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annm4peace

(6,119 posts)
Wed Sep 4, 2013, 01:44 AM Sep 2013

Dispatch from the War Zone - Week Two in Fresno, Ca (many pictures)

Last edited Mon Sep 9, 2013, 08:17 PM - Edit history (1)

(I only posted some of the pictures, there are more on the link)


The City of Fresno is in their second week of destroying homeless encampments in the downtown area. The photos of the demolition and people trying to escape (below) are from the encampment that is located between E street and highway 99 with California Ave and San Benito on either end of the encampment. These photos were taken on Tuesday, September 3, 2013.


The city work crews gathered at 7 a.m. and were soon walking through the encampment telling the homeless residents that they have to move on. Most homeless people I talked to did not have anyplace to go. Several said they would go to the H street encampment that is scheduled to be destroyed (by the city) next week and some said they would sleep on a nearby sidewalk. As I arrived at about 6:30 a.m. some people were still sleeping on sidewalks by the Poverello House, the location of last weeks demolitions.

It was the Poverello House, which is a social service organization that provides meals for the homeless, that pushed the city to destroy the homeless encampments. They argued that the encampments, with their run down appearance and alleged crime was preventing clients from entering their facility.

The demolition today followed a pattern that played out last week near the Poverello House. After the city’s attorney and sanitation workers walk through the encampment (with multiple video recorders capturing every conversation), they offer the residents bags to put their property in. If they have a lot of property, the city brings in a large 8 x 8 x 20 foot container. While property is being stored, the bulldozers start clearing out unwanted property and trash that has been left behind. Soon, the bulldozers are tearing into the shelters as many of the homeless are still pushing shopping carts away. Eventually every last shelter will be destroyed, property will be stored for 90 days, and the homeless will have no place safe to sleep tonight.
This house sits right across the ally from the homeless encampment. At least 1/2 of the homes in the neighborhood are boarded up and abandoned and yet you have homeless people living all around the area.

The Bulldozers Come Very Close to Where People are Standing




Hauling away a Water Bottle


This Woman Broke Down as the Demolition Began
by Mike Rhodes Tuesday Sep 3rd, 2013 1:28 PM


Getting out just ahead of the bulldozer
by Mike Rhodes Tuesday Sep 3rd, 2013 1:28 PM


3rd World
by Mike Rhodes Tuesday Sep 3rd, 2013 1:28 PM
This house sits right across the ally from the homeless encampment. At least 1/2 of the homes in the neighborhood are boarded up and abandoned and yet you have homeless people living all around the area.

************************
Mike who is editor of the Fresno Community Alliance can always use donations to support getting more of the papers out. click on the link: http://fresnoalliance.com/wordpress/?p=1313 see contact on the right.

******************************************************************
Yes, the City of Fresno could do better.. instead they choose to spend tax dollars in harassing and abusing the homeless then in helping them.

click below if you want to click on their name so you can email them.

http://www.fresno.gov/Government/CityCouncil/Default.htm

To contact any of the Council Members, please call (559) 621-8000

Blong Xiong (supports the homeless)
Councilmember District 1
Email FAX (559) 268-1043

Sal Quintero
Councilmember District 5
Email FAX (559) 490-5395

Steve Brandau
Councilmember District 2
Email FAX (559) 621-7892

Lee Brand
Councilmember District 6
Email FAX (559) 621-7896

Oliver L. Baines III
Councilmember District 3
Email FAX (559) 621-7893

Clint Olivier
Councilmember District 7
Email FAX (559) 498-2541

Paul Caprioglio
Councilmember District 4
Email FAX (559) 621-7848

***
Ashley Swearengin, Mayor
2600 Fresno Street
Room 2075
Fresno, CA 93721
(559) 621-8000

*********

and incase you need more info check out these two links

http://www.democraticunderground.com/10023547400

history of attacks and abuse on the HOmeless by the City of Fresno
***********************************

If you do call the Mayor's office, please post the staff's comments if you can, especially if you are from another state..
The Mayor is a rightwing born again Christian as was the previous Mayor, and the Chief of Police is also. The hateful kind of born again Christian as oppose to true follower of the works of Christ.. more followers of the power and money

8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Dispatch from the War Zone - Week Two in Fresno, Ca (many pictures) (Original Post) annm4peace Sep 2013 OP
K & R ~ nt 99th_Monkey Sep 2013 #1
the camps were dangerous Niceguy1 Sep 2013 #2
Yes much safer place to lay your head with no shelter. annm4peace Sep 2013 #3
comments from an activist who brought water. annm4peace Sep 2013 #4
If you see any coverage of this in national news annm4peace Sep 2013 #5
Thanks for continuing to cover this. NuclearDem Sep 2013 #6
that horrible. annm4peace Sep 2013 #7
received my Community alliance paper today of article of Fresno Homeless attacks. annm4peace Sep 2013 #8

Niceguy1

(2,467 posts)
2. the camps were dangerous
Wed Sep 4, 2013, 05:22 AM
Sep 2013

Without remedy...walkways were ramdon, congested without easy egress in the event of a fire.

annm4peace

(6,119 posts)
3. Yes much safer place to lay your head with no shelter.
Wed Sep 4, 2013, 11:11 PM
Sep 2013

it would be one thing if the City of Fresno had shelter for these people to go to but they don't.. the couple of homeless shelters there are in Fresno are full.

