When we push out the down-and-out, what kind of city are we?

It was just another one of those campers that parks on Seattle's side streets being hauled away, like so many are nowadays. Two dogs were inside, impounded along with their home. But the sight of this little bit of inhumanity raises questions about our city's soul.

The RVs show up in neighborhoods, park for a few days, and then move on

The RVs show up in neighborhoods, park for a few days, and then move on

Seattle's skyline is dotted with towering cranes that mark the location of new buildings. The neighborhoods see older affordable single family homes bulldozed to be replaced with multiple new town homes per lot. Judging by the rate of development we must have become "World Class" by now. We boast a new art museum, library, a sculpture park, taxpayer financed football and baseball stadiums. We have a posh new City Hall and a city being administered out of a skyscraper. The three-masted schooners carrying timber out of Seattle have sailed into oblivion and been replaced by massive luxury cruise ships. Taxpayers are facilitating the development in South Lake Union and the SODO district with subsidies and tax breaks. The building boom seemingly has no end. So many folks have moved to the described "vital downtown area" that the noise from the "vibrance" they were seeking is beginning to irritate them. But in all our affluence and apparent success, our city is rapidly losing its humanity and tolerance. Sure, we tolerate different lifestyles, at least if they have money or green cards, but we are becoming more intolerant of those who don't write code for Microsoft or Adobe, or do research at the Hutch. We have created a climate of development that is rapidly ridding Seattle of anyone who doesn't have the capacity to hold a high-paying job. It's not progress, it's "economic cleansing." Every day we are dumping people on the street, priced out of their homes by high land values and new development. Politicians have mistakenly bought into the myth that if we build higher, bigger and denser that it will produce affordable housing or prevent sprawl. It isn't working. New development costs much much more. Yesterday morning, I looked out the window to see a Lincoln tow truck dragging a somewhat dilapidated pickup camper down the street. There were things hanging off the camper and the image was reminiscent of photos taken by Dorothea Lange of sharecroppers escaping the Dust Bowl in Kansas on their way to California's promised land during the Great Depression. The image shocked me because this particular camper had been parked adjacent to our local park. I have met and talked with the occupants and met their two much-loved dogs. As neighbors, they are more considerate, politer, and quieter than some others who live nearby. They are regular folks by any standard with the one exception, the place they call home is a camper. Their big crime against the citizens of Seattle is that they waited a few hours too long before driving away. Usually, they move on after a few days to avoid violating the city's no-parking-over-72-hours law. On this day, with no sticker on their windshield and a mayor's get-tough policy, their home was unceremoniously hauled off to an impound lot with their dogs still inside. I went to the place where they had been parked and found a few of their belongings, which had been leaning on the back of the camper, still lying in the street partly dragged away by the tow truck. Within minutes the man and woman returned, having gone to take a shower, and found their home and their two dogs missing. I have no idea where they slept that night or if their dogs got water or food or were even discovered. For people trying to survive in one of the most expensive cities in the nation, one wonders if they had enough money to get their camper out of the impound yard before their dogs died. No doubt some civic-minded local resident concerned about his property values, and unwilling to speak to these folks, called the city and arranged for the removal of their home. Couldn't our great city have waited another day for them to move on? Have we become so intolerant we can't even let someone park under a tree at a wide spot in the road? They didn't depend on public housing, or handouts. All they wanted was a decent safe place to stop, a grassy area to walk the dogs, and clean park bathroom nearby. I couldn't help but ponder if in Seattle's early history there might have been a few folks camping in the surrounding woods before they became leading citizens of the community. But there is more to the story. About 300 or more feet from where they were parked is a substantial, well-maintained two-bedroom home that is owned by the city's parks department and has been boarded up for over a year. It's perfectly habitable. Additionally, Seattle Housing Authority owns other single-family homes in the immediate area, several of which have been vacant and boarded up for more that two years. These folks could have parked in any of the driveways of these vacant homes and avoided the mayor's wrath. The City of Seattle's web site lists 2,672 employees for the administration of Housing & Human Services and Parks for the 2006 fiscal year. Expenditures for these two departments administrative costs are shown as 10.2 million dollars. Wouldn't you think that many people could find a safe place for homeless people to park their camper? Agreed, there are many issues involved, and it may require totally new thinking in dealing with the many different kinds of homelessness. Of course there are bad people, but most of those who have been forced to live in campers or cars aren't a threat to our city. They don't molest children, sell drugs on the corner, manufacture meth or scatter their trash in the park. They could have been your grandparents during the Great Depression of the late '20s and early '30s. Some have speculated that a third of our nation's people lived in makeshift housing during that Depression . The big crime committed by the folks who lived in the camper was going out for a shower and trying to exist in a city that has lost its direction and sense of values. If we can't develop the tolerance to accept someone who doesn't want to go for handouts or live in public housing, then we sure as hell don't deserve to be a "world class" city.

