There
will now be a deluge of information, so I will concentrate on the
stories that will doubtless go untold.
Nowhere
to run: Homeless offered little aid in wake of Hurricane Sandy
Hours
after Hurricane Sandy battered the eastern coast of the US, residents
hope to repair the damage and move on. But as the media focuses on
power outages and damaged apartments, many have forgotten about the
area’s silent citizens – the homeless
RT,
30
October, 2012
As
residents fled to hotels and the homes of friends and relatives in
preparation for the storm, the homeless were left with few options –
except to hope for the best.
The
lucky ones were able to claim a spot in one of the 46,631 beds
scattered throughout New York’s various homeless shelters. But many
others were left out in the cold.
Lacking
enough beds to house all those in needs, many shelters made
exceptions, allowing their buildings to go over capacity for the
night. But although the efforts helped many in need, there still
wasn’t room for everyone.
The
Department of Homeless Services’ spokesperson, Heather Janik, told
the New York Observer that outreach teams have been out and about
with an “extremely enhanced” presence since Sunday morning.
“In
partnership with the NYPD’s homeless outreach unit, the DHS’s
outreach teams have managed to bring 175 people inside,” she said.
Whilst
those efforts have been lauded, reports online suggest that many
homeless were left on the streets, bunked in doorways, as the storm
approached on Monday.
With
no promise of assistance or a bed, New York’s homeless community
did whatever they could to survive the storm. For one person, that
meant traveling to Newark Liberty International Airport.
Speaking
to New Jersey News from a covered entrance to Terminal B, 60-year-old
Dorothy Howe said, “This is the safest place a homeless person
could be right now.”
Howe
took a bus from downtown Newark to the airport on Sunday afternoon,
before New Jersey Transit halted all bus, train, and light rail
services.
“I
didn’t know where to go,” she said.
John
Edgecombe II, who is homeless, takes refuge from the rain and wind at
a bus stop on Ward Circle on October 29, 2012 in Washington. (AFP
Photo/Brendan Smialowski)
But
the lack of beds isn’t the only thing stopping many of the city’s
homeless from seeking refuge in a shelter. According to an article by
freelance journalist, Julia Reinhart, the system has become a maze of
complicated rules which make many of the city’s most needy
ineligible for a bed.
James,
a forty-three year old homeless man, told the journalist that once a
person has been in the system for 18 months, he can’t return for at
least one year. “I can’t go back to the shelter system for
another two months," he said.
James
also stressed he couldn’t go to an emergency shelter, because those
were aimed at people made homeless by the storm – not those who are
permanently without a home.
“They
don’t want us there. These shelters are for the good folks, the
families that get evacuated. There is no room in there for me,” he
said.
However,
religious and non-profit organizations throughout the east coast did
their best to make up for the shortcomings of local governments.
Catholic
Charities of the Archdiocese of Washington, D.C. used twitter to
spread news of their goodwill, encouraging readers to “please call
if you see someone on the street who needs to get in out of the
storm.”
Shepherd’s
Table, a resource center for homeless people in Silver Spring,
Maryland, didn’t let the storm squash their spirits on Monday
night. Employees and volunteers turned up – despite heavy winds and
flood warnings – to serve meals to the needy.
“We
serve a meal seven nights a week…we’ve never, ever missed a
meal,” Executive Director Jacki Coyle, told the Colesville Patch.
But
the kindness didn’t stop there – the organization opened up the
building to those in need.
“Any
person who’s without a home and needs a place to stay can be here
tonight,” Coyle said.
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