Keep Breathing

Erica K

Erica K
Location
New Jersey, USA
Birthday
September 26
Bio
Grew up in Jackson Heights, New York, but now live in Jersey. Married and the proud owner (servant?) of 4 cats, including a little blind guy named Quincy. Jobs have included: English teacher in U.S. and abroad, cabaret performer and member of a NYC sketch comedy troupe; now a full-time legal secretary and freelance writer. Other jobs: canvasser for NYPIRG/cannery worker in Naknek, Alaska (a fisherman told me it was "the ugliest part of Alaska")/dog kennel cleaner/member of the swine and poultry crew on a California farm. This year a memoir piece will be published in Telling Our Stories Press and poems in The Awakenings Review. Currently working on a one-woman show. "Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better." Samuel Beckett

MY RECENT POSTS

Erica K's Links

Salon.com
JANUARY 25, 2012 4:43PM

Lifestyles of the Down and Out: Tent Cities in America

Rate: 16 Flag

“To be shelterless and alone in the open country, hearing the wind moan and watching for day through the whole long weary night; to listen to the falling rain, and crouch for warmth beneath the lee of some old barn or rick, or in the hollow of a tree; are dismal things—but not so dismal as the wandering up and down where shelter is, and beds and sleepers are by the thousands; a houseless rejected creature.”

            Charles Dickens, Barnaby Rudge

 

According to the National Alliance to End Homelessness, about 671,859 people are homeless on any given night in the United States.  There was a time when the homeless lived on the streets and in shelters.  With many shelters filled to capacity, tent cities have become an alternative form of habitation.  In many cities across the country, it is illegal to sleep in your car, and other communities are taking measures to criminalize tent cities as well.  Out of sight, out of mind, I guess.

 

 

 

Lakewood, New Jersey.

Reverend Steven Brigham of the Lakewood Outreach Ministry Church started the Lakewood tent city in 2006.  After fighting with the city for years for access to public lands, he found a lawyer to represent his case pro bono.  The attorney, Jeff Wild, said that the homeless population is part of the public and therefore should have access to public lands.  Lakewood City Council decided to settle rather than go to court, and Brigham signed an agreement not to put up any more shelters and to limit the population to 70.  Brigham refuses to close the camp, stating that neither Lakewood nor Ocean County provide adequate shelter for the homeless.

 

Last winter the community built three wooden structures to house and keep everyone warm.

 

According to Robert Johnson’s article in Business Insider last September, Brigham says, “We didn’t lose anybody last year, and nobody got sick.”  He says that some stay, some find part-time work and are able to move on and others come back.

 

Moral Low Ground published an article on August 29, 2011 entitled “U.N.:  U.S. Criminalization of the Homeless Violates International Human Rights Obligations.”

 

The United Nations says that “the criminalization of the homeless in the United States is a clear violation of international human rights standards.”

 

“Under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, safe drinking water and restrooms are considered basic human rights. The U.N. found that U.S. cities are failing to meet these human rights obligations. In this day and age of soaring homeless populations, especially families, a problem exacerbated by the ongoing unemployment and foreclosure crises, more people than ever are at risk of being denied their human rights.”

 

Fast forward to January 2012.  Lakewood officials still want to close the camp.  Jeff Wild said that the county and township’s remedy is to pay $100 a night for motel stays for those living in the camp, which he calls a “Band-Aid” that does not address the issue of affordable housing in the area.

 

Michael DiCicco, attorney for Lakewood, said that “allowing homeless individuals to remain on this property indefinitely . . . would eviscerate centuries of Anglo Saxon property law.”

 

 

 

Slab City, Southern California.

 

slab city 

 

Slab City, called the "The Last Free Place" by its residents, consists of multiple slabs left over from the foundation of a World War II training camp.  Currently inhabited by about 2,000 people, it has been an unofficial RV park for years that has attracted artists and people who want to live off the grid, but its population includes the homeless as well.

 

On December 14, 2011, Ben Tracy of CBS News reported on this community in an article entitled, “ ‘Slab City’ A Desert Haven for Recession’s Victims.”

