ReportWire

Tag: Homelessness

  • After deinstitutionalization, America’s mental health system struggles to protect the public

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    One of the charming, if bizarre, discoveries I made living in New England was its constellation of splendid, thoroughly abandoned mental institutions. They occupied commanding heights in bucolic rural backwaters—fine Victorian masterpieces of red brick and turreted cupolas. The one near Danvers, Massachusetts, was perhaps the most impressive—the sheer scale and strange, unsettling quiet of it all inspired curiosity. The awe these deserted institutions inspired has never left me.

    I thought of the place recently in light of the awful murder of Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska by Decarlos Brown on a subway car in Charlotte, North Carolina. The assassination shortly afterward of Charlie Kirk eclipsed the headlines, but each case has a great deal to say about our national schizophrenia over mental illness. 

    While Kirk’s murderer was clearly unstable, he showed no actionable warning signs of the violence he was about to commit. Zarutska’s murderer, on the other hand, was a known quantity—a time bomb whose repeated encounters with the law painted a trajectory that could predictably end only in disaster. Brown was trapped in the liminal space between mainline criminal incarceration (where he spent time) and the psychiatric wards of yesteryear, which no longer exist. The societal question over individual liberty and social safety, however, remains.

    The State Lunatic Hospital at Danvers fairly exemplifies the structural elements at play. Since the 1960s and the era of “deinstitutionalization,” the United States has substantially eliminated treatment space dedicated to the care and incarceration of the mentally ill, with an estimated 64 percent decrease since 1970. Some of this decline was a rational response to advances in antipsychotic medications and moves toward “community-based” care, but much of it was about funding and politics.

    The politics, in their turn, were shaped by the growing disaffection with the model of treatment these facilities could offer. Centralized psychiatric care at places like Danvers had become grossly overcrowded, and disturbing methods of treatment made everyone uneasy. Eunice Kennedy Shriver, sister of President John F. Kennedy, said of her sister Rosemary after a botched lobotomy, “Her mental capacity diminished to that of a two-year-old child, she was left incontinent and unable to speak intelligibly.” Stories like these shifted public opinion. By 1963, the Community Mental Health Act devolved mental care toward local communities, and the closing of large state institutions began. By 1981, under President Ronald Reagan’s Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, the process was effectively complete: The era of the “psychiatric facility” was over. Danvers closed for good in 1992 and was largely demolished in 2007.

    These shifts had major implications—many of them good. They helped protect patients from abusive treatments and from the Dickensian nightmare that many asylums had become. But they obviously didn’t end mental illness. In effect, they merely pushed the problem to less visible peripheries and increasingly depended on the criminal incarceration system to pull up the slack for those unable or unwilling to seek professional treatment. Prisons became, in effect, the nation’s new asylums—only without the mandate, expertise, or resources to treat the underlying pathology.

    The results are visible in tragedies like Zarutska’s. Those who ride subways, walk city streets, or simply send their kids to public schools know from experience that they harbor a certain population of untreated, unstable individuals. Some are harmless eccentrics. Some are self-medicating strugglers. Still others are genuinely dangerous, propelled by paranoia or psychosis toward catastrophic acts.

    This is the point where a free society faces its most uncomfortable question: How do we balance liberty with involuntary commitment? America’s default in recent decades has rightly been to err on the side of liberty, a choice with noble roots but sometimes tragic consequences. We recoil from the notion of allowing the state to lock up citizens without trial. We recall the abuses of “insanity defenses” and the ease with which Soviet authorities diagnosed dissidents with schizophrenia. Our suspicion of state power is vital. But in our zeal to prevent abuse, we have stripped away tools that might, in fact, protect both the vulnerable and the innocent.

    This very debate was featured in the pages of Reason, and it’s evident that the “lock ’em up” or “let ’em be” camps can both find ample supporting evidence for their positions. Mike Riggs, a contributing editor at Reason, takes the firmer individualist position, writing that, “mentally ill people can be deprived of their liberty only as a form of punishment and only if they victimize someone; they cannot be deprived of their liberty to merely deliver them from temptation or risk.” Libertarians, as a rule, would be inclined to agree—accepting the risk of isolated violence over systemic “preventive” incarceration. Riggs is supported by psychiatrist Thomas Szasz, who wrote in 2016 that “the overwhelming majority of mentally ill people can live okay lives outside of any institution, hopefully receiving community care if they want it. If they commit crimes they will go to prison just like anyone else.” 

    The murder by Brown confronts us with the frightening failure of this system. Lawmakers in North Carolina have introduced “Iryna’s Law” to try to fill the void caused by a justice system that has “lost institutional control” over its community. Balancing liberty and security in this situation will not be an easy task, especially amidst the heightened emotions over a heart-wrenching murder. 

    Other societies have attempted to strike their own balance. The Netherlands, for example, has developed a model that attempts to thread this needle more carefully. Dutch law allows for terbeschikkingstelling (TBS), a system in which courts can impose psychiatric treatment in secure facilities for offenders deemed dangerous due to mental illness. The regime is subject to judicial review and proportionality standards, but it acknowledges a simple truth we Americans seem to resist: Some people are both ill and dangerous, and society must manage that reality rather than wish it away. The Dutch experience suggests that it is possible to protect public safety without abandoning civil liberty altogether—but it is hardly perfect. My wife’s good friend, a psychologist at one of these secure facilities, witnessed the horrific murder of a care provider by a psychopathic inmate. Yet the very fact that this tragedy occurred within walls designed to shield the innocent from this psychosis directly highlights the awful tragedy of the American system, which allowed Brown to prowl the North Carolina subways. 

    There are glimmers of reform. Some states have experimented with “assisted outpatient treatment” laws, which compel treatment without requiring long-term confinement. Others have piloted crisis-intervention teams that divert offenders toward psychiatric care rather than jail. These are steps in the right direction, but they remain piecemeal and controversial, constrained by our deep-seated suspicion of institutionalization.

    Perhaps that suspicion is justified. No one, after all, wants to resurrect the abuses of the asylum era. Yet it is worth remembering that we once accepted the need for institutional care as a matter of course, and that our rejection of it was as much about cost and scandal as it was about basic principle. The empty hulks at Danvers and elsewhere stand as monuments to that choice—monuments we dare not celebrate, but whose consequences we live with every day.

    The derelict asylum on the New England hillside and the violent crime on the Charlotte subway are connected. Both reflect our collective discomfort with the messy problem of mental illness in a free society. We can choose essential liberty, or we can choose safety, but giving up the former for temporary stints of the latter has, as the famous Benjamin Franklin quote goes, permanent consequences that condemn us to neither.

    Unsatisfying as it feels in the heat of the moment, our challenge is to find a middle ground—an institutional arrangement that recognizes both the dignity of the mentally ill and the legitimate right of the public to be safe from clear and present harms. Other societies have shown this is possible. Ours, so far, has chosen paralysis. Until we grapple with the hard question of what we owe to the dangerously unstable, we will continue to live with headlines like Zarutska’s, and with the haunted ruins of Danvers as mute testimony to our unfinished business.

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    Paul Schwennesen

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  • Greensboro veteran who was homeless now helps veterans overcome homelessness

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    GREENSBORO, N.C. — For many veterans, the transition home is not easy, and some even find themselves without a place to live. 

    In Greensboro, Army veteran Diane Dunn is now a case manager at The Servant Center, a nonprofit that provides housing and resources for veterans experiencing homelessness. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Army veteran Diane Dunn is a case manager at The Servant Center, a nonprofit that provides housing and resources for veterans experiencing homelessness
    • It’s personal for Dunn, because she once faced homelessness herself
    • The Servant Center’s new temporary housing facility will include 21 beds for disabled veterans experiencing homelessness, 22 medical respite beds and office space for staff
    • On Sept. 12, the center hosted its 2025 Triad Stand Down event where veterans connected with critical services like health and dental care, employment and housing




    The Servant Center offers permanent supportive housing — a program that Dunn said is life-changing. It’s personal for her, because she once faced homelessness.

    Dunn said since last year, Servant Center’s Glenwood and Haworth permanent housing facility has served 20 veterans and 95% of them remained permanently housed. In the Foxworth facility, Dunn says 34 veteran families were served, 100% of which have remained permanently housed.

    Dunn uses her own story of survival to help others find stability after serving their country.

    “When I had gotten out of the military in 1997, they didn’t have, of course, any programs like this,” Dunn said. “So I was homeless for almost a year.”

    Diane Dunn served in the Army for 10 years before becoming a case manager at The Servant Center. (Courtesy: Diane Dunn)

    Dunn served in the Army for 10 years. She said coming home and adjusting to civilian life was difficult.

