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Homelessness, this and other Social Issues Education Resources in a division of Black Oak Ridge Productions ESIRCâ„¢ by Kevin Anthony Kozuh
Poverty, this and other Social Issues Education Resources in a division of Black Oak Ridge Productions ESIRCâ„¢ by Kevin Anthony Kozuh

 

In 2015, homelessness is considered an epidemic in several American cities. "Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti and seven of the 15 City Council members announced they would declare a state of emergency and try to find $100 million to cure what has become a municipal curse."  Homelessness in New York City has tripled since JAN2000, from approximately 20,000 people using provided nightly shelter services to more than 60,000 in JAN2015. These counts do not include those persons who choose to stay away from shelter providers.

 

Current reasons cited for an epic increase in homelessness are economic policies supported by the Republican Party, especially since 2000. During the last decade and more, a transfer of wealth from the poorer classes to the wealthier classes has affected widespread poverty across the country, later exacerbated by the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis.

 

Poverty and homelessness have also become methods of 'disruption' used against political activists, such as members of the Occupy Movement. Shut down in 2011 by national security agencies and local police forces collaborating with private business, members say they later lost jobs, defaulted on home mortgages, then became homeless. Incidents of domestic violence contribute to homelessness among women, who are often denied police protection and legal recourse.

 

In 2008, according to the United States Conference of Mayors, the three most commonly cited causes of homelessness for persons and families were a lack of affordable housing (cited by 72 percent) poverty (52%), and unemployment (44%).

 

The suggestions to alleviate homelessness included providing more housing for persons with disabilities (72%), creating more employment opportunities (68%), and building more assisted housing units (64%).

 

Over the past decades, the availability and quality of data on homelessness has improved considerably, due, in part, to initiatives by the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the US Department of Health and Human Services, the US Department of Veterans Affairs, and several nongovernmental organizations working with homeless populations. Since 2007, the US Department of Housing and Urban Development has issued an Annual Homeless Assessment Report, which revealed the number of individuals and families that were homeless, both sheltered and unsheltered.

 

It standardized the data collection processes and created more opportunities for government officials and service providers to remedy the problem of homelessness in the United States.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Homelessness in the United States is an area of concern for social service providers, government officials, policy professionals, and society at large. Although the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in January 2012 annual point-in-time count found that 633,782 people across America were homeless, other counts vary widely. In a recent approximation, an estimated 1.6 million unduplicated persons used transitional housing or emergency shelters. Of these people, approximately 1/3 are members of households with children, a nine percent increase since 2007. Another approximation is from a study done by the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, which states that approximately 3.5 million people, 1.35 million of them children, are likely to experience homelessness in a given year (National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, 2007). With 2007 as a benchmark, the data from the report showed a 6.8 percent decline in homelessness among individuals, a 3.7 percent decline of homeless families, a 13.1 percent decline of the unsheltered homeless population, and a 19.3 percent decline in persons experiencing chronic homelessness.

 

One out of 50 children or 1.5 million children in America will be homeless each year. In 2013 that number jumped to one out of 30 children, or 2.5 million. There were an estimated 57,849 homeless veterans estimated in the United States during January 2013; or 12 percent of all homeless adults. Just under 8 percent of homeless U.S. veterans are female. Texas, California and Florida have the highest numbers of unaccompanied homeless youth under the age of 18; comprising 58% of the total homeless under 18 youth population.

 

Because of turnover in the homeless population, the total number of people who experience homelessness for at least a few nights during the course of a year is thought to be considerably higher than point-in-time counts. A 2000 study estimated the number of such people to be between 2.3 million and 3.5 million. According to Amnesty International USA, vacant houses outnumber homeless people by five times.

Myths of Homelessness, and  Social Issues Education Resources in a division of Black Oak Ridge Productions ESIRCâ„¢ Director  Kevin Anthony Kozuh
Awareness and open minds to homelessness Director of ESIRC Kevin Anthony Kozuh

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Definition of Homelessness

By: the Homeless Hub

 

This is an important question to consider.  Many of us are quick to condemn people who are homeless for their personal failures and inadequacies. 

 

Some of us continue to believe that people choose to be homeless and prefer the lifestyle of the ‘vagrant’.  However, the experience of constant hunger, the enhanced risk of illness or injury, daily harassment by passers by, and the constant threat of violence make these assumptions questionable.  Any attempt to address the problem of homelessness requires that we understand what it is.

 

Defining homelessness is both complex, and simple at the same time.  

 

On the one hand, the term homelessness draws our attention to a complex array of social and economic issues that produce poverty and unstable housing, including an inadequate affordable housing supply, tenant insecurity, inadequate income, individual crises, health problems, mental health challenges, addictions, trauma, veterans issues, child abuse and involvement with the justice system. 

 

On the other hand, as David Hulchanski has argued again and again, the definition of homelessness is actually much more simple.  It is, he suggests, about inadequate housing, inadequate income and a lack of appropriate social supports (Hulchanski, et al., 2009).  Lack of housing is of course central to this definition.  Hulchanski often quotes U.S. housing researcher and activist Cushing Dolbeare to drive this point home. 