About the Author

Kent Kammerer is the unofficial leader and official scribe of the informal, non-partisan Seattle Neighborhood Coalition, which meets over breakfast once a month to discuss Seattle policy and politics.

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Comments:

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 8:24 a.m. Inappropriate

one other factor mr. kammerer: does not take into account are the deals the city makes with towing companies hereabouts!!! The cut they get from what they tow in. And the parking enforcement ladies [mostly] are some of the nastiest in the nation, perhaps on some kind of incentive too, i noted before i gave my car to some long shoremen friends of mine. there's a story worth investigating, the towing company deals and nepotism there, the payoffs.

mikerol

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 8:24 a.m. Inappropriate

no henry fonda,s;: sorry kent; I,ve lived in seattle over forty years without working in high tech and find we are no more or less tolerant now then when I first arrived.used to be people who were down and out were at least expected to look for work; not so today.
I am very familar with your down and outers and feel you,re hung up on the myth
that their all like henry fonda in" the grapes of wrath" most are drug addicts who expect the taxpayers to subsidize their habits. those houses are boarded up for a reason; opened and they would soon become shooting parlors.

I would like to live in san francisco, say pacific heights, I dont go and set myself down on clay street I cant afford it, does that make san francisco bad?

seattle and the state of washington have many programs that help down and outers if their are willing to follow the rules; most dont. they feel we owe them a living. how many of those men holding help,need work signs by the ballard bridge are really looking for work? look under the bridge and find the answer.
sunshine

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 8:45 a.m. Inappropriate

Re: No Henry: Hey, No Henry-- Careful, honey--your stereotypes are showing.

If you've been looking around at all, reading, participating in our community, you know that more "middle class" people are becoming homeless every day. Contrary to the rosy picture portrayed by the mainstream media--"experts agree--everything is fine"-- more and more educated, hard-working people (myself included) are a paycheck--or less--from "down and out" homeless. Even with what used to be called "good paying" jobs, housing and basic living expenses have risen to obscene levels and continue to rise, even as we speak.
MaryW

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 8:59 a.m. Inappropriate

The Law Applies to Everyone: First, living in a camper mounted on a functional truck doesn't meet any definition of "homelessness" that I know. It may not be the Hearst Castle, but it's a clean space with a roof.

Second, if they insist on living in this way they must be aware of the law. 72 hours is long enough for anyone to park on a city street.

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 9:13 a.m. Inappropriate

Perhaps "hanging by a thread" would be more accurate: But still, the premise is the same--not everyone, including many educated working class people, can afford even lowest-end $150,000 (per unit!) condo/tenaments.

As for the 72-hour parking ordinance--please--someone tell my neighbor who has kept his covered "vintage" car parked unmoved on the street for nearly three years. (Oh, sure, he uncovers it to wash it--also on the street--but not move it; his on the street storage has never been questioned. Not once.)
MaryW

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 9:31 a.m. Inappropriate

Welcome to the neighborhood: On my laptop there is an advertisement next to this article that says I can own a "coach" (an RV) for $9,500.
If I buy this affordable house can I park it in front of yours? "Won't you be my neighbor" Mr. Kammerer?

Maybe this is Seattle's answer to its affordable housing dilemma. The city (or able individuals) could buy a bunch of RV and camper-like dwellings and line them up next to our public parks (because everyone deserves a place to run their dogs).

No reserved spots, the overflow would have to spill over into residential streets (we could make an exception for the Phinney Ridge Zoo neighborhood).

Yes, they would still have to move their vehicle every 72 hours but we generous taxpaying citizens could subsidize their gas in addition to the taxes we pay for roads and parks maintenance and operations, water, electricity, health care, schools, fire, etc.

Just add a line item for "gas for affordable housing" on our property tax bills. Oh, maybe one for license fees and car insurance too.