100's of these homeless are displace again.. the groups and individuals that have been trying to help will have a heard time finding these people.

shameful. It happens again and again. But who cares? There are 100's of churches in Fresno and some are trying to help. But the city of Fresno made it illegal for churches to allow homeless to set up tents on their land, or to even sleep on their steps.

There are empty hotels and 100's of empty houses... some of these homeless people used to be in those empty houses.

the majority of people in Fresno don't care, the vast Majority of Californians don't care. The Gov of CA doesn't care, the AG of CA doesn't care. The AG of the US doesn't care.

One Tomahawk missile costs 1.4 Million dollars. 1.4 Million dollars could go a long way in Fresno.

annm4peace

(6,119 posts)
4. comments from an activist who brought water.
Thu Sep 5, 2013, 01:58 AM
Sep 2013

Three of us were there in the afternoon. We had cold water for the few homeless still in the area. Several were packing their carts and just waiting, not knowing what's next, trying to hang on to a few possessions and watching their "neighborhood" be leveled.

 

NuclearDem

(16,184 posts)
6. Thanks for continuing to cover this.
Thu Sep 5, 2013, 09:35 AM
Sep 2013

Over here in Indy the IMPD just finished clearing out the largest homeless camp in the city, and one of my friends is having difficulty finding another place to camp.

annm4peace

(6,119 posts)
7. that horrible.
Thu Sep 5, 2013, 08:50 PM
Sep 2013

they can keep throwing our tax dollars at police depts, military and contractors but can't help our fellow citizens who find themselves homeless.

annm4peace

(6,119 posts)
8. received my Community alliance paper today of article of Fresno Homeless attacks.
Thu Sep 5, 2013, 10:24 PM
Sep 2013
http://fresnoalliance.com/wordpress/?p=8294

By Jessie Speer


The author, Jessie Speer (center), with Ray Polk (left) and Larry Collins (right) at the H street homeless encampment, which the City of Fresno plans to bulldoze on Sept. 9.
Imagine a young woman. Close your eyes and see her in front of you—her hopeful gaze, her restless hands. Now imagine one morning she can’t get out of bed. The doctor says it’s brain chemistry, but her family can’t afford the treatment she needs. There is no shelter space, so she ends up living in an encampment on the banks of a canal near downtown Fresno. One day the city announces it will bulldoze her tent, destroying everything she has.

This is not a nightmare. This is the real story of a young woman I met this summer while conducting interviews for a master’s thesis on Fresno homelessness with Syracuse University. Her name was Peaches, and she had freckles and curly hair. We sat outside her tent as she told me about her working-class upbringing, her bipolar disorder and her struggle with homelessness. (“Peaches” is a pseudonym, as the author protects the identity of all participants who wish to remain anonymous.)

Several weeks later, the city announced its plan to bulldoze three major tent cities in downtown Fresno. It will not provide residents with alternative shelter. When I asked Police Chief Jerry Dyer what will happen when the homeless resettle in other neighborhoods, he said the police will remove every camp in the city and continue doing so as long as necessary. I wondered what would happen to Peaches.

Fresno has the third highest rate of homelessness in the nation, and in 2011 it was the second most impoverished city. I came here to research how the local government was handling these high rates of homelessness and poverty. Over a two-month period, I interviewed more than two dozen politicians, shelter operators, community advocates and homeless people. I also attended community meetings and press conferences and read hundreds of pages of documents.

The more I learned, the more apparent it became that the city’s policy is to effectively drive the homeless out of Fresno. Politicians want to please business owners and see homelessness as a hindrance to downtown revitalization. Shelter operators claim that the homeless camps around their facilities have caused a decline in the use of services by other clients. In interviews, both groups consistently described all people without homes as criminal and deviant. The executive director of one of Fresno’s largest shelters told me that the homeless were “worse than infidels.”

I decided to write this article because I know firsthand that the homeless are not deviants. They are not separate and distinct from the rest of us. Like Peaches, the homeless are the mothers, fathers, grandmothers and cousins of the working poor in this community. Many homeless people work hard recycling or doing odd jobs all day long. Many people give away their last pair of clean socks to their neighbor or share their food with the community. And at no point during the hours I spent by myself at the camps did I feel threatened or unsafe.

At their latest press conference, city officials repeatedly referred to a recent string of violent crimes as the underlying reason behind the city’s new policy. Yet several insiders informed me that the plan to destroy the camps predated these crimes. And when I asked Chief Dyer how many of these violent crimes were committed by homeless people, he admitted only one perpetrator was homeless. Should more than 3,000 unsheltered citizens be driven out of the city because of the actions of one person?


The City of Fresno destroyed Yellow Feather’s shelter and confiscated her property. She now sleeps on the sidewalk near the Poverello House.


