Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Thanks!
Thursday, August 21, 2008
An item of interest...
I just came across the following report from the National Coalition for the Homeless that has to do with the voting rights of the homeless. In short, you don't need a home to vote. That said, there are plenty of obstacles for the homeless to overcome should they would want exercise their right to vote...
This guide provides a nice state-by-state rundown of the voter registration requirements, how to conduct a voter registration drive, how to host a forum on housing and homelessness, etc. Very nicely done.
Friday, July 11, 2008
More research...
Dennis Culhane collects data. Mounds of it. More of it in his areas of interest--primarily urban homelessness--than anybody has collected before. And what he has learned has created a revolution.
Among the truths he has drawn from his data on the homeless:
* About 40 percent of the people entering the shelter system in New York for example, have passed through other major institutions--jails, hospitals, detox centers, or foster care.
* Many, in turn, are recycled back through those same institutions; e.g., in Philadelphia 25 percent of those admitted to city jails are homeless.
* The chronically homeless represent as little as 10 to 15 percent of the total homeless population in New York but cost about $40,000 per person per year in public resources, far greater than anyone imagined.
"I think that some people thought it was cheap for society to ignore poor people and, if they had to, let them starve on the streets," Culhane says. "But it turns out that having people live on the street isn't cheap after all."
Interesting stuff. It is largely because of Culhane's research that the Bush Administration's focus on homelessness has shifted from temporary shelter-based care to permanent, supportive housing.Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Are you on Facebook?
If you have a facebook profile, (or if you don't, set one up!) I wanted to let you know that I started a group there that may make it easier for folks to freely share thoughts as we move through the budgeting process. Here it is!
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
Let's save some money...
From the Jan.-Feb., 2008 issue of This Magazine:
Calgary journalist Gordon Laird pointed out this past summer in his report, Homelessness in a Growth Economy: Canada’s 21st Century Paradox, that Canada is spending between $4.5 and $6 billion a year funding its homeless. Laird reached this figure by examining a 2001 British Columbia government study that found the average homeless person uses $30,000 to $40,000 annually in frontline emergency services such as hospital care, jail time and shelters, and applying this formula to the National Homelessness Initiative’s estimate that 150,000 Canadians are homeless.
“It’s a complete double standard that we should attack debt and deficit with such fervour,” says Laird, “but when it comes to the cost of homelessness, we’ve really chosen to neglect it.”
What’s worse is that the B.C. study showed that it’s cheaper to house people—at $22,000 to $28,000 per individual—than have them live on the streets.
$30,000 - $40,000 per person per year burden on frontline services. Ugh.
So here's the question: Do we need to replicate Laird's research here? Can we legitimately assume that the same situation would apply here in Spokane? Thoughts?
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Efficiency is fine, but what about the need?
The answer would be yes. A resounding yes.
As food and fuel prices continue their climb to who-knows-where, it is getting harder to provide the most basic needs. For example, a Spokesman-Review article from June 18th (in the NW section) entitled "Costs Squeeze Meals on Wheels," notes that things are pretty bleak for the local Meals on Wheels program, which delivers food to the elderly and the homebound. The program's bill "for liquid nutrition - supplements such as Boost and Ensure that are critical to some clients - went up by 50 percent recently, from $16 a case to $24."As if that weren't bad enough, since the Meals on Wheels program relies on volunteer drivers (and their cars), "58 percent of the nation's Meals on Wheels programs have said they've lost drivers because of gas prices, and some had eliminated meals or customers." Ouch.
Contact the City Council and let them know that getting food to people has to be a priority.
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Speaking of Efficiency...
Please contact the City Council members and let them know that you support such wise use of public funds and that you support funding Spokane's Human Services at 1% of the overall budget.
Saturday, June 14, 2008
All for Efficiency
Fully funding Human Services allows our palette of fabulous local non-profit agencies to reach, counsel, and support those in our community who need assistance in managing homelessness, hunger, substance abuse, mental illness, physical disabilities, domestic violence, etc. Our non-profits have the staff with the background, training, and facilities to best --and most efficiently-- help those in need. Especially if they have the funding they need...
I work at the Downtown library and on the occasion when a person with mental health and/or substance abuse issues runs afoul of our Rules of Conduct, there is often very little we can do but call the police department. So we do it. The police then take the person to jail where they are subsequently released back onto the street with little chance of receiving the help they need. The next day the same person may be right back in the library. We then lather, rinse, repeat.
In terms of pure efficiency in local government, this is a horribly wasteful and damaging way to ignore a problem. The issue is this: when it comes to discussing efficiency with those who have the incredibly hard task of allotting scare public funds, they like to be able to point to hard numbers. But the rub is that it is frequently hard to prove, in numbers, the cost of not funding Human Services. How many dollars per year do the police and/or fire departments spend addressing areas that they are not trained to deal with nor have the tools to provide a long-term solution? How much is drained from our public libraries when our public (rightly or wrongly) avoid our facilities out of fear of being confronted with an unpleasant situation? I don't know, and therein lies the problem; it is really hard to quantify.
While the cost of not fully funding Human Services is a hard number to pin down, the overall logic of the situation remains: if Human Services doesn't address the problem, it is a given that the the issue, be it domestic violence or homeless teens, won't go away on its own and other local agencies will be forced to deal, in one fashion or another, with the complexities. The costs don't just go away. In fact, there are good arguments to be made that the issues (and the total costs) just compound if not properly addressed.
So what I'm hoping to hear from you and have you pass on to the City Council, are cases where adequate funding did (or would have) save money, preserved dignity, and got a fellow human being back up on their feet.
All for One!
The goal of this campaign is to convince the Spokane City Council to allocate 1% of the total 2009 budget to human services. Thus, the "All for One!" rallying cry. As it stands right now, we are just under that mark at .008%, to be precise (source). The only way that this will happen is if you -- yes, you --contact your City Council representatives and let them know how critical -- and efficient -- it is to keep our homeless housed, our hungry fed, and our abused given nuturing support.
Here are your City Council members. Contact them and tell them that you are "All for One!"
Joe Shogan, City Council President
jshogan@spokanecity.org
District 1
Al French
afrench@spokanecity.org
Bob Apple
bapple@spokanecity.org
District 2
Richard Rush
rrush@spokanecity.org
Michael Allen
mallen@spokanecity.org
District 3
Nancy McLaughlin
nmclaughlin@spokanecity.org
Steve Corker
scorker@spokanecity.org
If you don't know your district? Who cares! Contact the entire Council. Or be a stick in the mud and check here: http://www.spokanegis.org/default.asp
Select "Council Districts" as one of the map layers and then click "redraw map."
Phone calls are always welcome at the Council chambers as well, 625-6255.
Oh, and don't neglect letting Mayor Verner know how you feel as well. mayor@spokanecity.org
Why is this so important, you ask? Well, I have my own reasons but I'd love to hear what your's are...