    “You’re with a group of people all the time, and now you have to come home and learn to be a husband, learn to be a wife, you know, and fit into the daily schedule,” Dunn said.

    At the time, Dunn said she was “couch surfing” and even “dumpster diving” for food.

    Despite her circumstances, she enrolled in college while also working a part-time job. She was homeless for a year and a half. Now, Dunn helps residents with everything from medical appointments to transportation, but she said the most important thing she offers is trust.

    Dunn said residents lean on one another like family inside The Servant Center’s supportive housing.

    “Everybody in this building watches over everybody’s child, so I’m thankful for that,” Dunn said.

    Still, Dunn pointed out that supportive housing options for female veterans are limited across North Carolina.

    “The females don’t know where to go, and it’s not safe in the street,” Dunn said. “You find a lot of females hidden behind buildings off in the corner until daylight.”

    That’s why The Servant Center is opening a new building with a female hall for the first time. Dunn said it’s a mission that’s long overdue.

    The North Carolina Point-in-Time Count showed that in 2024 on any given day, 6% of people who were experiencing homelessness were veterans, and out of 11,626 people who were experiencing homelessness that same year, 41% were female.

    The Servant Center’s new temporary housing facility will include 21 beds for disabled veterans experiencing homelessness, 22 medical respite beds and office space for staff.

    On Sept. 12, the center hosted its 2025 Triad Stand Down event where veterans connected with critical services like health and dental care, employment and housing.

     

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    Ashley Van Havere

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  • Twin Cities woman buys bus to give essentials to people experiencing homelessness around metro

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    Twin Cities woman takes different approach to helping homeless



    Twin Cities woman takes different approach to helping homeless

    02:07

    A Twin Cities metro woman is embarking on a different approach to helping those experiencing homelessness.

    Kelly Kunz began what she calls “Street Justice Ministry” months ago, buying a bus and using it to give essentials to those on the streets.

    On a sunny afternoon in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, it’s the race against the clock for Kunz.

    Bin by bin, she loads up the bus with meals, hygiene products and resources. She then drives to camps and sidewalks to find those living without a roof over their head. 

    “My mission is to encourage them to start their own steps,” said Kunz. “I’m like a blessing. I just pull up, I want to bless you, I want to love you, I want to meet the things you need at that one moment.”

    She bought the bus in April and knew exactly where to go because she has been there before. 

    “I was sold into sex trafficking at the age of 15 in the streets of north Minneapolis. I ended up in Atlanta for 23 years,” Kunz said, explaining that those are years she’s worked tirelessly to turn around. She’s put that life behind her by focusing on a new spiritual approach.

    “I can’t even explain it, what it was like,” Kunz said. “I didn’t work a job. I hustled people. I was your worst enemy.”

    Kunz says she’s able to do Street Justice Ministry by working two jobs and donating plasma.

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    Frankie McLister

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  • Judge grants Minneapolis’ temporary restraining order request for controversial homeless encampment

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    A judge on Tuesday granted the city of Minneapolis’ request for a temporary restraining order against a commercial parking lot owner who turned his property into an encampment for people experiencing homelessness.

    The order says Hamoudi Sabri, who owns a commercial parking lot off of East Lake Street as well as others in the Twin Cities, cannot allow a homeless encampment on any of his properties in Minneapolis until further order from the court.

    Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey called the ruling “the right call.”

    “Encampments are not safe — not for residents, neighbors, or surrounding businesses,” Frey said. “Once services and shelter are offered, encampments must be closed. This ruling allows us to do exactly that and move people toward safer, more stable housing.” 

    In response to the judge’s decision, Sabri says he still plans to hold the city “accountable,” adding his priority is “the dignity and safety of our unhoused neighbors.”

    “Community and faith leaders have been calling this out for years. I’m just joining them — apparently it takes a landlord to get Frey’s attention, but we already knew that,” Sabri said. “Frey’s suing me for welcoming people he only kicks around. I never said that was the solution—only a start, expecting collaboration like we’ve seen work before.”

    Frey says the city has been trying to clear this encampment out for months and has been met with resistance. He said the city has issued Sabri nearly a dozen public health notices for drug paraphernalia, open fire, excessive debris and lack of sanitation, and fined him more than $15,000.

    Earlier this month, the Minneapolis City Council voted 6-4 to take legal action against Sabri over permitting the homeless encampment off East Lake Street and 28th Avenue South. He had been ordered to clear the lot by Aug. 25, but he refused.

    On Sept. 15, seven people were shot at the encampment on Sabri’s lot. One of the victims died from their injuries a few days later. 

    As a result of the shooting, the city closed the encampment and announced its intent to file a temporary restraining order to secure the property.

    According to the city, the latest estimate suggested there were 70 to 75 people living on the property. After the shooting last week, the number hovered around 30 people. Regulatory Services Director Enrique Velazquez said all but one person denied offers for shelter.

    Since being cleared, the encampment has relocated a block away. Court documents say Sabri “indicated” he will re-open the encampment once the property where the shooting took place is no longer secured.

    This is the second time in nearly four years Sabri has clashed with city leaders over what he calls their failures to find adequate solutions to help people who find themselves living in encampments. Sabri previously opened one of his properties in the North Loop for a similar encampment.

    No future court dates have been scheduled.

    and

    contributed to this report.

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    Riley Moser

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  • Hundreds of people will sleep at the Phillies ballpark on Nov. 20. Here’s why.

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    On a November night a few weeks after the baseball season ends, the outfield at Citizens Bank Park will be filled with people in sleeping bags.

    The Phillies are partnering with Covenant House, a nonprofit that provides services for young people experiencing homelessness, for a “sleep out” fundraiser on Thursday, Nov. 20, when participants will stay at the ballpark from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m.


    MORE: Estate that was George Washington’s headquarters during Revolutionary War hits market for $3.3 million


    “It’s not a slumber party. It’s not a camping trip. It’s not pretending to be homeless,” said Colleen Veldt, Covenant House’s vice president of peer-to-peer fundraising. “It’s really a very strong act of solidarity to call attention to this issue and to raise money.”

    Covenant House operates in 19 states and five countries providing shelter, housing support and other resources to people ages 16-21 who are on the street or have been victims of human trafficking. The organization is celebrating its 25th anniversary in Pennsylvania and wanted to revisit a yearslong partnership with the Phillies, who once had former managers Charlie Manuel and Larry Bowa spend a night on the street in Center City to raise money for the nonprofit.

    Covenant House, based in New York City, once had a sleep out at Yankee Stadium with about 250 people on the field overnight. The organization hopes to bring about 750 people to Citizens Bank Park this year, making it the largest sleep out event to date. Covenant House also will host events nationwide the same night, including smaller sleep outs at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey and Gillette Stadium in Massachusetts.

    “The premise of the event is that you’re giving up your bed for one night so that a young person facing homelessness can have a safe bed at Covenant House,” Veldt said.

    Covenant House estimates more than 4.2 million young people experience homelessness in the United States each year, including more than 10,000 children and youth in Philadelphia and over 46,000 statewide. Many young adults lose their safety nets when they age out of the foster care system. Others struggle with mental health and legal issues. Some lack basic documents needed to access housing and other necessities.

    “It’s a less visible population than the adults who are facing homelessness, and that’s really part of the issue,” Veldt said. “Young people are really good at flying under the radar. They have really been let down by the adults and institutions in their lives, so they’re hesitant and afraid to come forward to ask for help. They couch surf and try to make it on their own as long as they can.”

    People who want to participate in the sleep out at Citizens Bank Park must be at least 13 years old and will need to raise a minimum of $1,000 using Covenant House’s fundraising portal. Those who sign up for the event can customize their pages and share links on social media, in group texts and by email to raise money.

    “Our team gives weekly coaching tips to try to make it as easy as possible for them,” Veldt said.

    On the night of the sleep out, Covenant House will provide participants with a sleeping bag, a cardboard box and light refreshments. All minors must be accompanied by a parent or guardian. The event will go on rain or shine. Based on the weather or the amount of space occupied in the outfield, some people will sleep in covered areas of the ballpark concourse. There will be access to bathrooms and Covenant House staff will be available to offer emotional support.

    “It’s meant to be uncomfortable. It’s a challenge,” Veldt said. “It’s not homelessness by any stretch of the imagination, but it’s not usually a comfortable night.”

    The morning after the sleep out, Covenant House leaders and alumni who once stayed at the organization’s shelters will hold a reflection period for people to talk about their experiences. Holding the sleep out on Thursday is an intentional way to help people understand the difficulty of going to work or school after a night without their usual comforts. 

    “You get a full, immersive experience in our work, our mission and our world when you come to our events,” Veldt said.

