider cultural acceptance of the LGBTQ community than there was twenty years ago, discrimination is still frequent in some areas. Rejection by friends and family is a very real fear facing people coming out for the first time. Additionally, sometimes LGBTQ youth (and even adults) face violence, bullying, or hate crimes. All these factors can lead to stress, depression, anxiety, identity issues, and poor self-esteem. Seeing a qualified mental health professional can be enormously beneficial for an individual facing any emotional stress. Therapists can offer strategies for coming out, ways to deal with discrimination, and help to address any other issues faced by a member of the LGBTQ community, including relationships, marriage and parenting.

Find out more at https://www.portlandtherapycenter.com/