 

One of the residents, Vince Neill, parked his RV here along with his wife and six kids a couple months ago.  He recently lost his audio-visual business and their Modesto, California home. 

 

“I would apply to 30-40 jobs a day online,” said Neill.  “And there’s just nothing.”

 

“Did you ever imagine ending up here?” Tracy asked.

 

“No, no,” he said.  “I always wore a shirt and tie, and worked in an office.  And had a nice car and house.  But we’ve lost pretty much everything.”

 

Slab City boasts a church, a music venue called the Range and an internet cafe.  Electricity is derived from the sun, and there is no sewer or running water.  A hole in the ground is the only shower for miles around.

 

Neill hopes his family will not be living there too much longer and hopes to look for work in Los Angeles this spring. 

 

I have no solutions to offer here, only information.  I found it curious that Tracy referred to the homeless at Slab City as “refugees of the Great Recession.”  I thought refugees were foreigners seeking asylum on other shores.  According to the Merriam-Webster dictionary, a refugee is “one that flees,” particularly one “who flees to a foreign country or power to escape danger or persecution.”

 

Is that what our homeless citizens have become?  Refugees in their own country, beset by danger, persecuted in their own land, driven from their homes by economic terror.  If they are forced out of their own cars or tent cities, where will they go?  I cannot help but think of the coyotes and mountain lions who appear in people’s backyards in Los Angeles or bears and deer in New Jersey, led by hunger or because they have been dispossessed.  What will become of them?

 

Your tags:

TIP:

Enter the amount, and click "Tip" to submit!
Recipient's email address:
Personal message (optional):

Your email address:

Comments

Type your comment below:
To answer the question you pose Erica, there are two kinds of refugees. One is the kind you list seeking refuge in a foreign country fleeing wars.
There is another kind. They are referred to as internally displaced refugees. They leave on area of their home country fleeing to another part. I would expect the homeless in America fall under that category.
Tent cities are everywhere now. Some, legally placed with permission of the land owners, most simply perched anywhere off the roadways. Out of sight out of mind is right.

After seeing the post you had yesterday detailing the houses of the candidates for the Republican's running for POTUS, I can't help but comment the total difference in this one versus the other...
Oh, and might I comment further and say I just watched the video of the St Petersburg police cutting up those tents.

welcome to my new home town. (sarcasm)
I have to believe that one of the reasons that the Occupy Movement encampments were broken up with such violence is that they brought the homeless and the non-homeless social activists together, the "poor" and the "middle class". Some people are upset by that kind of alliance, very upset.
We live in terrible times and you told a story about one part of such misery.
I did a post on the homeless as I love talking to them all the time. IN the bay area they are now called Urban Campers.
argh..
HUGGGGGGGGGGGG
Thank you, Erica. Having spent just two months, in 1986 and 1987, being homeless (while pregnant and having serious health problems not related to the pregnancy), I have NEVER forgotten what that is like. We have come a long way but I will never forget the stark differences in how Arizona treated middle class people who were having a hard time and how California took us in, took care of us and how I went on to the University of California and to success in my life. I know that safety net that we had is pretty much gone so we try to help wherever we can.
Thank you for writing about this, it is the ugly truth most people don't want to see as others have said. What does it say about our society and by the way, so what with Anglo Saxon law, in my opinion. As someone with Native American roots, maybe we could adapt our Anglo Saxon traits a tad in times like these.
My daughter, a social worker, has worked with homeless people for over a decade. She noted that one of the biggest changes in the last few years is the growing number of families and people who do NOT have drug or alcohol problems. Many of their stories sound like the ones you noted, Erica. Thanks for keeping us focused on the issue.
You speak of places where humanity is reborn.
R
Dickens is perfect for this. John Steinbeck, too. I don't know how the hell we can recover from this, Erica. I think the greedy bastards have finally done, broke this country. They'll go down, too, of course, when the whole damned building finally comes down their fat asses will get crushed, too.
Didn't intend to say "done broke this country," altho the dialect would fit. I meant to say, "finally done it, broke this country."
I'm trying to reconcile the 671,859 homeless people on any given night in the United States, and Mitt Romney's homes and adjacent property estimated at $30 million. How can anyone, especiallly running for office, answer that or sleep at night? Thank you for this study, Erica.
R♥
No one cares. Even worse, the fine American Puritans want these people (homeless/poor) in prison because they are sinners. According to the made-up "American Bible," you are only poor because God does not love you and He wants you dead. God loves only the rich.