    Covenant House has a 24/7 youth crisis center and shelter in Germantown that serves about 300 people every year. The nonprofit also has additional beds at other locations in the city, a mobile outreach unit and a transitional housing facility serving youth in York.

    Veldt said the Covenant House’s goal is to bring in more than $1.5 million from the sleep out event at Citizens Bank Park. All proceeds from the event will support young people in Pennsylvania, and those who wish to participate in the sleep out virtually from another location also are invited to sign up. 

    “We want people to know that this is a really pressing issue and that there is something they can do to help,” she said.

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    Michael Tanenbaum

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  • Pasco County hosting series of town hall meetings on homelessness

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    NEW PORT RICHEY, Fla. — It has been a growing issue throughout the country and one that hits close to Tampa Bay.


    What You Need To Know

    • Pasco County will host a series of town hall meetings discussing homelessness
    • The local government is asking to hear from residents to find out how homelessness is impacting neighborhoods, communities and businesses
    • Two town hall meetings will take place, starting Tuesday night at the West Pasco Government Center


    Homelessness has become a cause for discussion, even in Pasco County. The local government is asking to hear from residents to help reduce the trend in a series of town halls with the first taking place Tuesday night.

    Pasco County says they want to find out how homelessness is impacting neighborhoods, communities and businesses. But it all starts with hearing from residents. That’s the reason behind this series of town hall meetings the county will host; first tonight and again next Tuesday.

    The Board of County Commissioners is working on their 2025-2030 strategic plan and the goal is to make homelessness rare, brief and non-existent. The county says they want to hear which services and facilities are working and which of those services still need some work. Residents are invited to either attend in-person or fill out an online survey.

    “I hope to see education around the topic of homelessness so that we can create a response external to county government, local county government, but all-inclusive with our citizens, our not-for-profits, our public safety sector,” says Brian Hobin, Pasco County Director of Community Services. “It needs to be an all-hands-on-deck response for us to be able to make a difference in homelessness.”

    And Hobin says Pasco County has already opened what they call a low barrier shelter through Pasco Hope. They will be in attendance for tonight’s meeting.

    The first town hall takes place tonight at the West Pasco Government Center in the boardroom starting at 5:30 p.m. Another town hall is scheduled for next Tuesday, Sept. 30, at the Saint Leo University Wellness Center at 5:30 p.m.

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    Calvin Lewis

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  • The TransLatin@ Coalition campaigns for $20 million to support new housing initiative

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    Troy Masters was a cheerleader. When my name was called as the Los Angeles Press Club’s Print Journalist of the Year for 2020, Troy leapt out of his seat with a whoop and an almost jazz-hand enthusiasm, thrilled that the mainstream audience attending the Southern California Journalism Awards gala that October night in 2021 recognized the value of the LGBTQ community’s Los Angeles Blade. 

    That joy has been extinguished. On Wednesday, Dec. 11, after frantic unanswered calls from his sister Tammy late Monday and Tuesday, Troy’s longtime friend and former partner Arturo Jiminez did a wellness check at Troy’s L.A. apartment and found him dead, with his beloved dog Cody quietly alive by his side. The L.A. Coroner determined Troy Masters died by suicide. No note was recovered. He was 63.

    Considered smart, charming, committed to LGBTQ people and the LGBTQ press, Troy’s inexplicable suicide shook everyone, even those with whom he sometimes clashed. 

    Troy’s sister and mother – to whom he was absolutely devoted – are devastated. “We are still trying to navigate our lives without our precious brother/son. I want the world to know that Troy was loved and we always tried to let him know that,” says younger sister Tammy Masters.

    Tammy was 16 when she discovered Troy was gay and outed him to their mother. A “busy-body sister,” Tammy picked up the phone at their Tennessee home and heard Troy talking with his college boyfriend. She confronted him and he begged her not to tell. 

     “Of course, I ran and told Mom,” Tammy says, chuckling during the phone call. “But she – like all mothers – knew it. She knew it from an early age but loved him unconditionally; 1979 was a time [in the Deep South] when this just was not spoken of.  But that didn’t stop Mom from being in his corner.”

    Mom even marched with Troy in his first Gay Pride Parade in New York City. “Mom said to him, ‘Oh, my! All these handsome men and not one of them has given me a second look! They are too busy checking each other out!” Tammy says, bursting into laughter. “Troy and my mother had that kind of understanding that she would always be there and always have his back!

    “As for me,” she continues, “I have lost the brother that I used to fight for in any given situation. And I will continue to honor his cause and lifetime commitment to the rights and freedom for the LGBTQ community!”

    Tammy adds: “The outpouring of love has been comforting at this difficult time and we thank all of you!”

    Troy Masters and his beloved dog Cody.

    No one yet knows why Troy took his life. We may never know. But Troy and I often shared our deeply disturbing bouts with drowning depression. Waves would inexplicitly come upon us, triggered by sadness or an image or a thought we’d let get mangled in our unresolved, inescapable past trauma. 

    We survived because we shared our pain without judgment or shame. We may have argued – but in this, we trusted each other. We set everything else aside and respectfully, actively listened to the words and the pain within the words. 

    Listening, Indian philosopher Krishnamurti once said, is an act of love. And we practiced listening. We sought stories that led to laughter. That was the rope ladder out of the dark rabbit hole with its bottomless pit of bullying and endless suffering. Rung by rung, we’d talk and laugh and gripe about our beloved dogs.

    I shared my 12 Step mantra when I got clean and sober: I will not drink, use or kill myself one minute at a time. A suicide survivor, I sought help and I urged him to seek help, too, since I was only a loving friend – and sometimes that’s not enough. 

    (If you need help, please reach out to talk with someone: call or text 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. They also have services in Spanish and for the deaf.)

    In 2015, Troy wrote a personal essay for Gay City News about his idyllic childhood in the 1960s with his sister in Nashville, where his stepfather was a prominent musician. The people he met “taught me a lot about having a mission in life.” 

    During summers, they went to Dothan, Ala., to hang out with his stepfather’s mother, Granny Alabama. But Troy learned about “adult conversation — often filled with derogatory expletives about Blacks and Jews” and felt “my safety there was fragile.”  

    It was a harsh revelation. “‘Troy is a queer,’ I overheard my stepfather say with energetic disgust to another family member,” Troy wrote. “Even at 13, I understood that my feelings for other boys were supposed to be secret. Now I knew terror. What my stepfather said humiliated me, sending an icy panic through my body that changed my demeanor and ruined my confidence. For the first time in my life, I felt depression and I became painfully shy. Alabama became a place, not of love, not of shelter, not of the magic of family, but of fear.”

    At the public pool, “kids would scream, ‘faggot,’ ‘queer,’ ‘chicken,’ ‘homo,’ as they tried to dunk my head under the water. At one point, a big crowd joined in –– including kids I had known all my life –– and I was terrified they were trying to drown me.

    “My depression became dangerous and I remember thinking of ways to hurt myself,” Troy wrote.  

    But Troy Masters — who left home at 17 and graduated from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville — focused on creating a life that prioritized being of service to his own intersectional LGBTQ people. He also practiced compassion and last August, Troy reached out to his dying stepfather. A 45-minute Facetime farewell turned into a lovefest of forgiveness and reconciliation. 

    Troy discovered his advocacy chops as an ad representative at the daring gay and lesbian activist publication Outweek from 1989 to 1991. 

    “We had no idea that hiring him would change someone’s life, its trajectory and create a lifelong commitment” to the LGBTQ press, says Outweek’s co-founder and former editor-in-chief Gabriel Rotello, now a TV producer. “He was great – always a pleasure to work with. He had very little drama – and there was a lot of drama at Outweek. It was a tumultuous time and I tended to hire people because of their activism,” including Michelangelo Signorile, Masha Gessen, and Sarah Pettit.  

    Rotello speculates that because Troy “knew what he was doing” in a difficult profession, he was determined to launch his own publication when Outweek folded. “I’ve always been very happy it happened that way for Troy,” Rotello says. “It was a cool thing.” 

    Troy and friends launched NYQ, renamed QW, funded by record producer and ACT UP supporter Bill Chafin. QW (QueerWeek) was the first glossy gay and lesbian magazine published in New York City featuring news, culture, and events. It lasted for 18 months until Chafin died of AIDS in 1992 at age 35. 

    The horrific Second Wave of AIDS was peaking in 1992 but New Yorkers had no gay news source to provide reliable information at the epicenter of the epidemic.    

    “When my business partner died of AIDS and I had to close shop, I was left hopeless and severely depressed while the epidemic raged around me. I was barely functioning,” Troy told VoyageLA in 2018. “But one day, a friend in Moscow, Masha Gessen, urged me to get off my back and get busy; New York’s LGBT community was suffering an urgent health care crisis, fighting for basic legal rights and against an increase in violence. That, she said, was not nothing and I needed to get back in the game.”

