Why are there so many more homeless people living in our streets? New Yorkers all over the city are asking.
The last Quinnipiac poll reported that well over half of New York voters (62%) disapprove of the way our mayor is handling poverty and homelessness. De Blasio’s approval rating on handling homelessness was only 28%, a trend that was consistent across boroughs and ethnicities.
Back in 2015, the mayor has announced a $22 million mental health effort that will include more caseworkers at shelters and more outreach personnel to tend to mentally ill people. Like all politicians, De Blasio also blames his predecessor, Michael Bloomberg, for contributing to the homelessness of the poor and mentally ill. While De Blasio has rightly claimed that living on the streets “is not against the law,” urinating on the sidewalk or apartment building wall is a crime and a quality-of-life issue for all New Yorkers. Besides, doesn’t it seem like arguing about the legality of living on the street is missing the point in a big way?
I don’t claim to have the answer to homelessness, but one thing I know for sure: New York is on the verge of becoming an exclusive playground for the rich. (Think Hunger Games.) As real estate prices skyrocket, owning a home anywhere in Manhattan, Brooklyn or Queens is becoming more and more out of reach for the middle class. Rentals are becoming less and less affordable as the supply of rent-stabilized and rent-controlled apartments continues to dwindle.
In some ways, I believe we have created a culture that is the modern-day equivalent of pre-revolutionary France. Whatever the politicians say or do, they might as well be quoting Marie Antoinette who famously said of the hungry poor: “Let them eat cake.” With the exception of Michael Bloomberg, Jimmy Carter, and perhaps a few others, politicians are funded by wealthy individuals, corporations and super-PACs. None of them are going to play Robin Hood and risk losing their financial backers. Certainly De Blasio—despite his stated good intentions—has not made any headway in providing more or better quality housing for the most vulnerable members of society.
What I keep wondering every time I see a homeless person on the streets of Manhattan (an alarmingly frequent occurrence) is what happened to that individual’s family? Once upon a time those men and women who now huddle in filthy sleeping bags or under cardboard boxes were innocent babies, some of whom must have been welcomed into a family nest and loved. Obviously, the fairy tale was fleeting, and for all kinds of reasons, the nightmare of living on the streets became a reality.
For me, this type of reflection is dangerous and worrisome. What will happen to my daughter Samantha and other adults on the autistic spectrum when their parents pass away? Will they end up in the streets or warehoused in sub-standard living conditions?
Maybe we should look at the Israeli solution for housing young adults with autism. In 2014 the ALUT Fellowship House opened as a home-for-life for 24 young adults with autism, who function at various levels and range in age from 18 to 28. Some of these residents interact with their environment, have jobs or attend college and operate independently in many areas. Fellowship House is located in a desirable area of Tel Aviv, overlooking two rivers and next to a well-maintained park, so residents can ride their bikes or stroll and shop in the neighborhood. Young adults at Fellowship House are divided into three groups of eight. They each have their own room, but eat together and share common area where they can watch TV and interact. The goal of the facility is to provide a family lifestyle, while taking the needs of each individual into consideration.
In The Journey Magazine, ALUT’s stated mission is to ensure “the well-being, rehabilitation, future and economic status of persons with autism in Israel.” While providing educational, residential, vocational, and leisure-time services to people with autism, ALUT works to promote their rights and improve the services available to them and their families. Now that sounds like a plan with vision, doesn’t it?
At the opening ceremony of Fellowship House, Rabbi Eckstein addressed the crowd and said: “If we want to progress and set an example for the world through our values and care for our fellow man and society’s weakest, it can only be done by all three sectors—the government, the non-profit sector, and the business sector—working together. ‘A cord of three strands is not quickly broken,’ we learn in Ecclesiastes 4:12. The Fellowship House is an example of all relevant factors coming together.” Of equal importance, he emphasized, was that this house represented “Christian and Jewish friends around the world coming together to offer compassionate support for Israelis in need.”
Hello, America, is anyone listening?
If Israel—a tiny nation perpetually at war—can provide a home and dignified lifestyle to young people with autism, why can’t we do that here in the USA, with greater resources and more power? Come to think of it, why limit the Fellowship House model to people with autism?
Maybe it’s a pipe dream, but why not expand Fellowship philosophy to help house our homeless poor, mentally ill and learning disabled populations? Instead of allowing the chaotic avarice created by various “interest groups” contributing millions of dollars to campaigns where politicians give speeches about complicated problems that they hope will please their constituents, why not invest in concrete solutions?
What about something simple and obvious like homes for all humans?
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Originally Published on The Never-Empty Nest
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