dborys's avatarPainted Black

But like words, numbers can be interpreted to serve a person’s agenda.  When confronted with the news that New York families are staying in homeless shelters 30% longer than they used to, the city mayor took a rather large leap of illogic.  Living in a shelter is “much more pleasurable” these days he’s quoted as saying in the article linked below.

Unfortunately, Mayor Bloomberg isn’t the only powerful, rich person who is out of touch with reality when it comes to homelessness.  That misconception is shared by way too many.

Read the article below to hear more about Bloomberg’s example of politicians putting a spin on facts to further an agenda outside of reality.

“The Mayor’s assertion that homeless New Yorkers are staying in shelters longer because they are ‘much more pleasurable’ is shocking and offensive,” said Mary Brosnahan, executive director of the Coalition for the Homelessness, in an emailed…

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No Vacancies

Ever since I began to educate myself about homelessness, I have felt frustrated by the wasted real estate in so many cities, big and small that sit vacant.  If I owned such a property, or was the one responsible for what should be done with it, I would welcome having squatters stay there to find some small refuge from  the weather. Screw the legalities or what the neighbors think.

It wasn’t until fairly recently that I found out in some countries, if squatters take over an abandoned house and stay there long enough, they actually gain the rights to the property under the right circumstances.  This has apparently been a time honored tradition in some cities.  This idea has now found a foothold in the U.S.

Recently I found the article below and applaud the efforts of the people who promote this movement to reclaim foreclosed, empty houses.  Let’s reclaim our resources, both property and people.

The term “squatter” conjures images of the predominantly young, urban hipsters who in decades past claimed vacant property in areas such as New York City’s Lower East Side. But with five times as many vacant homes as homeless people in the U.S. today, a new wave of squatters – just as likely to be hard-hit families like Smith’s as young activists making a political statement – is moving into vacant foreclosed properties in cities like Chicago, New York and Minneapolis.

via No Vacancies: Squatters Move In – In These Times.