    It took Troy about two years to launch the bi-weekly newspaper LGNY (Lesbian and Gay New York) out of his East Village apartment. The newspaper ran from 1994 to 2002 when it was re-launched as Gay City News with Paul Schindler as co-founder and Troy’s editor-in-chief for 20 years. 

    Staff of Gay News City in New York City, which Troy Masters founded in 2002.

    “We were always in total agreement that the work we were doing was important and that any story we delved into had to be done right,” Schindler wrote in Gay City News

    Though the two “sometimes famously crossed swords,” Troy’s sudden death has special meaning for Schindler. “I will always remember Troy’s sweetness and gentleness. Five days before his death, he texted me birthday wishes with the tag, ‘I hope you get a meaningful spanking today.’ That devilishness stays with me.” 

    Troy had “very high EI (Emotional Intelligence), Schindler says in a phone call. “He had so much insight into me. It was something he had about a lot of people – what kind of person they were; what they were really saying.”

    Troy was also very mischievous. Schindler recounts a time when the two met a very important person in the newspaper business and Troy said something provocative. “I held my breath,” Schindler says. “But it worked. It was an icebreaker. He had the ability to connect quickly.”  

    The journalistic standard at LGNY and Gay City News was not a question of “objectivity” but fairness. “We’re pro-gay,” Schindler says, quoting Andy Humm. “Our reporting is clear advocacy yet I think we were viewed in New York as an honest broker.” 

    Schindler thinks Troy’s move to Los Angeles to jump-start his entrepreneurial spirit and reconnect with Arturo, who was already in L.A., was risky. “He was over 50,” Schindler says. “I was surprised and disappointed to lose a colleague – but he was always surprising.”

    “In many ways, crossing the continent and starting a print newspaper venture in this digitally obsessed era was a high-wire, counter-intuitive decision,” Troy told VoyageLA. “But I have been relentlessly determined and absolutely confident that my decades of experience make me uniquely positioned to do this.”

    Troy launched The Pride L.A. as part of the Mirror Media Group, which publishes the Santa Monica Mirror and other Westside community papers. But on June 12, 2016, the day of the Pulse Nightclub shooting in Orlando, Fla., Troy said he found MAGA paraphernalia in a partner’s office. He immediately plotted his exit. On March 10, 2017, Troy and the “internationally respected” Washington Blade announced the launch of the Los Angeles Blade

    Troy Masters and then-Rep. Adam Schiff. (Photo courtesy of Karen Ocamb)

    In a March 23, 2017 commentary promising a commitment to journalistic excellence, Troy wrote: “We are living in a paradigm shifting moment in real time. You can feel it.  Sometimes it’s overwhelming. Sometimes it’s toxic. Sometimes it’s perplexing, even terrifying. On the other hand, sometimes it’s just downright exhilarating. This moment is a profound opportunity to reexamine our roots and jumpstart our passion for full equality.”

    Troy tried hard to keep that commitment, including writing a personal essay to illustrate that LGBTQ people are part of the #MeToo movement. In “Ending a Long Silence,” Troy wrote about being raped at 14 or 15 by an Amtrak employee on “The Floridian” traveling from Dothan, Ala., to Nashville. 

    “What I thought was innocent and flirtatious affection quickly turned sexual and into a full-fledged rape,” Troy wrote. “I panicked as he undressed me, unable to yell out and frozen by fear. I was falling into a deepening shame that was almost like a dissociation, something I found myself doing in moments of childhood stress from that moment on. Occasionally, even now.”

    From the personal to the political, Troy Masters tried to inform and inspire LGBTQ people.   

    Richard Zaldivar, founder and executive director of The Wall Las Memorias Project, enjoyed seeing Troy at President Biden’s Pride party at the White House.  

    “Just recently he invited us to participate with the LA Blade and other partners to support the LGBTQ forum on Asylum Seekers and Immigrants. He cared about underserved community. He explored LGBTQ who were ignored and forgotten. He wanted to end HIV; help support people living with HIV but most of all, he fought for justice,” Zaldivar says. “I am saddened by his loss. His voice will never be forgotten. We will remember him as an unsung hero. May he rest in peace in the hands of God.” 

    Troy often featured Bamby Salcedo, founder, president/CEO of TransLatina Coalition, and scores of other trans folks. In 2018, Bamby and Maria Roman graced the cover of the Transgender Rock the Vote edition

    “It pains me to know that my dear, beautiful and amazing friend Troy is no longer with us … He always gave me and many people light,” Salcedo says. “I know that we are living in dark times right now and we need to understand that our ancestors and transcestors are the one who are going to walk us through these dark times… See you on the other side, my dear and beautiful sibling in the struggle, Troy Masters.”

    “Troy was immensely committed to covering stories from the LGBTQ community. Following his move to Los Angeles from New York, he became dedicated to featuring news from the City of West Hollywood in the Los Angeles Blade and we worked with him for many years,” says Joshua Schare, director of Communications for the City of West Hollywood, who knew Troy for 30 years, starting in 1994 as a college intern at OUT Magazine. 

    “Like so many of us at the City of West Hollywood and in the region’s LGBTQ community, I will miss him and his day-to-day impact on our community.”

    Troy Masters accepting a proclamation from the City of West Hollywood. (Photo by Richard Settle for the City of West Hollywood)

    “Troy Masters was a visionary, mentor, and advocate; however, the title I most associated with him was friend,” says West Hollywood Mayor John Erickson. “Troy was always a sense of light and working to bring awareness to issues and causes larger than himself. He was an advocate for so many and for me personally, not having him in the world makes it a little less bright. Rest in Power, Troy. We will continue to cause good trouble on your behalf.”

    Erickson adjourned the WeHo City Council meeting on Monday in his memory. 

    Masters launched the Los Angeles Blade with his partners from the Washington Blade, Lynne Brown, Kevin Naff, and Brian Pitts, in 2017. 

    Cover of the election issue of the Los Angeles Blade.

    “Troy’s reputation in New York was well known and respected and we were so excited to start this new venture with him,” says Naff. “His passion and dedication to queer LA will be missed by so many. We will carry on the important work of the Los Angeles Blade — it’s part of his legacy and what he would want.”

    AIDS Healthcare Foundation President Michael Weinstein, who collaborated with Troy on many projects, says he was “a champion of many things that are near and dear to our heart,” including “being in the forefront of alerting the community to the dangers of Mpox.”  

    “All of who he was creates a void that we all must try to fill,” Weinstein says. “His death by suicide reminds us that despite the many gains we have made, we’re not all right a lot of the time. The wounds that LGBT people have experienced throughout our lives are yet to be healed even as we face the political storm clouds ahead that will place even greater burdens on our psyches.”

    May the memory and legacy of Troy Masters be a blessing. 

    Veteran LGBTQ journalist Karen Ocamb served as the news editor and reporter for the Los Angeles Blade.

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    Kristie Song

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  • Hurricane Helene displaced thousands of students. Some struggled to get back on track with school

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    SWANNANOA, N.C. — When 12-year-old Natalie Briggs visited the ruins of her home after Hurricane Helene, she had to tightrope across a wooden beam to reach what was once her bedroom.

    Knots of electrical wires were draped inside the skeleton of the house. Months after the storm, light filtered through breaks in the tarps over the windows. “All I could think of was, ‘This isn’t my house,’” said Natalie, who had been staying in her grandparents’ basement.

    At school, Natalie sometimes had panic attacks when she thought of her ruined home in Swannanoa.

    “There were some points where I just didn’t want people to talk to me about the house — or just, like, talk to me at all,” Natalie said.

    Thousands of students across western North Carolina lost their homes a year ago when Helene hit with some of the most vicious floods, landslides and wind ever seen in the state’s Appalachian region, once considered a “climate haven.” Across the state, more than 2,500 students were identified as homeless as a direct result of Helene, according to state data obtained by The Associated Press.

    While storm debris has been mostly cleared away, the impact of the displacement lingers for the region’s children. Schools reopened long before many students returned to their homes, and their learning and well-being have yet to recover.

    The phenomenon is increasingly common as natural disasters disrupt U.S. communities more frequently and with more ferocity.

    ___

    The Associated Press is collaborating with Blue Ridge Public Radio, Honolulu Civil Beat, CalMatters and Centro de Periodismo Investigativo in Puerto Rico to examine how school communities are recovering from the disruption of natural disasters.

    ___

    In the North Carolina mountains, the challenge of recovery is especially acute. After all, many families in rural, low-income areas already deal with challenges such as food insecurity and rent affordability, said Cassandra Davis, a University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill public policy professor.