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 10:28 a.m. Inappropriate

Dense RVs: Patricia,

That add is for fractional ownership of an RV for $9,500. So you and twenty of your fellow owners can live parked next to the park as a timeshare. How's that for dense urban living?
George

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 11:57 a.m. Inappropriate

Will the last bleeding-heart liberal in Seattle please turn out the lights?: Judging from some of these comments, you wouldn't know that Seattle is supposedly full of bleeding hearts. I think Kent is reminding us that government programs aren't enough to take care of people; that hard times call for a renewal of a private ethic of tolerance and understanding for those who are struggling. Maybe a little flexibility would help. The rules about street parking are often only enforced when neighbors complain. If we all took a deep breath and decided not to complain after 72 hours, or as Kent suggests, if we actually talked to the people living in their campers down the block, might that not help just a little? Remember It's a Wonderful Life? The bad guy was Mr. Potter, not the Jimmy Stewart character.

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 1:43 p.m. Inappropriate

72 hour parking is a reasonable tolerance policy: Sorry, Skip, but people don't have a right to turn public streets or parks into mobile home parks. It's my understanding that the police will ticket or otherwise post a vehicle before towing it. If the vehicle owners move when they're warned and limit their stay to three days per neighborhood, that's as much tolerance as they can expect.

J.R.

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 2:08 p.m. Inappropriate

Pay to Stay: I pay every month (with no 72 hour grace period, either) for a place to live and park my car. Why can't these folks move their camper to a RV mobile home park? They can't afford it? If that is true, they certainly can't afford to live in Seattle, either, so perhaps they should explore some towns that better fit their financial situation so they can put down some roots.

I'm all for talking, tolerating, and feeling their pain; however, that won't help them get back on their feet.

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 2:47 p.m. Inappropriate

A man's camper is his...impounded castle...: Expecting a whine fest about homelessness, Kent Kammerer's piece in fact raises interesting questions and illuminates interesting hypocrisies. Some questions, though, he needs to ask himself.

People in this neck of the woods want to be known for good works while not actually engaging in them, so they support high taxes for social services and social agencies that employ people to engage in them. They're content to let others do the work as long as that work isn't done anywhere near their neighborhood. It's OK to do it downtown or in someone else's neighborhood, but not in my back yard.

Big deal a beater camper is parked on the street for a few days with what appears to be a somewhat rough looking couple? What? Not dressed in Nordstrom, Eddie Bauer or REI apparel so that makes them suspect?

Yet out of all the places to park the camper, why there? Nearly every RV'er I've ever met waxes euphorically over how RV-friendly are Wal-Mart parking lots. Of course, this begs a discussion over how unfriendly Seattleites are toward Wal-Mart and the whole big box concept, about the only retail stores priced low enough for the aforementioned couple to afford.

The classic Seattle dichotomy: bleeding-heart liberal generosity in a community that swallows every liberal land use, growth restriction, high taxation, profligate spending scheme that comes down the pike all of which result in creating more people in need of bleeding-heart liberal generosity resulting in more schemes…and so forth and so on.

How much thought - real, serious, soul-searching thought - is given to how local public policy exacerbates the crunch on low-income people? Quick to blame market-driven growth, Olympia, or Washington, D.C., locals ought to look in the mirror and ask themselves to what extent they're responsible for creating a community that's unaffordable for everyone save a self-styled elite, the occasional ballot measure for low-cost housing notwithstanding.

How many in Kammerer's neighborhood would welcome a relaxation of zoning restrictions in order to accommodate individual, low-income, mother-in-law-type housing units? Or how many would support taking land now closed off from development and devoting it to housing for modest-income people? How about supporting across-the-board tax cuts that would benefit most those who pay the highest percentage of their income in taxes?

Most significantly, how many of the pay-someone-else-to-do-it crowd engage low-income and homeless people one-on-one in order to offer them a hand up, not a hand out?

Which brings me to you, Kammerer…You imply you had an encounter with the man and woman, yet you have no idea whether they got their rig back or how the dogs faired or what. You're quick to complain about boarded-up residential units owned by the City or the Seattle Housing Authority - criticisms no doubt very valid - yet you don't tell us what YOU did for the two who unfortunately found themselves sans home.

Make any calls? Offer to help them with impound fees? Feed them lunch? Direct them to a social service agency or church that might have helped? I know for a fact, that the couple could have been housed and feed for a night for around $75, less than the cost of dinner and a movie for two people.

This isn't a criticism of you, Kammerer. For all I know you are a volunteer and hands-on contributor par excellence. But your article illustrates a real problem too typical in this town: bemoan a human tragedy without articulating a specific solution to it; keep things in the abstract in order for some other guy to feel guilty about doing zip.

