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Since you brought it up...


Step 2: Documenting Bushvilles

Welcome to America in decline:

"They are tagging us because we are homeless," she said, staring at her orange wristband. "It feels like a concentration camp."
We need to set out to document these atrocities in as much detail as we can. Are there any places like this near you:

Bushville, Ontario, California:
"Is a campground the solution to the problem of homelessness? The California City of Ontario thinks so."

     More:
"Tent cities have sprung up outside Los Angeles as people lose their homes in the mortgage crisis."

More:

"Large, often confused, crowds formed ragged lines behind police barricades where officers handed out color-coded wristbands. Blue meant they were from Ontario and could remain. Orange indicated they had to provide more proof to avoid ejection, and white meant they had a week to leave.

Pattie Barnes, 47, who had her motor home towed away last week, shook with anger.

"They are tagging us because we are homeless," she said, staring at her orange wristband. "It feels like a concentration camp.""

Welcome to free market America:
"It feels like a concentration camp."

Bushville, Sacremento, California:
"Some 300 people call a tent city in Sacramento home, including Tracy Vaughan, who moved to the city with her husband six months ago.

Via the AP, No Job - No Home:


As many as 1200 homeless?
"Some nearby homeowners have reportedly complained about the tent cities, but Sacramento's new mayor, former NBA star Kevin Johnson, has suggested that the tent cities might provide a temporary solution to the lack of shelter. As many as 1,200 people may be living in these tent cities, according to the local ABC 7 News."


Bushville, Reno, Nevada:
"A few tents cropped up hard by the railroad tracks, pitched by men left with nowhere to go once the emergency winter shelter closed for the summer.

Then others appeared -- people who had lost their jobs to the ailing economy, or newcomers who had moved to Reno for work and discovered no one was hiring.

Within weeks, more than 150 people were living in tents big and small, barely a foot apart in a patch of dirt slated to be a parking lot for a campus of shelters Reno is building for its homeless population. Like many other cities, Reno has found itself with a "tent city" -- an encampment of people who had nowhere else to go.

From Seattle to Athens, Ga., homeless advocacy groups and city agencies are reporting the most visible rise in homeless encampments in a generation."


Bushville, Santa Barbara, California:
"The relatively tony city of Santa Barbara has given over a parking lot to people who sleep in cars and vans."


Bushville, Fresno, California:
"authorities in Fresno are trying to manage several proliferating tent cities, including an encampment where people have made shelters out of scrap wood."

America the Beautiful:
3rd world shantytowns.

Bushville, Athens, Georgia:
"Wayne Hill packed up his meager belongings last week and moved his home deeper into the woods.

Hill's red tent and neighboring homes had inched too close to the nearby highway, and police told him to move.

"We've asked them to move back off the road a little bit," Athens-Clarke police Maj. Carter Greene said. "It seemed they were encroaching on Lexington Road."

snip

But Tent City limits slowly crept downhill, so now people look up from Lexington Road and a perimeter off-ramp to see campsites and junk piles."
Can you just imagine the horror of having to actually see the homeless?

Bushville, Seattle, Washington:
(Note: there are several - 5 or 6 - of them in Seattle)
"Activists point to the annual One Night Count as evidence that not enough shelter beds exist. During the count of the homeless in Seattle and other parts of King County on Jan. 25, volunteers counted 2,631 people sleeping in cars and trucks, doorways and parks and under highways, or walking around or riding buses to stay warm in freezing temperatures. When comparing similar areas counted a year ago, the number of homeless increased 15 percent.

An additional 2,515 people spent the night in emergency shelters, with 3,293 more in transitional housing, for a total of 8,439 homeless people."


Bushville, Nashville, Tennessee:
"To its credit, Nashville recognizes that there is a problem with the "system" and, as the community slowly works towards correcting these problems, understands that there is at least a temporary need for the existence of homeless encampments.