    “I would almost argue that they don’t get the opportunity to recover,” Davis said.

    After Helene flooded her rental home in Black Mountain, Bonnie Christine Goggins-Jones and her two teenage grandchildren had to leave behind nearly all their belongings.

    “They lost their bed, clothes, shoes, their book bag,” she said.

    The family lived in a motel, a leaky donated camper and another camper before moving into a new apartment in June.

    Goggins-Jones, a school bus aide at Asheville City Schools, struggled to heat the camper during winter. Her grandchildren kept going to school, but it wasn’t top of mind.

    The area around Asheville, western North Carolina’s largest city, still has a significant housing shortage a year after the storm.

    The family of America Sanchez Chavez, 11, had to split up to find housing. Helene left their trailer home in Swannanoa uninhabitable, and money from the Federal Emergency Management Agency wasn’t enough to cover the renovations.

    America and some relatives went to stay at her grandmother’s apartment, while her older brother lived at a friend’s house. Eventually, America moved with her mother to a room at a Black Mountain hotel where she works.

    America said she is still frightened by rain or thunder.

    “At one point when the rain actually got, like, pretty bad … I did get scared for a while,” she said.

    Helene damaged more than 73,000 homes, knocking out electricity and water for weeks if not months. The destruction of local infrastructure also closed schools for large stretches of time, and a barrage of snow days exacerbated the time out of class even more. In rural Yancey County, which has approximately 18,000 residents, students missed more than two months of school last year.

    After natural disasters, it’s common to see a surge in students living in unstable, temporary arrangements, such as sleeping on a couch, staying in a shelter, or doubling up with another family, according to research from UCLA’s Center for the Transformation of Schools. Those arrangements qualify students as homeless under federal law.

    In Puerto Rico, more than 6,700 students were identified as homeless in Hurricane Maria’s aftermath during the 2017-2018 school year, the study found. Hawaii saw a 59% increase in its homeless student population following the 2023 Maui wildfires.

    In Helene’s aftermath, student homelessness spiked in several hard-hit counties, according to AP’s analysis of data from the North Carolina Homeless Education Program.

    Yancey County saw the region’s highest percentage increase. The number of homeless students went from 21 in the 2023-2024 school year to 112 last school year. All but 15 were homeless due to Helene.

    Some students enrolled in other school systems, at least temporarily. Others never returned.

    Terri Dolan of Swannanoa sent her two young children to stay with her parents in Charlotte ahead of the storm. After seeing the extent of the devastation, Dolan had them enroll in school there. They stayed over a month before returning home.

    “My job is to make money for our family and their job is to go to school,’” Dolan says she’d always told her kids. “Just because the school wasn’t open here, I felt like they needed to go to school and do their job.”

    Some districts receive federal money for services such as transporting homeless students to their usual school buildings and providing tutoring under the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act. But districts must apply in a competitive process, and they can’t request more money immediately after a natural disaster until the next application cycle. Many miss out on McKinney-Vento funding entirely.

    Helene-impacted students made up at least a fifth of the homeless population in 16 counties, but only six counties received McKinney-Vento money last funding cycle. Nationally, only 1 in 5 school districts receives McKinney-Vento money due to limited funds, said Barbara Duffield, executive director of Schoolhouse Connection, a nonprofit that advocates for homeless students.

    “If there’s a disaster, it’s going to involve districts that don’t get money from McKinney-Vento,” Duffield said.

    Gwendolyn Bode, a pre-law student at Appalachian State University, had to leave her mud-wrecked apartment complex after Helene. Told she couldn’t get campus housing, she found an Airbnb where she could stay at until her FEMA housing application went through, and then she moved into a hotel.

    She felt like she was drowning as she tried to keep up with her classes and a part-time job.

    “I can’t tell you what I learned,” Bode said. “I can’t even tell you when I went to class, because (mentally) I wasn’t there.” She found more stability after moving into an apartment for the spring semester.

    For Natalie Briggs, now 13, the grief of losing almost everything, coupled with the tight quarters in her grandparents’ basement, sometimes got to her — and to her mother, Liz Barker. Barker said it felt like a “time with no rules” because there was so much to deal with on top of her job as a health care worker.

    The circumstances sometimes led to friction. But Barker said overall, she and Natalie had “done pretty well” together.

    “She’s been a little bit more loving since all of this happened,” Barker said, smiling at her daughter.

    “I give her hugs and stuff,” Natalie said, “and I’ll tell her I love her, more than I did.”

    ___

    The Associated Press’ education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

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  • Could a homeless encampment response from 2018 work now?

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    In the coldest month of 2018, a massive encampment with children in tents shocked the system. 

    Hundreds of people including young children called the Franklin-Hiawatha homeless encampment home. It was called the Wall of Forgotten Natives.

    Officials quickly built a temporary navigation center to bring people inside. That was seven years ago. 

    Today, tents continue to pop up. Just this week, two separate mass shootings sent many to the hospital. 

    Steve Horsfield with Simpson Housing Services operated the center and says over 100 people eventually found housing in a seven-month span in 2018. 

    “We were able to see positive outcomes in terms of housing placements,” Horsfield said.

    The estimated cost: nearly $3 million with the city helping fund majority of the funds.  

    Many partners say the center yielded positive outcomes, but it was costly and came with challenges. 

    In a statement a Minneapolis spokesperson said, “The 2018 navigation center presented numerous challenges, was costly, and yielded mixed results for the individuals served. Since then, both the City and service providers have agreed there is a better way. Utilizing lessons learned, we’ve worked together to implement long-term, culturally specific solutions to better address the issue of unsheltered homelessness in Minneapolis.”

    Horsfield says it’s not a model to repeat, but one they learned valuable lessons from.

    “Service rich environment is really the best tool we’ve got to facilitate that journey for someone experiencing homelessness,” he said. 

    Hennepin County Senior Department Administer in Housing Stability Danielle Werder says the navigation center at the time was in response to a crisis. A time when there wasn’t enough outreach teams or dedicated housing focused case management.

    She says since then, the county took those lessons they learned and applied them to different services provided within the county. 

    “At this point in time, systems built out more robust diverse shelters people willing to come into,” Werder says. 

    She believes the navigation center was a model that worked then, but now says the focus is on long term housing solutions. 

    Red Lake Nation Tribal Leader Sam Strong was a leader during this time. He says the system as a whole has come a long way but the recent violence at encampments could mean a temporary navigation center could be the safest option to save lives. 

    “We have discussed this with the city and we would be very interested in continuing conversations, finding a place to provide navigation for these homeless people to find safe place to live,” Strong said. 

    County officials say unsheltered homelessness has decreased by more than 30% since 2020.

    Werder says they understand more needs to be done. That is why additional shelter beds will come online in November and street outreach will continue. 

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    Ubah Ali

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  • Cupertino to ban RV parking on city streets

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    Cupertino has become the latest Bay Area city to ban RVs and oversized vehicles from parking overnight on city streets — a new ordinance that many believe will help alleviate nuisance areas while others have expressed concern about those displaced.

    Despite arguments by some councilmembers that the city had not conducted enough outreach to alert those who will be displaced by the new restrictions, many thought the ban was long overdue.

    “We’re having a challenge which every city is having,” said Councilmember Ray Wang in an interview, asserting that Cupertino has seen an influx in RVs as nearby cities have enacted restrictions on parking for RVs and oversized vehicles. “If you’re the last city with (a ban), you’re the one left holding the bag.”

    Currently, the city has a 72-hour limit for vehicles parking on public streets, though vehicles were only required to move six inches to avoid a violation, said Cupertino Mayor Liang Chao in an email. “This is a loophole in the current law that we must fix.”

    Even though municipal law already restricts sleeping in vehicles, according to Cupertino Interim City Attorney Floy Andrews, some RV residents had parked on streets permanently, clustering in two locations in the city, triggering residents to voice concerns about safety and congestion.

    “The issue with the current ordinance is that it allows the vehicles to park substantially and indefinitely day and night,” said Andrews at a September 3 meeting. “This creates a nuisance. It impacts residents and businesses. It fails to prevent … individuals from living in vehicles.”

    After months of deliberation, the City Council settled on prohibiting oversized vehicles – such as RVs and campers – from parking on public streets citywide from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. Cupertino households are allowed 20 free permits annually, which would be obtained online and allow permit holders to park a vehicle on city streets for 72 hours.

    Additionally, the policy would ban “vanlording” — renting out vehicles like RVs and vans for human habitation.

    With the move, Cupertino joins several other cities throughout the Bay Area with RV parking restrictions. Late last year, Fremont passed an RV parking ban that required vehicles to move 1000 ft every 72 hours. In San Jose, the city is creating dozens of tow-away zones throughout the year focusing on areas with high complaints. Mountain View passed parking restrictions for oversized vehicles, but after a lawsuit settlement in 2022, had to designate over three miles of streets where oversize vehicle parking was allowed.

