Thursday, August 9, 2018

Eliminating Homeless Camps

"Homeless camps are on the rise. 50% of encampments have 11-50 residents while 17% have 100+ people" (National Health Care for the Homeless Council).

You can't help but see them and once you do, it's like a bad wreck, you keep looking whenever you drive pass.

The one under the Truman Parkway receives the most attention because it's the most visible ... and it's wretched.

Religious banners and Port-a-lets?

Really?

City officials, the Georgia Department of Transportation, Chamber of Commerce, Business Community, Developers and the Faith Community express outrage, mobilize resources and fail to address the problems of public human squalor in a tourist town.

Religious zealots romanticize it while asking for funds!

Talk about a lovely lady with a dirty face!

Why are there homeless camps when shelters exists for people in need of a roof over their head?

The awful answer is homeless shelters are not designed to end homelessness. They are designed to manage it and for a couple of centuries they did that quite well.

Then homelessness changed but the shelter system didn't.

Shelters are predicated on rules, expectations of self-help, sobriety and mandatory religious expression.

The Salvation Army is a church before it's a shelter and if this point is pressed ... "Do you exist to help the homeless or to convert them" ... the answer is "save their souls."

The same is true for today's Union Mission.

"You never expect it to happen to you until it does," homeless people explain, for the thousandth time, most recently in the Savannah Morning News.

As tragic as it is, the last thing a homeless needs or wants is judgement, cookie-cut rules not applicable to reality, mandated morality and that the one answer is "Jesus."

They've already asked for Jesus' help and they're still homeless.

In response, they've developed a working viable alternative ... shelters without walls ... communities with few rules ... no judgement ... self medication is allowed ... and religion is what a person needs it to be without strict admonishment for lack of adherence.

The new approach is obviously working for the homeless.

Camps are growing like crazy.

The antiquated shelter system continues to demonstrate failure justifying itself with successful exceptions rather than the rule.

There is a solution though it's not an easy one.

It's not rocket science either.

The reason people are homeless is there is a lack of significant social relationships in their lives.

No family, church, best friend, AA Group, support system or, most importantly, health care network to prevent the fall into nothingness.

Current societal structures no longer weave a comprehensive tapestry of anything resembling a safety net.

What's the answer to the growing alternative developed by homeless people themselves, an obvious preferable alternative to Government and Religious responses?

Homeless camps exist because people are building significant social relationships where none exists.

They're helping themselves ... pulling themselves up by their own bootstraps ... and weaving together a tapestry where viable ones don't exist.

The obvious solution to the camps is to help them accomplish what they're doing without us.

The answer starts with health care going to where the sick live rather than demanding they come to the sterile environment Doctors, Nurses, Psychiatrists, Mental Health professionals mandate.

Health care has to move into the camps, becoming a permanent foundation and part of the community building already taking place.

Treatment of health care comes first so better decision making takes place as the community is built.

Physical, mental, domestic and societal health must be met first and the only way to do it is to become part of the community.

The Health Care Profession must reinvent itself by becoming part of, and no separate from, the community it serves.

It's not as radical as it sounds.

Doctors make house calls again ... only this time where in shelters without walls ... "house-less calls" with consistency and discipline the profession requires.

Street Medicine is already an international movement but, sadly one Savannah ... more importantly Chatham County who manages health for the community ... ignores.

Health care must become part of the community building, elevating it to a higher level, which is the ultimate purpose of the discipline in the first place.

The helping professions ... Social Work, Clergy, Teachers, Lawyers ... follow suit.

Jesus himself healed the sick first before other things follow and the community grows stronger as individuals grow healthier.

With the infusion of health, community building's foundation grows into a stronger base as the most basic of ills are addressed enabling stronger decision making and purpose.

Social work, clergy, teachers, lawyers expand the base of personal freedom through decision making empowerment.

The community continues to elevate.

In the ultimate of ironies, housing options come last.

It's only after the homeless person is strong enough in recovery of whatever the ails, has a strong enough support system in place, is capable of contemplating the management of housing, a most arduous task under the best of circumstances as things break, fall apart, neighborhood tensions mount, societal norms are enforced and Governmental regulation overwhelm.

The healthiest of persons has difficulty managing multiple systems simultaneously but one recovering from homelessness ... scared and failed by each helping discipline ... demand the appropriate supports to retain housing once established.

It is a long road to recover but ... not an impossible one.

Making what is real to a homeless person our reality, beginning with health care, followed by the other helping professions, last of which is housing ... is the road map to eliminating homeless camps.