Less liberal largess, more hands-on love and compassion.

The Piper

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 3:06 p.m. Inappropriate

Solutions? Inspiration for Possibilites?: Because, as you allege, a "civic-minded local resident" phones in to the city that a camper has been parked for longer than three days on the street, somehow the whole of Seattle is implicated, "couldn't our great city have waited another day...?" and also somehow the whole of Seattle appears to have "become so intolerant." How do you come to these conclusions? Later, you also mention "the mayor's wrath" with no related backup. Wow, these inferences from alleging that a resident made this phone call are astounding!

You also mention that our city tolerates different lifestyles only "if they have money or green cards" and are nearly intolerant of those who don't also "write code for Microsoft or Adobe..." Where do you manufacture this absolutist smelly-ness?

Later you ask, "wouldn't you think that many people could find a safe place for homeless people to park their camper?" I thought that's what these people did. They camped near your local park for three days. Where's the lack of safety you're talking about?

Further on, you talk of how most of these people aren't a threat, don't molest kids, make meth, etc. So, some of them are these types of criminals? What is some? Twenty-five percent? Five percent? Fourty-nine? Then you state that "the big crime committed by the folks who lived in the camper was going out for a shower and trying to exist in a city that has lost its direction and sense of values." Yet another silly inference from your "civic-minded local resident's" phone call. Lastly, according to you, we don't deserve to be a world class city (another old, tired remark) if we don't accept those who decide not to go on the public dole. Huh?

How you can make such claims based on a ridiculous story about urban campers who camped out near a city park for longer than the three days the city gave them and were subsequently towed is phenomenal. What other inferences and wholesale allegations are you adept at making? Your monthly breakfasts must be a hoot.

I think your heart's in the right place and you seem serious, but your approach is exhausting. Not good for the cause, my friend.
tarantula

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 3:20 p.m. Inappropriate

RE: 72 hour parking is a reasonable tolerance policy: I think if the city started enforcing the 72 hour rule citywide--universally and unconditionally--there'd be a major rebellion. I've seen parked cars covered in moss on neighborhood streets (which means they had to have been parked there at least 96 hours). I've also seen cars ticketed and towed almost simultaneously. We look the other way when all kinds of rules are violated. Just try enforcing the letter of the law on bicylcists. I'm not arguing we change the rules, but why not cut people who are down on their luck a little slack?

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 3:22 p.m. Inappropriate

RE: Solutions? Inspiration for Possibilites?: Loose with your facts there, Tarantula. While drug use, alcoholism, and mental illness are serious issues among the homeless, alleging that upwards of almost half of them are either child molesters or criminal meth manufacturers is reckless and false.

I know a lot of homeless people. Some have criminal records, some have done time, some have outstanding charges against them. For almost a year, I could count on getting a call from a guy I know sentanced to spend that year in the Yakima Jail. But he's out now - has been for almost another year - and just successfully completed a rehab program, so why not cut him some slack?

There's a huge difference between the pandering that passes for a lot of "help the homeless" stuff (witness the phony-baloney Tent City 4 and the cynical antics of its sponser, SHARE/WHEEL), and the genuine human tragedy, irrespective of causation, of homelessness.

Kammerer sought to make a point - too subtly in my mind - that people in Seattle are unwilling to actually engage either the issue of low-income living/homelessness or low-income/homeless people. Your comments, as well as several others, prove his, and my, point.

Before a city can be world class, the people in it must be world class.

The Piper

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 4:09 p.m. Inappropriate

RE: Will the last bleeding-heart liberal in Seattle please turn out the lights?: This all came across in Kent's article - which was both interesting and well-written. You understand, of course, why we have reasonable rules and laws that discourage these living arrangements. I think that is what mouthy commentators, like me, are basically saying.

A few months ago I remember some businesses complained about permanent wheeled-residences along Government Way. Patricia McInturff, director of Housing or one of those depts. with the City defended the actions saying that low-income people had to have some place to stay. So the city inconsistantly enforces the rules.

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 4:30 p.m. Inappropriate

RE: Will the last bleeding-heart liberal in Seattle please turn out the lights?: I think, though, that one of Mossback's arguments is that if the government can't help (Government? Help? That's an oxymoron), then it ought to butt out and leave well enough alone.