    The new Cupertino ordinance bans all overnight parking for oversized vehicles without a permit, and does not designate any areas in the city that are exempt from the ban. While the city has a safe parking program for cars, there is not a similar program for RVs and oversized vehicles.

    Although some residents and councilmembers who spoke at the council meetings said that RV restrictions in other cities had pushed people into Cupertino, others expressed concern that some of those living in RVs might be people working and attending schools in Cupertino. Chao noted that given the high cost of housing in Cupertino, some who work in the city might choose to live in RVs.

    Councilmember J. R. Fruen acknowledged while some living in RVs might not be in dire need, many are likely members of the Cupertino community “down on their luck,” and might be families whose children attend school in the city.

    “It’s very clear that we haven’t done the outreach on this situation to ensure we’re not constructing a Cupertino of cruelty and to ensure … that the streets will be cleaner and safer for all concerned,” said Fruen in an interview. “I think the public has the right to its right-of-way, but we also have to ensure that the people that are most vulnerable there aren’t swept away.”

    At an earlier City Council hearing on the issue, Fruen asked that along with the ban, the city create a plan of outreach to those living in the RVs to connect people there with services.

    The ban passed unanimously Tuesday and will go into effect in a month. City staff expect the policy to cost $51,000 in the first year due to expenses associated with the online permitting system and new street signs communicating the ban — a process that may take months to roll out.

    After a year, the City Council will return to the ordinance to assess its impact. “Any policy is an evolving process,” said Chao in an email. “The council has adopted a version that we think make most sense at this time and we will review its effectiveness and its impact after one year.”

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    Luis Melecio-Zambrano

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  • Grumdahl out as asst. commissioner for homelessness and housing at DHS

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    Democrats hold onto slain Rep. Melissa Hortman’s seat in special election, and more headlines



    Democrats hold onto slain Rep. Melissa Hortman’s seat in special election, and more headlines

    06:53

    The Minnesota Department of Human Services says Eric Grumdahl, who had been serving as its assistant commissioner for homelessness and housing supports, is no longer there.

    A statement from DHS to WCCO on Wednesday said Grumdahl’s last day in the role was Tuesday. 

    This comes as Department Chair and Republican Rep. Kristin Robbins issued a statement early Wednesday morning that said in part that Grumdahl had been fired. 

    The DHS went on to say the reason for “an employee’s separation is not public” due to Minnesota’s Data Practices Act. 

    Robbins says she was notified about Grumdahl’s alleged firing on Wednesday, just hours ahead of a 10 a.m. meeting involving the House Fraud Prevention and State Agency Oversight Committee on Housing Stabilization Services and Integrated Community Supports.

    “This is yet another example of DHS and the Walz Administration dodging accountability for their failures,” said Robbins. “I would have expected Assistant Commissioner Grumdahl to attend the hearing and answer questions today, but DHS never intended for him to come. While I’m glad to see they are finally starting to hold individuals running these programs accountable for fraud, doing it the day before the public hearing just shows how DHS tries to hide what is going on from legislators and the public.”

    Earlier this year, a search warrant filed with the U.S. District Court for Minnesota details a fraud investigation into a “massive scheme to defraud” the state’s Housing Stabilization Services program, which is run by the DHS. The investigation concerns the Minnesota Medical Assistance benefit meant to help find and maintain homes for people with disabilities — including mental illnesses and substance use disorders — as well as the elderly. 

    When the program started in 2020, it was estimated that it would cost taxpayers about $2.5 million a year. But by 2021, it cost $21 million. Last year, it ballooned to $104 million. The FBI said the housing program has “proved to be extremely vulnerable to fraud,” and listed eight business locations where the alleged fraud took place, including in St. Paul, Roseville, Blaine, Little Canada and Woodbury.

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    Krystal Frasier

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  • St. Pete motions to dismiss public sleeping suit filed by restaurant owner

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — The city of St. Petersburg has responded to the public sleeping lawsuit filed by downtown restaurant owner Ronicca Whaley by asking a judge to dismiss it due to vague assertions.


    What You Need To Know

    • The city of St. Petersburg filed a motion to dismiss a public sleeping lawsuit 
    • Ronicca Whaley’s one of the first people in Florida to file a suit under the new state law  
    • The city states the lawsuit makes vague assertions about Whaley’s beliefs
    • Whaley’s attorney stated she only has to show any person is being regularly allowed to sleep on public property under the law


    The city’s motion filed last month states, “The complaint warrants dismissal because it is replete with vague, conclusory and immaterial facts not obviously connected to any particular cause of action.”

    In July, Whaley accused the city of failing to enforce a new state law which prohibits local governments from regularly allowing overnight sleeping on public property, which she said has been harming her business Shiso Crispy.

    “The City’s failure to enforce this statute, particularly in Williams Park and the surrounding sidewalks near Plaintiff’s restaurants, constituents a blatant disregard for state law and undermines the safety, economic vitality and aesthetic integrity of the community,” states the complaint.

    According to the city, Whaley’s lawsuit makes vague assertions “based on information and belief” and should not be a catchall to assert a laundry list of real or perceived personal grievances.

    “Plaintiff’s ‘beliefs’ are not facts. There are no dates, times, nor names… this type of allegation is impossible to defend,” the motion stated.

    Last week, Whaley’s attorney, Sandford Kinne, responded to the city’s motion to dismiss. Kinne said the state law does not require Whaley to identify specific individuals. Instead, she only has to show any person is being regularly allowed to sleep on public property.

    “Defendant’s insistence that Plaintiff must produce the names of each individual sleeper, along with dates and times, would impose a burden that is neither found in the statute nor compatible with its purpose,” stated the opposition motion.

    Kinne stated his client is not required to perform a census of those experiencing homelessness and the court should allow the case to proceed to discovery.

    “Plaintiff’s factual allegations are neither vague, conclusory or irrelevant,” he stated. “The complaint is replete with specific instances of her personal observations of individuals sleeping in Williams Park and outside her restaurant.”   

    Whaley has said her goal is to get the city and county to create an area where the homeless are allowed to sleep overnight and get wraparound services. She also wanted to raise awareness about the problem downtown.

    Whaley’s one of the first people to file a lawsuit in Florida under the new state law.

    Attorney Kinne did not respond to a request for an interview. The city has a policy of not commenting on lawsuits. A court hearing on the matter has not yet been scheduled.

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    Josh Rojas

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  • 4-day Antioch resource fair offers free services to hundreds of homeless veterans

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    For Marine Corps veteran Deborah Taylor, a fishing trip organized by Delta Veterans Group in partnership with the East Bay Regional Park District on Sunday was more than just a chance to cast a line. It was a chance at a new life.

    “I hadn’t been fishing since I was a little girl. I thought it’d be fun to come out,” she said.

    Taylor caught three fish at the Antioch Regional Shoreline, but her real hope is to find permanent housing. For now, she sleeps in her car.

    “I’m hoping to find housing in Antioch,” she said.

    Taylor was one of hundreds of veterans who attended the four-day Stand Down on the Delta event this weekend at the Contra Costa County Fairgrounds. Organized by the Delta Veterans Group, the biennial fair brings together about 70 organizations to offer free services such as haircuts, medical checkups, dental care, meals, and housing placement.

    J.R. Wilson, president and founder of the Delta Veterans Group, said the event also focuses on helping veterans reconnect with their communities.

    “It’s about getting veterans that served their country to serve their community. So we give them that new mission,” Wilson said. “And this fishing [trip] is part of that. It’s to really teach them how to reconnect into their community, so then, they can launch off just like they did in the military.”

    Wilson said supporting veterans’ mental health is key to helping them succeed in other areas of life.

    Navy veteran Gabriel Alfonso is a testament to that.

    “I was homeless on the streets with my dog. [Back then], it felt like no one cared for me. And my life changed when I walked through those doors of Stand Down,” Alfonso said.

    Since then, he has found a job, a home, and stability. Now, he volunteers at the event.

    “It’s nice to be able to encourage and give hope to another veteran, because I’ve been in their shoes before,” he said.

    Coleman Nee, national commander of the Disabled American Veterans, said success stories like that of Alfonso’s give them hope.

    “[They need to] say, ‘Yeah, I need a hand up. Can you help me up?’ ” Nee said. “When they’re willing to do that, there are 1.3 million hands being stretched out to try and help them.”

    Taylor said she is ready for that help.

    “I have an interview on Monday. So hopefully, things will work out,” she said. “I feel very optimistic. I think things are going to turn around.”

