Story Archives 2002

Practiced and Perfect

09/24/2021 - 11:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
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Gavin Newsom: Golden Boy or Your Worst Nightmare?

by Gretchen Hildebran/PoorNewsNetwork

I was confused as I sat in the back of the Board of
Supervisor's Chambers two weeks ago. POOR Magazine
editors had sent me to witness Gavin Newsom
introducing his twenty-some-odd point plan to "solve"
homelessness but all I could find in the SF Board Agenda were
two insidious items about shopping carts and public
toilets. Then Supervisor Newsom got his turn on the
microphone and his plan became clear. Throughout his
15 minute speech he moved like a synchronized swimmer
performing his first solo routine, making himself
larger and more competent with every word.
Every hand gesture practiced and perfected, the
dynamics of his voice became at each turn of policy
appropriately passionate or concerned. While softening
all the ideological justifications of his plan to
further manage, exploit and police the homeless and
the poor, his deeper strategy emerged. All eyes were
fixed on the tall and well-suited man, who knows that
talking about getting rid of the homeless will
guarantee you a sound bite on TV and keep downtown
interests, ever hopeful about rising property values,
watching your back and calling you "mayor material."

When Newsom was done grandstanding, it took several
minutes to recover and review my notes. By then the
new golden boy of the Democratic Machine was outside
the Chambers, surrounded by a semi-circle of fawning
reporters and TV cameras. I elbowed myself half-way
in to the scene, hoping to catch a few of KRON's
hard-hitting questions. These appeared to be in short
supply as reporters nodded to Newsom's explanation
that he found it ìmean-spirited to watch people
suffer.î

Back in October, this same kind-hearted politician
voted down the 24-hour notice legislation. That law
would have required the police to notify homeless
people that their possessions would be seized, giving
them time to salvage precious items such as ID,
medicine and clothes. Newsom spoke out against the
legislation and orchestrated its failure. I jumped
into a gap between the smiles to ask him why.
Suddenly a large finger was pointed in my direction.
Sternly the Supervisor protested, "I have been a
champion on services and SRO reform!" A wild glimmer
appeared in his eye and his finger waved at me again,
No need to resort to name calling, he said. I waved
my hands in confusion and backed out of the crowd. I
had expected defensiveness, maybe a slippery
explanation, but not a counter attack. For a couple
of seconds I wondered what explicative had slipped out
of my mouth by accident. But no such slip of the
tongue had occurred. I had merely pointed out a
contradiction between the politician's stated
compassion and his consistent actions against basic
property rights of homeless folks. I was guilty only
of lightly scratching the surface of the slick new
paint job that Newsom is getting in preparation to
look and act like a contender in the 2003 mayor race.
When the new Board of Supervisors was elected in late
2000, Gavin Newsom was one of a few Brown-aligned
incumbents to hold onto his seat. His lasting power
may be related to the fact that he ran uncontended in
District 2, which covers the Marina and Pacific
Heights and is home to the cityís richest and whitest
populations. He was originally appointed in 1997 by
Mayor Brown to the Board of Supervisors seat vacated
by State Assemblyman Kevin Shelley. At the time,
Newsom was little more than a local rich boy with a
poly-sci degree from Santa Clara University. His
status as the owner of a Napa vineyard and Marina wine
shop inspired glee among the business community. The
Chronicle splayed the headline, SF's New Supervisor
Bold, Young Entrepreneur.

What didn't get as much attention was the system of
political patronage which garnered Newsom this
appointment. His father, William A. Newsom, was a
California Appeals Court Judge and is a close friend
and advisor to the likes of John Burton and
billionaire Gordon Getty. In political terms,
Supervisor Newsomís appointment secured Willie Brownís
connection to these families and kept the Board of
Supervisors stocked with cronies who would not
challenge his pro-business, pro-development brand of
machine politics.

Newsom is highly defensive about his privileged
background, and insisted in an profile in the SF
Sentinel that he is basically a normal guy: ìUntil
about five years ago, Iíve never made more than
$22,000 in my life.î While that figure may show up on
his tax return, there is no doubt that Newsom reaps
the rewards of the company he keeps. Gordon Gettyís
son William, (known in society columns as Billy) is a
friend and partner in Plumpjack, a vineyard and chain
of wineshops, restaurants and resorts. Gavin and
Billy make frequent investments together, such as the
Pacific Heights house they sold during the boom years
for about $4 million dollars. The two also dominate
society pages, typified by the media circus which
surrounded Newsomís marriage to D.A. Kimberly
Guilfoyle, which the Gettys hosted at their SF
mansion.