And so-called "good citizens" might consider wandering over to the camper and asking how the folks are doing or if they needed help or whether the dogs would like a dish of water instead of calling the cops on them. Believe me, as someone who's had the cops called on him by an anonymous "good citizen" neighbor (I was burning wood scraps in a metal garbage can in my backyard), I know how that feels.

You can have reasonable application of reasonable rules, or you can have legalism, but you can't have both.

The Piper

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 5:20 p.m. Inappropriate

RE: 72 hour parking is a reasonable tolerance policy: Those stallion thighed goateed gits deserve to have the book thrown at 'em! :p

cwesley

Posted Thu, Aug 16, 9:50 p.m. Inappropriate

Assumptions make for Bad Journalism: On numerous occasions I've worked to get abandoned vehicles and lived-in vehicles towed from city streets -- and away from low-income housing I help operate. I have done so in response to these vehicles being used for prostitution and illegal drug activity. This is a necessary tool to help with public safety.

It's also not a quick process and it would not be a surprise to the towee. You call the City, provide the information and a couple days later (if you are lucky) a notice is posted on the vehicle windshield. In that you didn't see this notice is no surprise. The person(s) in possession of the vehicle promptly scrape off the very sticky notice and often move the vehicle down the street in an effort to avoid the tow.

Your assumptions about the whole process are wrong. The City streets are for all of us to use, not possess. Seattle has excellent shelter facilities and programs to aid homeless and indigent persons. We do care and we show it by repeatedly passing a significant low-income housing tax levy.

Thanks for the opportunity to respond.

Posted Fri, Aug 17, 3:08 p.m. Inappropriate

RE: Solutions? Inspiration for Possibilites?: Tarantula alleged nothing with respect to drug use, alcoholism, or mental illness among the homeless. He was simply asking for clarification about the author's broad use of assumptions and anecdotes concerning what others might think about the people that were living in the van. A little better reading comprehension would go a long way.

This use of the anecdote, however, for a story which the author offers as a broad implication and in this case indictment against Seattle citizens is troubling and spurious. I'm not sure how we are to take one incident and infer from it the state of Seattle's good will toward human kind. I myself am not sure if towing a longterm parked vehicle is bad or good or either. Is this an isolated incident or is it a widespread occurence? If our laws are executed without uniformity, as Knute suggests, does this mean that the laws in and of themselves are invalid? Why is someone who reports a long term parked vehicle necessarily a hardboiled jerk who doesn't want anybody to get a break?

You won't find these "Why?" answers in the nostalgia and angst ridden fluff pieces proffered on the web pages here. It is assumed you share their biases and know the answers already. That is a pity.
George

Posted Mon, Aug 20, 10:46 a.m. Inappropriate

Will the real Seattlite pls stand up?: I guess you made your point, Mr. Kammerer - there isnt much empathy left in Seattle and its evidenced by the posts left in this forum.

I agree with you; there isnt much concern for the down and out anymore. Im surprised those who left posts even read your piece. I actually wonder how many of them are actual, native Seattlites?

If you remember about 10 years ago, the influx of folks moving here from California, the tech boom, Kurt Cobain wannabees and nowadays a robust economy continues to make Seattle attractive. Suddenly, trust fund babies who've lead sheltered, conserative lives are moving in, organizing and throwing hissy fits about THEIR Seattle. Even the Evergreen State College has been overrun - by conserative thinkers - scarry! Long gone are the treehuggers.

And with this influx, what made Seattle a great, cozy undiscovered gem is but a distant memory. No longer is Seattle the ecletic Emerald City, but a concrete jungle in the making with land and views going to the highest bidder. Ahhh, progress!

One response read, 'oh, theres plenty of shelters for them.' HA! Im sure some liberal developer will forgo the opportunity to make millions to build a homeless shelter in the middle of downtown. Then, what funds does the shelter use to operate?

The fact is we dont know what to do for the homeless and WE arent taking the time to find out. WE dont want to acknowledge the reason why homelessness occurs (classism) and WE just want the problem to go away (i.e. move somewhere else). The message is:I dont want smelly homelsspersons living in the doorway of MY half-million dollar downtown condo. We're too busy criticizing local officials for considering tolls on 520 or those "regressive" taxes that plague Washingtonians (although this state still does not have tax on groceries or a state income tax and that property taxes are used to fund schools).