The City of Fresno destroyed Yellow Feather’s shelter and confiscated her property. She now sleeps on the sidewalk near the Poverello House.


Imagine a massive flood hits north Fresno and hundreds of middle-class homes are destroyed. Of those affected, some don’t have anywhere to stay and begin living in tents to survive. Would you expect the community to come forward and help them, or should the community destroy their tents and drive them out of the city? I’m sure most Fresno politicians wouldn’t hesitate to help middle-class families get back on their feet. We would never think to blame middle-class flood victims for their tragic circumstances. But a pervasive and historic ideology says that poor people are somehow less deserving of kindness.

Aristotle wrote that wealth is a prerequisite for goodness. Milton Friedman, one of the fathers of American neoliberalism, argued that the poor are the losers of the capitalist system. In this way, poverty becomes justified, and society is no longer responsible.
(Fresno has been ruled by these hateful, fake christian neo-cons for several decades)

But these luminaries forget that one’s lot is usually the luck of the draw, not a personal achievement. You are born with money, or you are born without it. And when you are born without money, you cannot afford disaster. Being laid off, missing a rent check, being arrested, getting sick, losing a loved one, surviving violence, getting hooked on drugs—every person I talked with who is living on the streets suffered from one or more of these problems.

The middle class and the wealthy have problems too. The difference is that their families will step in to pay for rent, quality healthcare, rehab or a lawyer. But for those already struggling with poverty, any blow can easily lead to homelessness. And once someone is living on the streets, it becomes harder and harder to bounce back, as physical health declines, depression sets in and drugs become a means of escape and self-medication.

As a society, we have several choices. We can help each other, we can do nothing or we can chase our poorest citizens out of town.

For years, Fresno chose the second option and did nothing to house the majority of its homeless population who lived in sprawling downtown encampments. But when these camps began to receive negative press, the city started a campaign of destruction.

Over the course of a two-year period beginning in 2005, the city bulldozed at least 50 camps. During the raids, bulldozers came at odd hours and crushed all structures. Several residents lost their animals. On one occasion, a man crawled out of his tent moments after an activist prevented it from being bulldozed.

On another occasion, a Fresno police officer pushed a woman’s shopping cart into an irrigation canal of rushing water. (irrigation canals run through the city of Fresno) The woman lived on a breathing machine due to severe asthma and had to attempt to replace her identification, birth certificate and medical records in order to requalify for disability.

The city destroyed another woman’s wheelchair, which left her sleeping outdoors without shelter or blankets. As a result, she slipped into a coma for two weeks. When city officials tried to destroy her tent on a second occasion, police threatened to Taser her husband if he intervened. The city’s policies resulted in hundreds of similar tragedies—tragedies that happened to real people, not the vague apparition Fresno politicians tend to dismiss as “the criminal homeless.”

In the wake of a lawsuit filed against the city in 2006, the sweeps slowed and tent city residents enjoyed a temporary reprieve. But the sweeps happened again in 2011, and again civil rights lawyers filed suit. Fresno officials I spoke with unanimously claimed that the lawsuits prevented them from doing anything about homelessness, when in fact the lawsuits only prevented them from unconstitutionally destroying people’s property.

As a corollary to this brutal and expensive policy, any attempts to create shelter options for the homeless have been seriously flawed and underfunded. In 2006, only 2% of the city’s homeless population was sheltered, and no new temporary shelters have been constructed since then. Currently, one of Fresno’s only emergency shelters is operating at less than 10% capacity because its executive director ousted anyone who uses a cellphone, who doesn’t pray and repent to Jesus on a daily basis, or who has any source of income. As one homeless man told me, this shelter is “worse than prison.” And many Fresno shelters have similarly draconian rules. (this is true, Fresno has many sick fundamental Christian churches)

Meanwhile, attempts at securing permanent housing for the homeless in Fresno have been plagued by corruption. In 2010, when the city received an $11 million federal grant for permanent housing for the homeless, the money was given to a private developer to construct a small housing facility. The chair of the board that allocated the money also happened to be the CEO of the company that constructed the building. This facility now stands as the exemplary model for future housing for the homeless.

Thus, homelessness has become an industry in which various developers, shelters and service providers vie for government money. These problems can and should be addressed. But the city is so focused on driving the homeless out of town that the time and resources needed to do so are sorely lacking.

During my time here, I faced the real, everyday humanity of the people who are living on the streets of Fresno, and I can no longer remain impartial to the city’s policies. The way Fresno handles homelessness is not only rooted in an inhumane ideology, it is also irrational. This city has tried this tactic before in 2005 and 2011, and in both instances it failed. Homelessness is still a persistent problem. It’s time for a new tactic.

Jessie Speer is pursuing a master’s degree in geography at Syracuse University. Contact her at jlspeer@syr.edu.
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** the City Officials who continue to abuse those who are homeless need to be held accountable. When are the Feds or the State going to step in and arrest these Officials ? How bad does it have to get. Homeless people have already died.. and more will die from this latest assault. *** Who cares?


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