While the mainstream media delights in the whirlwind
affairs of the rich and powerful, they have also
allowed Newsom to portray himself as a self-made man
who will steer clear of Brownís party line. In small
ways Newsom earned this reputation. One of his
distinguishing stands on the Board was to work towards
decriminalizing drug abuse. He successfully promoted
the OBOAT (Office Based Opiate Addiction Treatment)
legislation which would allow private physicians to
administer methadone to people trying to kick heroin
or other opiates.

This initiative was applauded by people suffering due
to lack of substance abuse treatment and the providers
who work with them. However, providers I spoke with
felt that Newsom had aligned himself with the harm
reduction movement for personal and political
advantage. This made him an unpredictable ally to
those fighting against the War on Drugs.
Longtime frontline health worker Rachel McClean found
he aligned himself only with narrowly specific issues.

She suspects that his motives are related to rumors
of family experiences with drug abuse rather than
moral belief in a right to treatment. "Office based
methadone is great, we have worked for it for a long
time. But it definitely serves the interests of the
rich junkies out there who want to be spared the
indignity of going down to the methadone clinic."
McClean recalls Newsom listening to testimony of
addicts in City Hall and benevolently offering them
help. "It makes him look O.K. to all the folks in the
city who are against the war on drugs, who believe in
decriminalization." But this one isolated program
doesn't go very deep she concluded, adding, "The war
on drugs is really a war against poor people and he
couldnít care less about that."

Which brings us back to Newsom's many-pointed plan and
his claim to be promoting it out of compassion. Much
popularized in the Chronicle, Examiner, and even
scoring a story in the New York Times, Newsom's office
released a Policy Advisory Update on January 7th
which claims to work towards a comprehensive
solution to homelessness. The catch phrase "New York
model" has repeatedly appeared in coverage of his plan
due to the fact that many of the most controversial
points of Newsom's are drawn from Guiliani policies in
New York.

When promoting the centralized intake process and
fingerprinting of homeless people, Newsom called these
"the best practices from other cities." He also
borrowed directly from the ideology behind the New
York model when he stated, "This is not a housing
problem, this is a substance abuse and mental health
problem."

The popularity of this ideology and its re-emergence
in the rhetoric of Willie Brownís wanna-be heir is no
accident. This same philosophy is the lynchpin in the
"Ready, Willing and Able" program that has grown into
the "success story" of New York's homeless services.
The program's website details how its founder, George
McDonald, lived in an SRO for years in order to prove
that it could be done, that people could work at
minimum wage, live in SROs and make it. That is,
make it without government assistance, without a
meaningful living wage job, and without addressing the
root causes of homelessness, especially the endemic
lack of affordable housing.

Instead, the Ready Willing and Able program is work
oriented. Their slogan, ìwork works, is the
rhetorical answer to the question what do we do with
all the homeless?î Put them in shelters and require
their labor 40 hours a week at minimum wage. The
program acts as their employers and can lease the
workforce out at cut rates for services such as street
cleaning, bulk mailings, housing maintenance and more.

Success in the program means that you stay sober
(checked with regular drug testing), hand over $65 a
week for room and board from your paycheck and give up
ìentitlementsî such as General Assistance. It also
means that you must remain a docile and compliant
worker in order to receive shelter and treatment.
Chance Martin of the Coalition on Homelessness
commented, ìThis program commodifies homeless people.
There is no investment in the individual, it is only
about filling a certain number of slots to make your
numbers work.î

The RW&A website now boasts of a ìworkforce of 800î
which it gladly offers up to any corporation at the
lowest prices around. Companies such as Toyota,
Citibank and Canon contract with the programís labor.
Graduates of the program often continue to work for
many of the companies who donate to or whose officers
sit on the board of the Doe Fund, the parent funder of
the program.

As was reported last week in the Bay Guardian, the
California-based property management giant CB Richard
Ellis has taken time to promote Ready Willing and Able
as a ìsolutionî right here in San Francisco. Bringing
the program into the cityís range of services was a
hot topic at luncheons between Willie Brown, George
Smith (Head of the Department of Homelessness), Newsom
and CBRE reps. The companyís interest may lie in
raising property values but they may also feel
inspired by the thought of a cut-rate workforce
available for maintenance contracts on their
widespread holdings in San Francisco. Whatever the
motivation, it shouldnít escape notice that in 2001 CB
Richard Ellis was bought out by a private group of
investors known as the Blum Capital Partners, headed
most insidiously by Richard Blum, Senator Dianne
Feinsteinís husband.