    Organizers estimated the event would help nearly 500 veterans and their families before it wraps up on Monday.

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    Da Lin

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  • Neighbors of Elati Village want community relocated after RV fire destroyed vehicle

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    Residents near Elati Village in Denver’s Golden Triangle say the city ignored repeated calls regarding unauthorized vehicle encampments before an RV fire early Sept. 11.

    “For weeks, we received no response from these reports. Neighbors cited smoking, drugs, human waste, and other foul smells around these encampments. Neighbors have also reported witnessing Elati Village participants interacting with vehicle encampment residents and delivering items to them, leading up to the fire,” according to a statement issued by the Triangle 22 on Elati Homeowners Association, which represents 22 townhomes from 1323 to 1335 Elati St.

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    Aldo Svaldi

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  • Berkeley’s cash-for-RV program helps clear encampment, offers model for homeless solutions

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    A buyback program offering cash to people living in their RVs may become a model after the City of Berkeley effectively cleared out a homeless encampment this past January.

    It was so successful that UCSF Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative began a study to understand what works and what doesn’t work when asking people to move from an encampment into a shelter.

    For several years, Mike Jones had lived in his van at the notorious encampment on 2nd Street between Cedar and Page, until this past January, when he accepted an offer to get off the streets.

    “The program chose me, I won’t say I chose the program, they came around, they had a plan, and I needed change,” said Jones.

    The change came in the form of cash payment for his van, but also his own room at the Capri Motel on University Avenue, where, after several months working with outreach workers, he is now eligible to move into housing.

    “I’m waiting for placement, now,” said Jones. “They helped me get my affairs in order, paperwork, Social Security Card, ID, and even my birth certificate.”

    Jones is one of 56 residents, according to the UCSF study, who decided to sell their vehicle and move out of the 2nd Street encampment that the City of Berkeley had marked as a top concern.

    “I think there is only one word to describe it, which was dangerous,” said Peter Radu, who serves as manager for the city of Berkeley’s Neighborhood Services. “Scattered needles, raw sewage, active rodent burrows, you name it.”

    According to city documents, between August 2023 and July 2024, police were called to the encampment 369 times — 33.1% for high-priority calls. The fire department was called 81 times — 38 for fires and 43 for medical emergencies.

    Instead of just clearing the encampment, the city of Berkeley, through the state’s Encampment Resolution Fund, offered cash for people’s RVs, $175 per linear foot, $5,250 for a 30-foot vehicle.

    The deal came with a few conditions. Residents would receive 15% of the cash payment up front when they moved into the motel, and the rest of the cash once their vehicle was towed. And if they choose not to stay, they could keep the 15%, no questions asked.

    “If folks are really attached to this RV as their last remaining asset, that asset is not liquid. What if we liquefy that asset for them in the in the form of a cash payment?” said Radu. “And we found that overwhelmingly, for 29 out of the 32 vehicles that we targeted, the answer to that was, yes.”

    The motel room also provided residents, a sense of security and privacy, and a place to store their belongings.

    “We had seen how the use of motels and other non-congregate spaces where people have the dignity of their own private room compels folks who are, you know, previously reluctant to engage with homeless shelters to accept our offer and to move inside,” said Radu.

    Jones admits if he were offered a traditional shelter bed, he would have declined the offer.

    “The rooms are beautiful, you get a shower, you got microwaves, fridge freezer in there,” said Jones.

    The motel, which is operated by the nonprofit Dorothy Day House, also provides meals, additional storage, a bike parking lot and allows people to bring their pets. The real goal is to get residents out of the motel and through the lengthy process of permanent housing.

    “We’ve had four to five different people that have moved into permanent housing,” said Dorothy Day House Program Director Roshone Atkins. “We’ve also had some people reunite with family, which is really important because a lot of times when you’re out, in an encampment, you’re disconnected from your children or your sisters and brothers. And so, they have had the opportunity to reconnect with family.”

    Jones said the staff treat him and the other residents who moved from the encampment with respect.

    “They don’t look at you in a down way in nothing,” he said. “They understand, you know, because it could be them one day. You just never know.”

    The city is now looking to replicate the program by clearing a series of RV encampments in West Berkeley around Grayson St. and Dwight Way.

    Link to proposal: ECS Letter of Support – Signed.pdf

    Currently, they are working to secure funding to master lease a 32-room motel, contract with Dorothy Day house, and pay for another RV buyback.

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    Ryan Yamamoto

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  • San Jose clears Columbus Park homeless encampment as operation enters 3rd week

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    For the last 10 years, Columbus Park in San Jose wasn’t a park at all. It was a home for hundreds of encampments and RVs. San Jose, though, has started Operation Cleanup Columbus, and now only a few tents remain.

    A woman named Raquel, who only wanted to be identified by her first name, used to call Columbus Park home.

    “Last time I saw this field like this was when I first became homeless in 2012,” she said.

    She was one of the first to call this place home. It’s where she eventually raised her son before she was placed into a tiny home.

    “I get down on myself about that sometimes because I told myself I would never be homeless with my son because I was when I was a kid,” she said.

    As she looked at what was now an empty field, she was overwhelmed by a flood of memories.

    “Seeing this field like this is woah,” she said. “It’s truly breathtaking. It’s a lot of memories here. A lot of friends passed away here.”

    Raquel came back on Thursday night to help some of her friends still struggling to find housing.

    “They had his name,” she said. “He was one of the first people out here and now they just dropped him. It’s like they don’t really care. They act like they care but they really don’t.”

    According to San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan, more than 150 people have been housed as Operation Cleanup Columbus enters its third week, with 65% of those agreeing to move into temporary housing. Those who are not from Santa Clara County have been referred to their home county for services.

    She hopes this will help some of her former neighbors stay off the streets for good but also knows this isn’t a solution for everyone.

    “For some people, they’ve been out here so long that it’s hard to be in four walls,” she said. “So, they will be back out here. Maybe not here at this spot but back out on the streets, unfortunately. But for some people, this is the step they need to push them forward and get them a little bit closer to living a normal life or getting back on track in life.”

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    Andrea Nakano

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  • Oakland homeless encampment abatement policy proposal draws backlash

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    On Wednesday morning, Oakland leaders gathered to hear a new proposal to solve homelessness that immediately drew backlash.

    Outside City Hall, homeless activists were protesting what was going on inside. At a special meeting of the city’s public safety committee, Councilmember Ken Houston was presenting his proposal for a new Encampment Abatement Policy. But first he displayed current pictures from his old neighborhood of homeless RVs and junk blocking the sidewalks.

    “This is where I grew up. This is where my mother raised me. This is where I walked to school every day. Every day. And it did not look like this. We did not have to deal with this,” said Houston. “Someone has to take a bold stand. We cannot keep living in this condition, and we cannot continue to let individuals live in this condition.”

    Houston’s plan would allow the city to close camps without notice. Offers of shelter would be made “when available,” but would not be required. Vehicles in violation of city code could be towed, and all sidewalk camps would be subject to closure. And finally, people who return and reestablish a camp within 60 days could be cited or arrested. The plan drew harsh criticism from homeless advocates at the meeting.

    “The solution to the problem is not to take their stuff and put them in jail. The solution to the problem has got to be humanistic,” said longtime Oakland homeless advocate James Vann. “Oakland is not a city that wants to put its citizens in jail. We are not that Oakland.  We are better than that!  We can take care of our people, and we should and we must!”

    “The things that you guys want to take from us are the only things we own in this world,” said unhoused resident Shontoya Norbert. “We’re not perfect. Yeah, we need help. But to throw us on the street with absolutely nothing will fill up the jail, number one, OK?  You’re trying to criminalize being homeless when we can’t afford a home. It’s really hard to sit there and watch people make decisions in a life that they’ve never experienced, who’ve never walked a day in our shoes,”

    But Kevin Hester said his construction business was being heavily impacted by the encampment just outside his door.

    “We know this is a very difficult issue. But what is happening right now is not working. And something needs to change,” Hester said. “I’m born and raised in Oakland. My company is born and raised in Oakland. But if something doesn’t change, we may be forced to move out.”

    There are warnings that Houston’s plan, as currently written, could present a barrier to getting State and county housing funds. It appears to violate some requirements about providing advanced notice and alternative locations for sleeping. Nicole Dean, with Care for Community Action, addressed that issue in her comments.

    “Suddenly there’s all this urgency after years of resistance and delays to plans that would actually house people,” she told the committee. “This policy would undermine our ability to work with the county and the State to do that.  It threatens our access to the funding we need to provide that kind of housing.”

    Houston said his plan is in line with last year’s Supreme Court ruling that cities do have the authority to prohibit camping and sleeping on public property. He calls it a bold stand, and many agree with him that the current policy isn’t working. 

