Atlanta Ga is famous for high density
development, traffic gridlock, enforcing vagrancy laws, arresting and banishing
pan handlers, tearing down old buildings, hiding blighted areas, building new
stadiums every 20 years and mandatory group-think for politicians. Atlanta is
obsessive about attracting tourism.
The homeless population is about 3000. Churches and civic organizations provide
shelters and food pantries spread across Atlanta Metro. Most homeless
individuals and families live with grandma, but drug and alcohol addiction and
mental illness continues to fuel the homeless population.
Homeless population drops in Atlanta, but
families may get overlooked, by Alexis Stevens, 10/22/18, AJC
By late
October, the concrete is no longer scorching from Georgia’s summer heat. In the
coming weeks, dipping temperatures will freeze the sidewalks and thin blankets
will do little to fight the numbing cold.
But for
hundreds of Atlanta’s homeless, the pavement is the only choice. “There aren’t
enough beds in the city for the amount of people in the city,” Rachel Reynolds
with Atlanta Mission told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Atlanta’s
homeless population was 3,076 in January when the annual “Point in Time Count”
of the city’s homeless was conducted — a 14 percent drop from the 2017 count,
according to the city. Since 2015, the homeless population has dropped 29
percent, data shows. Based on the numbers alone, it appears the city is
combating the problem and getting people off the streets. But homeless
advocates say the city’s shelters are packed to capacity and must turn people
away daily.
They also
point to a large segment of the homeless population often is not included in
the official count: Families. “So often, families are the hidden homeless,”
Dennis Bowman, executive director for the Nicholas House said. “They are not
always as visible as others because of the children.”
Sheltering families - Every night, 300 people
including children and their parents find shelter at Nicholas House, Bowman
said. It’s the only Atlanta shelter that will accept families, he said, and all
types of families are welcomed. There are couples, single parents with
children, and even large families with teenagers, he said. “We’re always at
capacity,” Bowman said. “The need is still great.”
But homeless
families aren’t always included in Atlanta’s yearly counts because they aren’t
typically sleeping outdoors or in a shelter. Instead, homeless families may
sleep in cars or move from home to home without a permanent residence, Bowman
said.
“Families
are significantly under-counted because of the definition of what homelessness
is,” he said.in
downtown
The number
of homeless women and children continues to rise, and they aren’t what comes to
mind when most people think about homeless people, Reynolds said. “If you’re
couch-surfing, you’re homeless,” she said. “It’s not just the person walking
around Centennial Olympic Park.”
The U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development, or HUD, requires Atlanta conduct
the Point in Time, or PIT, count every two years. But Atlanta gathers the data
every year to better gauge how the city is tackling homelessness, according to
Cathryn Marchman, executive director for Partners for Home. The organization
was created in 2013 under former Mayor Kasim Reed and works with government,
nonprofit and business leaders to combat homelessness.
In
January, hundreds of volunteers conducted the PIT count in Atlanta, and the
count will take place again next January. The definition of homelessness used
by the government means some without permanent addresses won’t be counted,
Marchman said.
For HUD,
sleeping on a friend’s couch does not qualify as homeless and wouldn’t be
included in the count, Marchman said. If families are missed during the count,
it may be because they are sleeping in cars, she said. But Marchman doesn’t
agree families are frequently overlooked. “The majority of our families experiencing
homelessness are in emergency family shelter,” she said.
But most
shelters are not set up for families. The Atlanta Mission runs four shelters,
taking in an average of 1,000 people each night, Reynolds said. In 2017, the
four shelters housed 8,000 different people, she said.
The
Atlanta Mission runs The Shepherd’s Inn, which has room for 450 men, and My
Sister’s House, a 264-bed facility for women and children. The Potter’s House,
located in Jefferson, can house up to 180 men while offering treatment for drug
addiction, according to the Atlanta Mission.
In August
2017, Atlanta’s biggest shelter, located at Peachtree and Pine streets, closed
its doors after losing a well-publicized battle with the city to remain open.
Since 1997, the shelter took in hundreds of people a night, but it was also the
backdrop to deadly shootings and tuberculosis outbreaks.
The city
transitioned those that were willing into permanent housing, but others went to
shelters that were already at capacity. Atlanta Mission shelters added 50 beds
for former Peachtree-Pine shelter residents, Reynolds said.
Another
shelter, the Gateway Center, offers beds for more than 300 men, according to
its website, but may shelter women when temperatures are below freezing. There
are other transitional housing options, along with ministry-based groups, but
most are not family oriented.
That makes
it even more important that the social services offered at places like the
Nicholas House spark change. The goal is self-sufficiency and ending the cycle
of poverty, Bowman said.
“We don’t
ever want to see them again,” Reynolds said. “Not because we don’t love them.
This is just a circumstance in their life. We want them to thrive.”
Ending homelessness - The snapshot count of Atlanta’s homeless isn’t perfect, Marchman
said. But it gives the city a glimpse of the vulnerable population.
Despite
the shortage of beds for the city’s homeless, advocates agree that the outlook
is not entirely bleak. Recent changes and programs to help the homeless
population are making a difference, though more is needed.
“The fact
that our overall number (of homeless) is down a pretty substantial amount is
good news,” Marchman said. “We’re at 14 percent overall reduction, and compared
to some other cities that are creeping up or are experiencing rapid increase,
this was really, really promising for us.”
Shelter
leaders like Bowman agree. “We are
truly in the best position to address family homelessness in metro Atlanta than
we have ever been in before,” Bowman said. “Now we just need the resources and
access to affordable housing.”
Atlanta
Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms is doing her part after campaigning on a promise of
creating a $1 billion public-private affordable housing fund to spur new
housing options for lower income residents and preserve existing affordable
units. Last week, she appointed the city’s first chief housing officer, Terri
Lee.
In the
meantime, Marchman’s organization is working on efforts to access real-time
data to better monitor the city’s homeless population. That work continues
year-round, but as winter approaches, there is a urgent incentive to get people
off the streets, she said. The city’s shelters and emergency services work
together to prepare for the coldest days of the year.
Last
winter, during a seven-week period between December and January, 11 people
froze to death in Fulton County, including eight who were homeless, according
to the medical examiner.
“Certainly
we always want to be well-prepared for winter time,” Marchman said. “We don’t
want anyone dying outside.”
Homeless counts for Atlanta are
as follows:
2015: 4317
2016: 4063
2017: 3572
2018: 3076
Here are
some organizations to contact if you would like to help:
Atlanta
Mission
404-588-4000
Gateway
Center
404-215-6600
Nicholas
House
404-622-0793
Partners
for Home
404-546-1810
SafeHouse
404-523-2221
United Way
of Greater Atlanta
404-527-7200
Dial 211 for
information
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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