The power luncheons with a corporate agenda put
Newsomís plan into context. Homelessness is a popular
ìhot-button issue, that Newsom can use to develop his
leadership profile while serving the interests of the
powerful political leaders who are now grooming him
for a mayoral run. Newsom isnít the regular guy he
wants us to think he is, and he clearly isnít separate
from the machine politics that dominates the Bay Area
and beyond.

Jenny Freidenbach, also of the Coalition On
Homelessness, was standing behind the circle of
reporters as Newsom blurted sound bites at City Hall.
She wasnít impressed. ìHeís not talking about
housing, treatment or living wage jobs, only more
bureaucracy,î was her explanation of why the C.O.H.
wasnít receptive to Newsomís plan. He worked with no
service providers in forming the plan and again has
followed the "New York model" and Willie Brown's lead
in blaming providers and advocates like the C.O.H. for
protecting the rights and dignity of homeless people.
Newsomís homeless policy is inspired by a stingy
political climate and motivated by personal ambition.
The Supervisor has tried to convince more than one
homeless person or advocate that his heart is in the
right place. Freidenbach reported that back in 1998
when the Board of Supervisors voted on whether to cut
G.A. benefits, a man named Garth testified on the
devastating effects of having his monthly check cut to
even less. Although Newsom voted in favor of cutting
the benefit, he approached Garth after the hearing and
apologized.

These kinds of gestures only further indicate that
Newsom is aware of the people he is stepping on to get
ahead. Said Freidenbach, "He knows what he's doing is
wrong, but he does it anyway because he always stays
true to his constituency."

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I know why it's the meanest city!

09/24/2021 - 11:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
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Original Body

PNN staff writer goes on an unofficial tour of the US Cities rated the meanest by the National Coalition on Homelessness

by Clive Whistle/PoorNEwsNEtwork

In atlanta when the olympics came I was harassed, arrested, had my
belongings seized and finally was put in jail for the duration of the
olympics- at which time I made the mistake of asking the "nice" black cop (that's what he called himself when he arrested me) why I was arrested - to which he replied, shortly, " Because you know as well I do - you are a bum, and they don't want to see no bums in Atlanta right now"

Well, that "right now" lasted a whole year and even exists today -
it seems that the olympics fever rolled over into city policy - so much so that nowadays you can't even commit the crime of walking at night in downtown (Atlanta) in old clothes or you will be picked up on suspicion of "being a vagrant" (read; poor)

So I left. I went to New York just in time to be met by the demon named
Guiliani. But let's back up - I should tell you something about myself, I
am a low-key, loving kind of guy. I really don't have a lot of motivation to
be "all that I can be". I did an over long stint in the Army - which sort
of tore my brain out of my head - leaving me unable to handle much
stress-or really deal with a job at all - and I have had my share of em' I
have done everything from cleaning floors to hauling trash, and I still
work from time to time, when my back lets me . So I guess you could call
me a bum- but what's a bum?- I don't do no stealin' or lyin - I don't
bother noone- so really by who's standards am I a bum?-

So anyway, I make the terrible misstep of going to New York, at the
nexxus of Giuiliani's campaign of terror against "peddlers, panhandlers and
prostitutes" those are his words, and what a lot of people don't know is he
went after the street artists and hot dog vendors as vehemently as he went
after the so-called bums like me - it really should have been called
Giuliani's War on the Poor.

Well, anyway, I hit town and got a job in Soho moving and hauling trash -
and very soon I got an old truck with a messed-up rear end. I used it do
haulin' and within seconds the cops were on me for having an old car - it was
hilarious - Driving While Poor was in full effect- I had my white
co-worker drive so as to be sure of no DWB(driving while black) risks -but
he was stopped repeatedly - eventually - I gave up and took to livin in an SRO and then on the streets, which is no easy task in NYC. But then I began my relationship with the Business Improvement District ( read: the new fascism in AmeriKKa) These are areas such as Times Square in New York that hire their own cops to patrol the poor folks, the artists, the sex workers and anybody who doesn't resemble Mickey Mouse, i.e, a member of the Disney Family out of the area where tourists go. I was arrested and/or harrased so many times I can't count. And I wasn't even panhandling! Anyway, I finally borrowed enough money and went to San Francisco.