To its discredit, Nashville is currently engaged in dismantling Tent City, the largest (the population fluctuates wildly at times, but is consistently around 50) and oldest (in existence since the mid 1980s) homeless camp in the area, which is slated to close June 1, 2009; sooner if outreach workers are able to find housing for the remaining residents."


Bushville, Chatanooga, Tennessee:
"The demolition of Tent City left many of Chattanooga's homeless without a place to live.

But not so for one lucky man.

For the first time in six years Richard Waldrep has a home to call his own.

Waldrep has spent the last several years on the streets, for the last few months he called "Tent City" home.

But, now that home has been destroyed.

Due to safety concerns and liability issues Norfolk Southern Railroad bulldozed the property leaving Waldrep and almost 30 others to find another place to live. "


Bushville, St. Petersburg, Florida:
"Police officers with box cutters showed up where St. Pete's tent city residents had moved and set up. The cops slashed their tents to the ground as residents watched in shock. Now one homeless group is moving to label St. Petersburg as the 'meanest city in the nation.' Video by Tina May."



The police destroying the few meager belongings left to these homeless people. Is that what the mandate of police officers is supposed to include today? What happened to serve and protect?

Do you know of any of these tent cities or Bushvilles near you that the media has yet to disclose of? If you do... Links, photos, and videos need to be added to our own archives in order to document the widespread disaster that is a very result of this failed Bush economy and the free-market run amok.

Arthur Delaney at the HuffPo is attempting to document these stories. We should all be doing our part to identify these places:
There are reports of tent cities popping up across the country as unemployment rises in a worsening economy. The biggest and highest-profile shantytown is in Sacramento, where hundreds of newly-homeless tent residents are cooking soup in old coffee cans.

We want to know where else this is happening.

HuffPost readers: Is there a tent city near you? Have you noticed a newly-formed community of people living together in improvised housing in a public space? Email us! Send any information you've got (or pictures) to submissions+homeless@huffingtonpost.com.

Sacramento's KCRA reported this week that city officials plan to shut the tent city down:



While this is a good idea - documenting where they exist is really only Step 2 because it is an idea without a real humane purpose.

Rather than just documenting these stories, perhaps we should try to solve the problems? In some of these Bushvilles there are already people working to help fix the problems as both short term and long term solutions are needed.

In Portland, Oregon, many in the community are providing the elbow grease to make their tent city, Dignity Village, more livable for the short term and more effective at helping the people get back to work:
Many more community's across the country, have looked to us for answers to help the homeless population that is growing bigger each year. When People come out to visit us , they are amazed at what we have set up and how we help the 50 to 60 homeless people that live here at any given time, a stepping stone effect that gives each person living here a chance to help themselves regain a new start to gain main stream living again.

All of this comes from donations from viewers and visitors that help to support our goals.

Dignity Village has been working this way since 2001 and long before Bushvilles started popping up. I imagine that they are probably experiencing a huge surge in people needing their help as the economy has collapsed over the last few months.

The right did not solve the problem of Hoovervilles, but the left did with the bold and visionary leadership of FDR. Many on the right would like nothing more than to ignore Bushvilles because it exposes the reality of their political ideology taken to extremes.

We can and will solve the problem of Bushvilles.

I am no community organizer, but I imagine that we need to take these steps first:

1. Identify the major problem - done

2. Identify where it exists - ?

3. Identify problems that are more local to each area - ?

4. Get to work solving the short term problems on a local area needs basis - ?

5. Get to work solving the long term problems on a local area needs basis - ?

Are any of you up to a real challenge?

Are any of you interested in beginning Step 2 and starting to document as many of these tent cities and Bushvilles as we can? Searching for links, getting out in the streets and photographing and videoing these places AND, more importantly, documenting the problems they face so we can try to find real solutions would be no small undertaking.

Previously posted at ePluribus Media, dKos and my own Blog... Some other info added from comments:

And in Canada too.


In Dallas the city keeps plowing the tent cities under with bulldozers. They have an estimated 10000 homeless and only 2000 beds available in the shelters.