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    John Ramos

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  • Man charged with murder for role in St. Paul encampment shooting

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    The man accused of killing another man this summer at a St. Paul, Minnesota, homeless encampment is now facing a second-degree murder charge, according to a criminal complaint filed earlier this week.

    A spokesman for the Ramsey County Attorney’s Office says the 22-year-old suspect from Aitkin is making his first appearance in court on Wednesday for the death of 37-year-old Steffon T. Jennings of St. Paul.  

    The shooting happened during the early afternoon on July 20 along Maryland Avenue near Jackson Street. There, police found Jennings, who had been shot multiple times. He died a few minutes later. 

    An autopsy cited in the charging document says Jennings was shot seven times. The charges go on to say that a piece of paper with a handwritten phone number was found in the jacket that Jennings was wearing at the time.

    Witnesses then told police that two men, as well as a woman, had entered the camp shortly before the shooting. Officers were able to find surveillance video that allegedly showed a white Lexus being parked near the camp, and two men, as well as a woman, got out and walked toward the camp just after 1 p.m. Less than 15 minutes later, the two men returned to the car, and one of them drove it a short distance before walking away. 

    During an interview with police, a man said he was on his way back to the encampment when he heard the gunshots and said he had heard two men and a woman were involved, adding they sold drugs at the camp, according to the complaint. 

    After towing the Lexus and searching it, police found a wallet with the suspect’s ID inside, as well as a prescription with his name.  Police say they also found part of a drug ledger.

    Later that afternoon, a man approached an officer who was at a convenience store on Maryland Avenue East and asked to shake the officer’s hand. The charges go on to say the man passed a piece of paper, saying, “He and his girl did it,” and that the phone number on the piece of paper was for the gunman responsible for the encampment murder earlier that day. He went on to say an acquaintance of his gave him the information to then pass on to the police. 

    According to the complaint, the number passed to the police on that sheet of paper matched the number found on the paper found inside Jennings’ jacket. 

    Police used a database and found the number is tied to the man now charged with murder. 

    Witnesses told police the group didn’t stay at the encampment but were new and sold fentanyl. One of the witnesses confirmed the people he saw leaving the camp as the same people who were shown in a photo, getting out of the Lexus. That same witness said Jennings was shot because the trio “fronted him a ‘ball’” and he wasn’t going to pay the money back. 

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    Krystal Frasier

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  • St. Pete family displaced by sewage flooding face homelessness

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — A St. Petersburg family, whose house was flooded twice last year when the sewer system in their Disston Heights neighborhood backed up and overflowed from their toilet, received a notice on Thursday from Pinellas County to vacate the Seminole RV they’ve been temporarily living in.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Pennington’s home was flooded twice in 2024 by raw sewage overflowing from their toilet
    • Public Works said the toilet is the lowest point in the system and acts as a relief valve when over pressurized 
    • The city declined to purchase the Pennington’s home in May and instead Public Works installed a backflow preventer on the lateral line 
    • Pinellas County has given the Penningtons 20 days to vacate the RV the family of five has been temporarily living in since November


    “We don’t know where we’re going to go. We don’t know what we’re going to do,” said Jim Pennington, 53. “This is kind of a last resort for us. We feel honestly…we might be homeless if we’re kicked out of this location.”

    Pennington said a member of his church offered up the RV for free last November, which is parked on the side of a home in unincorporated Seminole. State law allows homeowners to put a temporary trailer on their property to live in for 36 months while repairs are being made to their flood-damaged home.

    In Pennington’s case, there was no place to park an RV outside of his St. Petersburg home. He asked Pinellas County for a permit to live in the RV outside his friend’s Seminole home. Pinellas County tried to be flexible and allowed the family to live in the RV, but complaints from neighbors and a change in the primary residence of the Seminole home shifted the stance.

    “The intent of the state law and the language of the permit allows residents to put a temporary RV on their residential property, which is what the single-family home property was when they initially moved into the RV there,” said Brian Pellerin, Pinellas County spokesperson. “Since then, the use of the property has shifted from residential to AirBNB, and the permit is no longer valid.”

    Pellerin said the county worked extensively with the Pennington family over the past six months and will connect them to community resources. The notice from code enforcement gave the Penningtons 20 days to vacate the RV. Rachelle Pennington, 48, said she’s worried about where they’ll end up with their three kids ages 17, 14 and 11, which she homeschools.

    “Now we’re under this ticking time bomb,” she said. “It’s not in our budget to go pay rent for an RV park, if we can even find one.”

    Pennington said he wishes he could move back into his St. Petersburg home, but he doesn’t have any money to repair it and lost 9 months while the city considered purchasing it.

    “They originally were kind of making it out, that they wanted to potentially purchase our home,” he said. “Instead, what they said is, ‘We’re not going to purchase your home because it doesn’t benefit us. It doesn’t benefit the stormwater system, or it doesn’t benefit the wastewater system.’”

    Pennington said the city has known since 2016 that his home had sewage backup problems, which peaked last year. Public Works Administrator Claude Tankersley wrote in a letter to Pennington that states:

    “We believe the reason sewage backed up into your plumbing during heavy rain events was because other users of the sewer system had removed the cleanout caps on their laterals.”

    Tankersley said the removal of cleanout caps was likely an attempt to drain stormwater from their properties allowed thousands of gallons to drain into the sanitary sewer pipes.

    “The surge of stormwater completely filled the sanitary sewer pipes until the sewage/stormwater combination found an easy way to escape — through the lowest points in the system,” he stated. “The sanitary sewer manhole and toilet acted as a pressure relief valve, allowing the water to exit the pressurized system at those points.”

    Pennington said he was shocked the city blamed his neighbors for the sewage flooding.

    “I think they’re trying to say, ‘Hey, our system is actually performing as it should, but the neighbors are not doing what they’re supposed to do,’” he said. “’That’s what’s causing your issue in your location.’”

    Tankersley said Public Works notified the users with missing cleanout caps that they must never remove the caps to drain their yards because they risk flooding someone else’s house with sewage. The city also bolted down the manhole cover and installed a backflow preventer on Pennington’s lateral line to prevent future sewer backups.

    “We wish they would have put this in sooner. I asked the city about solutions in 2016,” he said. “The sewage portion, we are hopeful, is maybe solved for the future. It doesn’t help us with recovering from our home the way it is right now and what happened already. And it doesn’t help the stormwater issues.”

    Spectrum Bay News 9 requested an interview with Tankersley, but it was declined. City spokesperson Samantha Bequer said that “given that there is currently an open claim with the City for the Pennington home, we are unable to comment.”

    Pennington said his claim for purchasing the home was denied in May and the claim for their ruined belongings was denied in June.

    “It’s not open anymore,” he said. “We just want a safe place to live in our city…(and) the city is looking out for our back.”

    The Pennington home is located in City Council member Richie Floyd’s District 8 who said he’s going to ask the administration for more information. Floyd said it’s a terrible situation, which shows the need for outreach after storms so people can get connected with resources as soon as possible.

    Pennington said that since they lived on high ground, they did not have flood insurance, the window to apply for an SBA loan has long passed and he’s not sure how they’re going to afford the estimated $150,000 to repair their sewage damaged home.

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    Josh Rojas

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  • Man, 37, sentenced for murder in shooting spree near south Minneapolis encampment

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    Neighbor “not surprised” by shooting at Minneapolis homeless encampment



    Neighbor “not surprised” by shooting at Minneapolis homeless encampment

    03:25

    A 37-year-old man has been sentenced for killing two men in the September 2024 shootings near a south Minneapolis homeless encampment, the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office said Friday.

    Joshua Jones of Bemidji was given a 35-year sentence by a judge for two counts of intentional second-degree murder. At least two-thirds of that sentence will be spent in prison. According to the attorney’s office, Jones pleaded guilty to the charges in July.

    Robert Milton Brown, 39, and Roland Scott Littleowl, 20, were killed in the Sept. 18, 2024, shooting spree. Littleowl was killed in an alleyway on the 2500 block of 17th Avenue South around 4:40 a.m., police said, and another person was seriously injured. Brown died nearly 12 hours later after a shooting on the 2500 block of Bloomington Avenue. 

    Police said a man suffered potentially life-threatening injuries in a third shooting on the 2300 block of 17th Avenue South around 7:20 p.m. Jones was arrested shortly after. 

    Court records show charges brought against Jones in the third shooting were dropped as part of the plea agreement.

    “While nothing will bring Mr. Brown or Mr. Littleowl back to their loved ones, this lengthy sentence will ensure that Mr. Jones cannot harm anyone else,” Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty said in a written statement on Friday.   

    Note: The above video first aired on Sept. 18, 2024.

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    Nick Lentz

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