Well, I guess I just have bad luck! cause little did I know I was on the unofficial tour of the meanest cities in America. As a poor black man, who grew up in the south I really don't think it has ever been this bad!

In San Francisco I have lived in Shelters and SRO's. Most of the shelters are similar to jails and I have been in the Army and in jail too much of life to be havin' anymore of that. So I have attempted to live quietly outside, mindin' my own business. I have lived in the most godawful hideaways and the SFPD or the Department of Public Works has found me and harassed me, seized my meager belongings and thrown me in jail for nothin at all. I think the only good thing about SF is POOR Magazine, The Bayview, Street Spirit and The Street Sheet - cause at least they help folks get the truth out.

I know there are good places in the US - but according to the recent report by the NAtional Coalition on Homelessness, even the possiblity of a hawaiian vacation isn't a good idea (Honolulu, Hi was voted 10th on the list of meanest cities to homeless folks) anyway, I don't really know where to go now. But the message is clear - they don't want poor folks like me in most of America - and as I marched in the Dr. King march yesterday along side my Black, white, Asian and Latino brothers and sisters I wondered who our oppressed folks really are in 2002.

Clive Whistle is a staff writer at POOR - through POOR's Writer-Facilitation project, which aims to give a voice to very low and no income writers and artists
The entire Meanest Cities report can be viewed at: www.nationalhomeless.org/criminalizationrelease.html

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24 hr. Warning...To be Continued.

09/24/2021 - 11:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
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by TJ Johnston and PNN Staff

It didn’t exactly surprise fellow POOR Magazine supportive reporter, Laurie McElroy, or me when the Board of Supervisors once again put off deciding on important legislation: to have Department of Public Works give 24 hours notice before removing a person’s belongings. This legislation has a serious impact on the lives of San Francisco’s homeless citizens.

But before we could set foot on City Hall to view this legislative inertia, the building was evacuated because of a bomb scare, putting the regularly scheduled meeting on hold for about one half-hour.

In the interim, we strategized on street-level lobbying to get the DPW to place 24-hour tags on a person’s stuff. We even rehearsed a reworded Rolling Stones classic: “I Can’t Get No Notice Action” (we never got the chance to sing it). Then the bomb squad determined the infernal device to be a dud in this latest development of the five-year effort by several economic justice organizations, including the Coalition on Homelessness (COH).

The proposal cites, above all, the need to protect the homeless, a population historically at the short end of the stick. Kathleen Gray, a homeless woman and COH member, sees current practices as a catch-22. “When you have systems which gives people blankets and medicines, then turn around and take them away, (it) is not only wasteful of resources, it is also very debilitating.”

Gray emphasizes, “This legislation is about permitting people to own things, to accumulate things, to go beyond collecting bottles in a cart, to have some nice clothes to enable them to work a job.” Currently, this civil right (not to mention one’s possessions) is at risk.

“That right is self-empowering,” continues Gray, “and those who are self-empowered improve their lives. When their lives are improved, the neighborhood is improved.”

While the Supes listened to Falun Gong advocates, who were there in numbers, we visited the offices of five Board members including Sophie Maxwell and Leland Yee (initially, they supported the 24-hour advance warning, but have since backpedaled). We delivered a letter addressed to each supervisor thanking them “for their continued support” (fully realizing the irony of this phrasing).

Some of us even placed orange stickers of our cause on the doors. At the urging of the COH’s Mara Radar, we removed them immediately. Supervisor Tony Hall of the Rules Committee himself returned one of our stickers. He didn’t seem too pleased about it!

After tabling a resolution condemning Chinese persecution of the Falun Gong and deciding on other measures, the Board eventually kicked our locally based proposal back to the Rules Committee. This hearing is scheduled for Friday, Oct. 18.

In order for the measure to be adopted, six out of eleven Supervisors must vote yes; to override a likely mayoral veto, eight “yea” votes are required. Curiously, this body, one of the most progressive ones this city has seen, has just as much trouble arriving at a decision as previous Boards. After five years, where many have navigated mazes in often-futile efforts to retrieve their possessions, such a decision is long overdue.

(For more about this policy, see “Where’s My Stuff?” by Clive Whistle, on POOR News Network, 7/10/01.)

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AMERICA: OPEN 4 BIDNESS?