In North Hollywood:

"It is in North Hollywood, Amelia Erhart Park, between Chandler and Magnolia along the river. The police will go in and hustle everybody out, but it always returns. This park also has a lot of people sleeping on the picnic tables." 

I have no further info on that one, as it was dropped to me in an unsourced comment.

And culled from a different diary of mine, some information on homeless students:


(h/t Buzzflash)

As for the leadoff homeless kids story in that video?

In and out of classrooms, sleeping in shelters, shielded by parents, homeless children can seem invisible to society at large.

A national study released Monday finds that one in 50 children in America is homeless. They're sharing housing because of economic hardship, living in motels, cars, abandoned buildings, parks, camping grounds or shelters, or waiting for foster care placement.

More on homeless students: 

'Tidal wave' of homeless students hits schools

School Districts across U.S. struggling to pay for needs of uprooted kids

Many of us in the Blogosphere knew that it was on the verge of becoming epidemic as a series of diaries written by teachers started appearing at many Blogs concerning these kind of issues as as far back as December:

Soooo, I was just doing my regular job, today. That's where things fell apart thanks to the real pain of our Main Street meltdown hitting real children.

For my 8th graders, some of my kids didn't get an 80% (mastery) on the Forms of Government test. As per my usual routine, I gave up my lunch and offered a LUNCH BUNCH study time and test re-take opportunity. One student arrived early sans lunch. I was busy gathering up lab equipment off tables from my 7th grade science class, so I wasn't looking at my early student as I said, "Hey, go on and get your lunch. You can eat while we do our Rapid Study Technique before the re-take."

I could feel the silence and non-movement of my student. So, I turned and looked. There were tears on the table beneath his bowed head. I pulled up a chair and asked, "Family or friends." Silence. That meant it was a family issue. Probing gently, I got, "Mrs K., both my Mom and Dad got laid off and our house ... our house. I was too worried to ask for a check for lunch money, and I'm too embarrassed to ask for the P&J lunch." When he said "our house," it came out like a moan.

For a while... Our kids were living this last nightmare that you read. It is breaking my heart to know that some kids may not be as lucky as ours were and could end up in shelters, moving in with relatives or, even worse, living in Bushvilles - the tent cities that have popped up across the nation as more and more Americans become homeless.

Modern Day Hoovervilles
A Bushville in Sacremento, California
Photobucket
Justin Sullivan - Getty Images

PSSSST! Do something...


9 Comments

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Modern day Hoovervilles? Bushvilles? Reagan Ranches?

We have an epidemic of refugee camps in this coutnry...

http://drinkliberal.blogspot.com/2009/03/republicans-are-failing-their.html

"Given that 30 out of the top 50 (60%) districts in trouble with foreclosures (34 out of the top 56 listed - 60.7%) are in Republican controlled turf, you might think Republicans would be working harder to save these homes in their own districts.

Republicans failing to fight for saving these homes are failing their constituents. Minority districts or not, and for the most part they are not, every home that goes under affects everyone living in that district.

Never mind the fact that Republicans are, in large part, responsible for this problem in the first place because of their "L'aissez faire" free-market-run-amok policies."

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Well presented cm1. Seeing the St. Petersburg police destroying the tents of the homeless, reminded me of Lenny Bruce's routine on the police, being the hired henchmen of the wealthy, while those wealthy exhort them to rough somebody up for them, but to "wait till I'm out of the room". It's pretty depressing that the solution to these camps seems to be either to plow them under, (Dallas), or move them out of sight. I was also struck by the newscaster on the one video stating that 'tomorrow, these homeless people won't be here". Like they're gonna disappear overnight? Like removing the camp from plain sight is some part of the solution. Man, have we got a lot to learn. We have a lot of homeless people here in southern New mexico due to the relatively mild climate. Most of them live just outside town in the desert, and come into town for food and money. I'll keep my eye on the area to see if there are any changes. I haven't noticed any as of yet. Over all the whole situation, sadly, reminds me of this.

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If you can document their living conditions in any way and any issues they may have the HuffPo is trying to document them. But I would also like to see us bring solutions to the table.