I cannot believe the audacity of the guy using the phrase, "Anglo-Saxon property law." I bet you anything, he probably believes what he is saying. Thank you for this reminder, Erica; you are a fine soul. R
You can read of equivalent encampments at http://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h1642.html

It tells of the Hoovervilles of the 1930's before FDR came into office. The same type of crooks were in charge then and there was real talk of revolution in those days. FDR did his best to pull things through but it was WWII when Government money was spent on the war effort that things turned around. These days when all the government talk is cutting taxes on the rich and cutting down on basic services the same mistakes are being made. And there is already extraordinary ongoing military expenditure but obviously it is no remedy.
mission, I didn't know that we actually used the term "refugee" with internally displaced citizens. Thanks for the information. Yes, I meant this piece to serve as a contrast to the other one about the splendorous lives of the Republican hopefuls.
Bob, very possible. Heaven forbid the homeless would rise up and demand their rights as citizens (and human beings).

Mary, wish I didn't have to report this.

Jane, Thank you for reading.

I read that piece, Linda. You did great work. "Urban campers," as if they choose to live this way!

Patsy, I am sorry for what you experienced. My mom was homeless for 6 months back in 1986 in New York while I was in college. It was a horrible thing, and I wish I could have prevented it. Unlike you, she ended up on the street due to mental illness.
Yes, what does it say about our society? I need to do some research on Anglo Saxon law.

beauty147, Yes, absolutely. It is not just the mentally ill and substance abusers. Your daughter sounds like a great person.

Ash, Very insightful. Rev. Brigham is a true hero, helping people in NJ without expecting anything in return.

Matt, I think we need a revolution.

Fusun, it is mind-boggling, isn't it? They must be heartless to sleep well at night knowing about all the misery beyond their palatial homes.

Thoth, sick stuff. I have to do further research on "Anglo Saxon property law." I hate to say, but NJ is not welcoming to the homeless, but who is?

Jan, Yes, I am familiar with the Hoovervilles. The rich are steadfast in their desire to maintain their riches.
Wrote a whole long comment and machine died again. Too sad for words. Too too few pro bono attorneys too. Very good that you bring such stories to our attention, Erika. Surely, something can be done.
fernsy, thank you for that ray of hope. If we can send a man to the moon, why can't we house the homeless?
It reminds me of The Grapes of Wrath. Thank you so much for this piece and for all the research you did on this important and disturbing subject. The contrast is just incredible. How many luxuries and homes do these people need when there are so many that have none -- and cut budgets for the homeless to boot? Something has to bust!
Rated Big Time!
People fear change. So how many people have to starve and go homeless before we decide we've had enough? Apparently, we are not there yet.
Joanne, yes, Grapes of Wrath it is. Early Industrial England too.

Harry's Ghost, that sounds about right.
Dang, you are so prolific I have a hard time keeping up with you lately, Erica. Thanks for another hard-hitting piece. Rated.
Margie, I feel like my brain is on fire! It must be the kung fu lessons (started last Monday). I have a lot more energy these days. Thanks for reading and commenting.
Vince Neill of Motley Crue? Wow..

Seriously, many of us still lucky enough to have
a roof and hot and cold running water, could be
out THERE on very short notice... myself included.

Great cause- great post
I do extensive research on homeless Erica. all the time. and I have been there before myself.
Bad things happen to good people. And so many are homeless now.
Too many, it seems.
tr ig, if either my husband or I lost our job, we'd have to sell the house. I know I am lucky to have a roof over my head, and I am grateful for it every day.

mission, I know you have. You are such a good soul.