09/24/2021 - 11:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
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by TJ Johnston

The sign was staring right at me, declaring itself (and the rest of America) "Open For Business." I was transfixed by the "shopping flag" design for about 20 minutes. This was about as long as I could stand. The door would automatically open unless whoever was inside would walk out of the pay toilet on his own volition. But in the interim, the kneejerk reaction against such obvious advertising ploys didn't kick this time. I stood in front of the newly fashioned, ubiquitous logo long enough to realize America is indeed Open For Business.

His Willieness called upon San Francisco merchants to display these new signs on their storefronts and to ascribe a higher purpose to their customers' year-end shopaholism. Does it matter pocket money might be scarce this year? No, because just as my family in WWII bought bonds, I'm buying retail. Ba-da-da-da-dee-dum. Charge! Or, in my case, Cash!

Most people who hang Stars and Stripes outside their homes probably aren't even registered to vote. But, I bet they're registered at Radio Shack. I bought headphones there with a ten-dollar bill and the guy asked for my address and phone number. I told him, "Do you want me to make a purchase or go on a date with you?"

Where the red, white, and blue is plastered on windows, so was their tricolor merchandise on sale. Macy's had racks of patriotic wear and wasted no time in urging their credit card holders to donate to the American Red Cross (and for a 10% saving). No telling whether the consumer or the Red Cross would max out first.

Old Glory merch also abounded at Ralph Lauren and Tommy Hilfiger. If the color scheme flatters their professional anorexics, then an average Joe like me can drape himself with pride.

Patriotism as a selling point isn't limited to just goods, but also services. Erica is also Open for Business, so said the ad in which her star-spangled panties are obviously Photoshopped. Isn't it funny how I abhor the flag-waving used to sell SUV's, but I can forgive the flag-wrapping of our nation's sex workers?

The declaration "These Colors Do Not Run" prevails in the tie-dyed Haight-Ashbury, where hippie imagery has long been co-opted and marketed to weekenders and tourists. One store was able to reconcile peace symbols with the ensign. A T-shirt on sale incorporated "peace" in the blue field.

At a leather shop, both Old Glory and Union Jack were emblazoned in their clothing lines and camouflage wear was prominently displayed. Maybe they recognized jingoism as the latest fetish. I'll keep an eye out for this new kink next time I visit the Power Exchange.

And curiously, I finished my outing empty-handed. Instead of a new wardrobe and dates with Erica and the Radio Shack guy, I walked away with the realization this excursion would leave a Daisy cutter-sized hole in my pocket. I might have been fashionably patriotic, but I can't afford to look this cool in a recession.

This well-timed epiphany prevented me from possible destitution. I'm glad that this flash appeared more quickly than my original notion to shop 'til I drop. I already knew there were better ways to spend my disposable income: after food and shelter, there are ways to alleviate suffering and injustice. All in all, this lesson relearned didn't set me back much. It cost me the price of a set of 'phones, plus the quarter at the john whose broad stripes and bright stars started it all.

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POVERTY

09/24/2021 - 11:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
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America's Forgotten State

by Staff Writer

One out of every ten children in America is living in a state of poverty. And that's one too many American Dreams broken. One too many American childhoods at risk, threatened by the daily struggle to secure enough food, enough shelter, enough medicine just to survive. Nearly 12,000.00 precious lives hanging in a brutally uncertain balance. Sixteen percent of all our children- a poverty rate that's higher than any other age group. but who cares to notice?

For more information contact the Catholic Campaign for Human Development @ 1.800.946.4243 or contact www.povertytusa.org

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Is a Homophobe In Charge?... Almost.

09/24/2021 - 11:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

Getting someone
hating your guts even if second
in charge...

Is as dangerous as
diabetics swimming in seas
of pure sugar:

A dangerous, deadly combination.

by Joe B.

There's a 3 for on deal here, it could be those tae Bo tapes or boost dring giving me extra energy

When 'Prez Bush AIDS Policy Director Scott Evertz say's "bad time's were ahead for HIV/AIDS research, prevention care.

"I'm thinking "BAD TIMES" FOR THE ABOVE PEOPLE".

Then a Dr. Tom Coates, UCSF's Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, said the then upcoming appointment (Thursday) of this guy signaled that funding and support of AIDS could be slashed under the Bush administration. [I'm paraphrasing Dr. Coates]

I'll get right to it, Mr. Tom Coburn, who is not only a Republican, former conservative, congressman [still conservative] openly believes "homosexuality is morally wrong" appointing Tom Coburn, to the President's advisory council essentially tells Gay commumnities everywhere "We Don't Care, We Just Don't Care About You."