We'll just look over the fact that many elderly and low-income persons who once occupied that half-million dollar condo you now live in were forced to move when their apartment was converted. But this is just a matter of economics - and its just too damned bad that grandma cant afford to live in a $3000 dollar a month retirement facility. Oh well, gotta go grandma!

The affordability index in Seattle has skyrocketed. Many teachers in the Seattle Public School system, an honorable line of work for college educated folk, can't afford to purchase a home in the city. Seattle is a two income household city and Im not talking about one person flippin burgers. No wonder there are so many roommates and housemates in the city!

So, we are pitting the poor against the teachers. Fair fight? I guess the poor people, if they reaaly wanted to get out of the hole, could walk into Wells Fargo, get a loan and just magically buy a home. Simple!

I could sit here and be cynical all day, but I have to move on. What I hope this post will yield is that someone will realize that there are veterans living on the street who made sacrifices for us that we just brush off. During the Regan era, mental health hospital funding where most of these people were living and receiving treatment was eliminated. Now, their all on the street living among us.

There isnt any free lunch. Either we pay to help the less fortunate find housing or we'll pay when some of them end up in jail just to have a roof over their heads.
This is supposed to be America, but more and more, I hear the aristocracy screaming 'let them eat cake!'

p.s. if your wondering, yes, I am a native of WA state. I dont live in a condo, but a small apt, paying far less than market rate rent in Tacoma and I plan to stay here as long as I can and live within my means.
Jem

Posted Tue, Aug 21, 10:32 a.m. Inappropriate

The Priorities of Government: This discussion highlights how the fabric of moral decision making is woven throughout this particular instance of RV towing. Government, as usual, is just doing its job when it insensitively tows away a vehicle (or doesn't) or provides low income housing (but not enough) or tows away cars used by drug dealers and prostitutes (or doesn't) or creates zoning and building practices that encourage some sorts of development (say high-density condos) but discourage others (say low income housing).

As it pertains to high-density transit-oriented development, the effects of crowding are well researched and documented. Crowding makes people less human, more intoelrant, and more like rats. Because of zoning (and the GMA), high-density downtowns are also high-priced downtowns where providing affordable housing is prohibitively expensive.

The GMA places an economic net across ALL property and lifts the values of all residential properties by reducing the availability of living space. The upshot is that it is largely illegal to be homeless. Most world-class third-world cities have large segments of the population living in what we would call substandard housing, often with open sewers, corrugated tin roofs, etc. In Seattle, we pretend that there aren't a lot of people who would LOVE to have that sort of accommodation because it would be better than no accommodation at all. But we are just not an accommodating sort of place.

Thus we have the 10-Year Plan to End Homelessness, which is trying to address the many ways that people become homeless (alcoholism, crime, drug use, lost job, just passing through, mentally handicapped, divorced, evicted, living in an RV on a residential street, etc.). In spite of my initial skepticism, these guys seem to be doing a pretty good job. Here, the government and nonprofits have teamed up to address the bureaucratic failure of various social-service "silos" to actually help people because of the limited purview of each particular bureaucratic silo. Hopefully, this is bleeding heart liberalism at its best. We'll see.

Piper (and indirectly Kammerer) make the great point that actually helping others outside of one's circle of family and friends often isn't part of the average person's normal routine. Enter many non-profits, and many churches who provide a way for one to routinely get involved with helping others, one-on-one. The very difficult challenge is people with a broad-spectrum of problems who are not easily helped by a kick-in-the-butt, a smile and a $20 bill, or a reference to a social service agency. What they need is long-term love. Good luck finding that in Seattle!

Seattle's answer to the homeless is, "I'm working real hard to cut carbon emissions and fight sprawl by keeping those friggin' rich people from living in the suburbs. It's an expensive city. Go get a college education and then maybe you can get a job and afford to live here. Subsidized housing? We don't have much of that. Too expensive. We do subsidize the God-blessed salmon and every year we pay tens of millions of dollars so that salmon can sh** in our streams. But build a home? Or an outhouse? Or live in a tent or off the land? Forget it. In general, unless you have a corporate job or a couple of million in the bank, you should just move on. We wannabe a real world-class city, and that means TRANSIT, which is what lines the pockets of bond-holders, lawyers, construction contractors, government bureaucrats environmental consultants, and union members. But in the end, you and all the other little people won't be left out. Transit will let the homeless on for free and you'll be sitting right next to real-live Microsoft commuters , and you can ask them for spare change, or explain to them that you took keyboarding at the Seattle high school you dropped out of with a third-grade education."
Stuka

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