These Motel Rooms Are the Last Resort For Homeless Families
http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/these-motel-rooms-are-last-resort-homeless-families
The Royal Park Hotel is a hulking brute of a building in Los Angeless Westlake neighborhood, a few miles from downtown. With its chain-link barricades, its entry passage through an underground garage, and its strict security procedures for visitors, it would feel like a fortress against the squalor of its surroundings if the blight werent even more pronounced on the inside.
Guests at the Royal Park looking for drugs dont even have to leave the building to find them; in fact, the motel is where people in the neighborhood come to score. You got people who come in the front of this building at 2, 3 in the morning, says Monica Nixon, whose family is staying at the motel. And theyll ask, Can you go up there and get me crack? Can you go up there and get me meth? I call it the Twilight Zone.
Monica and her family outside their room
Monica moved into the Royal Park Hotel in August, after being evicted from her apartment. She and her four kidsHonesty, Johnny, Steven and Savannahlive in a unit that looks to be around 150 square feet between the bedroom, the bathroom, the closet and the kitchenette. When its time to go to bed, Monicas kids curl up on two mattresses. Monica sleeps on a couch donated by Savannahs school.
The crowded halls of the Royal Park present dangers in their own right. On Christmas Day of last year, a fire ripped through the motel (then known as the J.J. Park, and before that the Nutel Motel: the buildings name, like its clientele, is transient). A tenant had left a hot plate unattended. Six people were injured, but that number could have been higher if residents hadnt pulled together to help one another out of the burning building. A lot of people here have walked a hard road, Monica said. But when tragedy happened, we saw the heart of those who still got heart left.