Its like having Att. Gen. John Ashcroft... oops its happened as wiretapping all phones land based, cell, including digital and PC's becomes the norm.

Lets say, Having some guy that hates eggs, and chicken's is in charge of egg production and the health and welfare of chickens.

What happens maybe not right away but eventually hens, rooster's, baby chicks, begin to die and eggs getting smashed.

Can you hear what I'm saying.

This guy has a big psychological problem or
"HARD-ON"against Gay folks as it is, so he's given power to affect the lives of very people he has no compassion for.

Can we spell PINK TRIANGLESboys and girls?

Coburn challenges the effectiveness of condoms in HIV prevention campaigns.

As Co-chairman of a 35-member Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS with Louis Sullivan, former Secretary of Health and Human Services under President Bush.

It gets better every time I thing of falling down "Sober" Bush supposedly overseeing these important things.
As a House-Care Watcher

Professional or [H.C.W. P.]

I'm a non drug user, smoker, drinker, pill popper - drug test me anytime. Light vacuum, no windows or laundry.

Pets have their routine - make a list of walking times, foods, and moods.

Prices:$25 a day apartments/flats

$50 a week for 2 to 4 bedroom cottage.

$2000, or $3,000 a month depending on home not area.


$50,000 to $100,000 monthly for homes with 7to10 rooms


INFORM FRIENDS, NEIGHBORS, POLICE; IN FACT
INVITE THEM PERSONALLY TO SEE ME, ASK QUESTIONS
THEN NO MISUNDERSTANDING, MISHAPS OR ACCIDENTS OF IDENTITY CAN HAPPEN.

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Doe Fund. Real or Hype?

09/24/2021 - 11:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

If working at minimum wage
job(s), permanent housing
and Church is so great.

How come we didn't we hear
word about it until now?

Did lots of Corps. make big bucks
while paying formelly homeless
worker's (sub)minimum wages?

by Joe B.

As for Sup. Newcom and his 28 or less points "to help homeless folk" with the "Ready, Willing, And Able" Program adopted from Apple City.

Deciding to webcheck [light virtual research or investigation] the Doe Fund Side [www.doe.org]
readers should also see it also.

The Doe Fund Founder and President is Mr. George McDonald had his Ready, Willing, And Able more than 15 years ago as the homeless crisis loomed large.

He said his Catholic upbringing and education made hime not ignore the problem.

The nuns had taught him "that other people's miseries are your miseries," and that those with gifts and advantages have an obligation to help others who do not. So far it reads well.

Some of this was gleaned directly off Doe's Webside. George decided to run for Congress on a platform of ending homelessness.

A testament to growing public concern about homelessness and his keen political sense, he achieved 40 percent of the popular vote in the democratic primary and the endorsement of three major New York

City newspapers, all with a campaign fund of only $7,000. [off site.] I'm skipping lots of this wholesome tale.

Soon Mr. McDonald is underground in New York's Grand Central Station talking, listening to homeless people and comes up with his plan:

To Prove formally Homeless people even with minimum wage could live a "viable" existance his aim: disprove minimum wage work is not a dead end. [I've been here before]

It may not be a dead end but it sure helps to have other options instead of steady state-non upwardly mobile working skills. He fight SRO [single room occupancy/only] into luxury housing.

One such placed is turned over to non-profit for permanent housing. That's the problem being lock-in to such a system.

We continue.

In 1985 a homeless woman known only as "Mama" dies on Christmas making McDonald work harder on what would become the Doe Foundation, named after "Mama" and all the anonymous men and women who've died on the streets New York.

,Other people trying to help saw simular situations happen and are helpless to stop people from homicide, suicide, or other kinds of death.

Founded on January 2, 1990 the first 45 trainees began in the Doe Training Program.

The program mirrored what society would ultimately expect of those who graduated. Trainees relinquished welfare benefits in favor of$5.50 per hour in wages, paid $65 per week toward their room
and board, and put $30 per week in savings accounts. In return, they slept in comfortable beds insemi-private rooms, and ate healthy, hearty meals prepared by trainees who expressed interest in food
preparation as a possible career.
12-step meetings, life skills classes, and certified teachers to help those who needed them earn high school equivalency diplomas or, in some cases, to learn to read and write.