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Great post CM1...highly rec'd.

Something needs to be done. In a country of our wealth nobody should be made to live outside in a tent unless they want to...and I'm sure most all of them are not there by choice. Hearing these stories makes me feel the same as I did in the wake of Hurricane Katrina...embarrassed by our country's inaction in the face of a crisis.

Western CT, huh? I'm in the Hartford area...lifelong resident, proud and very liberal.

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I moved to Connecticut about 7 years ago - first to Greenwich when I got out of the Army - and now in New Milford. I am originally from Montreal but we moved to the states about 15 years ago. I am, for the most part, a moderate liberal. But I am very proud of that fact and the liberal traditions of both Canada and the USA. Obama may be decent in his thoughts about following a Lincoln style leadership, but these times demand FDR like leadership with some serious change in the direction of the politics.

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.

About this one here . . .

In North Hollywood:

"It is in North Hollywood, Amelia Erhart Park, between Chandler and Magnolia along the river.


The police will go in and hustle everybody out, but it always returns.
This park also has a lot of people sleeping on the picnic tables." 

I have no further info on that one, as it was dropped to me in an unsourced comment.


This is my neighborhood. It's the North Hollywood Park next to and surrounding the Amelia Earhart Library. Homeless folks in this area have lived in the park area in fairly large numbers for over 40 years. Actually much much longer, all the way back into the early 1900s. There are also a large number of camper trucks that temporarily park in that area used for living spaces. I was born in this area in 1946 on agricultural land.

We have had a larger number of people on foot come into the area since the opening of the NoHo Redline subway station that is the northern terminus from downtown LA and the Hollywood area. Many more people have been directed to get on the subway and move out into the suburbs from downtown.

Yes. Homeless do stay at the park. During the daytime the police are liberal in allowing these people to hangout at the tables, and sleep if not deemed to be loitering in the near vicinity of the main playground area of the park or the library. The police do drive through at night and if they clearly see anyone loitering or sleeping from inside their cruiser they will request the people or person to move on. They direct them to a large church 4 blks. north of the park where the church organization has set up facilities in a church school that has been recently closed. They are allowed to camp out on the playground under the lunch shelters. For those with children they are allowed to stay on cots or air mattresses in the school rooms, if they so chose.. The bathroom facilities are also open for use. And women and children are separated from those outside, if they request it. They are requested to move on out during the day, but they are allowed to store their meager belongings if need be in a large secure storage area. The facility is guarded by uniformed security individuals with constant 24 hour oversight by male staff from the church. The most I've seen there are between 50 and 100 individuals. Usually it's more like 25 to 30 people.

I have been able to garner free food-chits that are only redeemable for food-to-go through various local fast food establishments in addition to commodities from markets with the help of the local neighborhood watch officers, fire personnel, and the churches. These are meted out to those most in need of something to eat. Also: The church does provide hot breakfast in the morning in conjunction from the local inter-faith organizations, and secular organizations in the greater Valley area.

Thanks for providing this post.

There but for the grace go we...

~OGD~ 

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Not surprisingly, when I or others posted on this topic before we found out that many in the left were already working on these issues. I am glad you could confirm and add a lot of information for this one. Well? I am not glad, I wish it did not exist, but you know what I mean.

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I missed this epic. I fell asleep about the time you wrote it and mixed it up with the other blog you set up. Incredible.

Some of this came on cable. Huff aint workin for me lately, I mean there are problems getting in.

But when millions lost their homes through foreclosure and when we have 8-9% unemployment somethings got to give. And we have governors holding back on unemployment benefits for political reasons. Jeeeeeezus!!

Oh, I found this blog early this AM, thought it might be of interest:

http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/blogs/lulu_strauss/2009/03/what-a-long-strange-trip.php#comment-3421332

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Aaron Spelling's widow has just put their L.A.-area mansion up for sale at $150 million; she's downsizing to a $47 million condo. Times, it seems, are tough all over.

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