What George McDonald had known all along proved powerfully true: "Work works." By 1994, 90 formerly homeless and drug-addicted men had entered the legitimate workforce. They were staying clean, doing their jobs
diligently and well, paying rent, saving money, repairing relationships and forging new ones and looking to the future. [From off the Webside]

Most of the above give a positive spin to people struggling to survive and given a chance a few will however.
1. $5.50 per hour in wages.
2. $65 per week toward their room and board.

3. $30 per week in savings accounts.

Number 3 is the beginning of good things. And who can deny nutricious food and training for those in clined but George McDonald's "Work Work's" is a cruel irony because work without access to higher skills, education, while sweeping streets, doing low wage maintenance jobs all over the city create wage slaves. Yes its a start but don't let this so called successful program stay at the same level, suppose to improve, grow, and with people with every kind of skill available [most homeless are not drug addicted, alcoholics, or mentally ill that's what most of the population continue failing to see.

It looks like if Mr. George McDonald's not making money off the backs of the poor many of the city's or other corporations are getting near free labor yet again in guise of "help the homeless help themselves" And going to the Church of St. Agnes is a nice touch since anyone who does not is deemed as someone "who may not work out.

What I want to know is after a decade can other graduates that made it through this R.W.A.A. programs thoughts on this and anyone formelly on the streets can say about this this New York Program since its moving to San Francisco and other cities.

I'll probably hear glowing reports. [yeah, right]

So reader's in the
New York or from other cities tell me the low down and if you don't tell please spread what you know to everyone about R.W.A.A. Bye.

As a House-Care Watcher Professional or[H.C.W.P.]

I'm a non drug user, smoker, drinker, pill popper - drug test me anytime. Light vacuum, no windows or laundry.

Pets have their routine - make a list of walking times, foods, and
moods.
Prices: $25 a day apartments/flats

$50 a week for 2 to 4 bedroom cottage.

$2000, or $3,000 a month depending on home not area.


$50,000 to $100,000 monthly for homes with 7to10 rooms


INFORM FRIENDS, NEIGHBORS, POLICE; IN FACT
INVITE THEM PERSONALLY TO SEE ME, ASK QUESTIONS
THEN NO MISUNDERSTANDING, MISHAPS OR ACCIDENTS
OF IDENTITY CAN HAPPEN.

Tags

Newsome Tries Cloning NYC TO S.F.C.

09/24/2021 - 11:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

Just because New York "imagines"
its solved the homeless problem
don't mean it has.

Hidden, in jail or underground
invisible means that the unseen
homeless has not been solved,
it just looks like it.

by Joe B.

Sup. Gavin Newsom tries his hand at cloning but the original may be flawed.

I wonder if He's thought about rasing the minimum wage maching the "Cost Of Living" index or more advanced training for people who want more than to be in low wage dead-end jobs, or that former Mayor "G"s clean city has a few holes and is possibly that the NYC model can improved upon - because cloning a program from somewhere else may not work the same the exact same way.

I'd really, really like to know the difference between Newsome's stumping for votes from anonymous human's on the street, in homes, or in banquets from pandhandlers's selling wares, performing tricks for money in streets, in cafe-restaurants, or in private homes?

Could it be the clean, pressed suit, neat hair, slick delivery, or possibly family connections?

All I want [when my work at POOR's done] is to House Sit or House Care to earn extra dough.

What I do is usually a long list of prices and lots of blah, blah about what I won't do in that capacity.

I say for anyone reading this who'll be choosing the next Mayor in 2003 or 4 please be absolutely sure which face your voting for.

In fact background check all the candidates.

If Mr.Newsom wants finger printing, checking puptents - do the same for his campaign too.

We don't need another crusader who only looks to be doing right but is constantly making deals left, right, and center for more power.

I'd like to go begging and have bags full of money, free food (oh, I forgot a few sponsor's to help grease 'um, I mean ease the the way to higher power)

All I want is to Housesit to earn a few extra dollars on the side.

I guess Newsom too needs an extra job too.

When I go for free meals its mostly on long lines with other folks waiting on the same line.

Can anyone out there tell me which one of us is the begging panhandler? Now below the House Care Ad. Bye.

As a House-Care Watcher Professional or [H.C.W. P.]
I'm a non drug user, smoker, drinker, pill popper - drug test me anytime.

Light vacuum, no windows or laundry.

Pets have their routine - make a list of walking times, foods, and
moods.
Prices: $25 a day apartments/flats

$50 a week for 2 to 4 bedroom cottage.

$2000, or $3,000 a month depending on home not area.


$50,000 to $100,000 monthly for homes with 7to10 rooms


INFORM FRIENDS, NEIGHBORS, POLICE; IN FACT
INVITE THEM PERSONALLY TO SEE ME, ASK QUESTIONS
THEN NO MISUNDERSTANDING, MISHAPS OR ACCIDENTS
OF IDENTITY CAN HAPPEN.

Tags

Heads Up For A Series.

09/24/2021 - 11:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

This is just a reminder
of what is to come.

The truism of Don'T Volunteer
makes more sense now.

by Joe B.

Friday, April, 12, 2002. OK, what happened to my writings? PC glitches, human error in saving, or what I don’t know.

Maybe because this might be a multi-part piece I should wait until POOR’s Sunday’s Resistance Awards Dinner is over before beginning this epic or for a certain someone to leave the country?

Either way with business cards, girlfriends, poem practice, money problems and all manner of flux going on

I won’t be able to have time, patience, or mental strength to do the job at hand.

[I’ll visit a friend or two, rest, “get off,” be satiated then deal with this stuff].

Every once in a while a brake is needed, when I'm completely wiped its time to Get.- A - Way before coming back fresh-that’s where I’m at now as I begin feeling time speed-up its up to me to vanish for awhile.

The Title: Restrain Day deals with Domestic Violence and my being a third party to deliver a Restraining Order to one of the two parties on behalf of injured party.

Confusing isn’t it? Being a man, serving another man with restraining orders is not on any list at all of what I wanted to do.

That and other musings is part of my column on this difficult, dangerous, and complex issue.

Tags

Sup. Newsom To Clone N.Y.C.'s (Doe) To S.F.C.

09/24/2021 - 11:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

Acting like Movie Hero/Mad
Scientist Sup. Newsom's has
seen the future.

And it looks like a New York Model
homeless free city.

Please look beyond its glittering surface.

by Joe B.

Sup. Gavin Newsom tries his hand at cloning but the original may be flawed.

I wonder if He's thought about rasing the minimum wage maching the "Cost Of Living" index or more advanced training for people who want more than to be in low wage dead-end jobs, or that former Mayor "Gs" clean city has a few holes and is possibly that the NYC model can improved upon - because cloning a program from somewhere else may not work the same exact same way.

I'd really, really like to know the difference between Newsome's stumping for votes from anonymous human's on the street, in homes, or in banquets from pandhandlers's selling wares, performing tricks for money in streets, in cafe-restaurants, or in private homes?

Could it be the clean, pressed suit, neat hair, slick delivery, or possibly family connections?

All I want [when my work at POOR's done] is to House Sit or House Care to earn extra dough.

What do I do? Its usually a long list of prices and lots of blah, blah about what I won't do in that capacity.

I say for anyone reading this who be choosing the next Mayor in 2003 please be absolutely sure which face your voting for.

In fact background check all the candidates.

If Mr. wants finger printing, and checking puptents do the same for his campaign too.

We don't another crusader who only looks to be doing right but are constantly making deals left, right, and center for more power.

I'd like to go begging and have bags full of money, free food (oh, I forgot a few sponsor's to help grease I mean ease the
the way to higher power) All I want is to Housesit to earn a few extra dollars on the side I guess Newsom too needs and extra job too.

When I go for free meals its mostly on long lines with other folks waiting on the same line.

Can anyone out there tell me which one of us is the begging panhandler? Now below the House Care Ad. Bye.

As a House-Care Watcher Professional or[H.C.W.P.]
I'm a non drug user, smoker, drinker, pill popper - drug test me anytime. Light vacuum, no windows or laundry.

Pets have their routine - make a list of walking times, foods, and
moods.

Prices: $25 a day apartments/flats

$50 a week for 2 to 4 bedroom cottage.

$2000, or $3,000 a month depending on home not area.

$50,000 to $100,000 monthly for homes with 7to10 rooms


INFORM FRIENDS, NEIGHBORS, POLICE; IN FACT
INVITE THEM PERSONALLY TO SEE ME, ASK QUESTIONS
THEN NO MISUNDERSTANDING, MISHAPS OR ACCIDENTS
OF IDENTITY CAN HAPPEN.

Tags