 

She wrote: “Homelessness may not be only a housing problem, but it is always a housing problem; housing is necessary, although sometimes not sufficient, to solve the problem of homelessness” (Dolbeare, 1996).

 

The Canadian Homelessness Research Network (CHRN) - working in collaboration with national, regional and local stakeholders - has developed a Canadian Definition of Homelessness.  This common definition provides all levels of government, community groups and researchers with a framework for understanding and describing homelessness, and a means for identifying goals, strategies and interventions, as well as measuring outcomes and progress.

Homelessness as a problem.

 

It is important to distinguish the individual and personal experiences of those who lose their housing, from homelessness as a broader societal problem.

 

The problem of homelessness and housing exclusion refers to the failure of society to ensure that adequate systems, funding and support are in place so that all people, even in crisis situations, have access to housing. The goal of ending homelessness is to ensure housing stability, which means people have a fixed address and housing that is appropriate (affordable, safe, adequately maintained, accessible and suitable in size), and includes required services as needed (supportive), in addition to income and supports. (CHRN, 2012: 1)

This distinction is important because while individuals and families will undoubtedly continue to experience crises that result in their becoming homeless, the problem of homelessness is something that we, as a society, can address.

 

Canada has long been home to people experiencing poverty, and homeless people have always needed charitable services such as emergency shelters and soup kitchens. Yet, homelessness as a social ‘problem’ has emerged only in the last two decades. Changes in our economy and housing market, as well as significant shifts in policies addressing poverty, have contributed to the homelessness crisis across the country. 

Many people will say that homelessness has been with us forever, and that the problem is not really new.  While it is undoubtedly true that throughout history and in different societies, there have often been people who are homeless, this is not the same thing as saying that homelessness has been around forever. 

 

Many researchers now recognize that our current homelessness problem really accelerated in the latter part of the 20th century (Hulchanski, et al. 2009). And this was not because more and more people decided to become homeless. 

 

It was a direct result of increasing levels of poverty resulting from the restructuring of our economy coupled with profound changes in government policy (Snow, 2008Falvo, 2009).  This has led to growing numbers of people ending up on the streets or in emergency shelters because they lacked access to safe, affordable housing.

 

Homelessness, then, is not defined strictly by an absolute lack of shelter (though this is the most obvious manifestation of it), but rather by the intersection of a range of social exclusionary factors that exacerbate poverty, limit opportunities and create barriers to full participation in society.

 

Real political solutions to homelessness rest not only in addressing the inadequate supply of affordable housing in Canada, but also in improving income security, equitable access to health care supports (including mental health and addictions) and justice, for example.

 

 

Homeless ness in canada discussed by Kevin Anthony Kozuh

Myths and Questions about Homelessness

 

Homelessness, despite its often very visible presence in urban areas, remains a commonly misunderstood social issue.

Stereotypes abound:

  • homeless people are all elderly men

  • homeless people are lazy/bums/drunks/sick

  • people choose to be homeless

  • they don’t want housing/jobs/education

  • homeless youth just don’t like the rules at home

Here at the Homeless Hub, we want to help change people’s understanding about homelessness by presenting research, facts, and stories that can educate and inform. In this section, we will be answering questions and dispelling myths to create a more informed public.

Have a question or myth you’d like to see debunked? Message us at thehub@edu.yorku.ca

 

FURTHER READING

 

How can someone with no income survive?

How Can We Improve Healthcare Access for the Homeless?

What are 5 ways to End Homelessness?

Which city in Canada has the most homeless people per capita and why?

How many people die as a result of homelessness?

How Can a Homeless Person Pay a Fine?

Should I Give Money to Panhandlers?

Why Don’t Governments Listen?

I’m homeless. Now what?

How Does Sexualized Violence Contribute to Homelessness?

What is National Housing Day? Where did it originate? What happens on that day?

What is World Mental Health Day?

What is World Homeless Day?

Do Homeless Women Experience Violence?

Homelessness Myths by Christine Schanes

Basic statistics about the realities of poverty faced by Canadians

 

  • 1 in 7 (or 4.9 million) people in Canada live in poverty.

  • In Edmonton, 1 in 8 individuals are currently living in poverty.

  • Poverty costs Canada as a whole between $72 billion and $84 billion annually; Ontarians pay $2,299 – $2,895 per year, while British Columbians pay over $2,100 per year.

  • Precarious employment has increased by nearly 50% over the past two decades.

  • Between 1980 and 2005 the average earnings among the least wealthy Canadians fell by 20%.

  • Over the past 25 years, Canada’s population has increased
    by 30% and yet annual national investment in housing has decreased by 46%.

​

Marginalized Groups: Members of society that are especially vulnerable to poverty including persons living with disabilities, single mothers, Aboriginals, elderly individuals, and racialized communities.

 

Persons living with disabilities

  • People living with disabilities (both mental and physical) are twice as likely to live below the poverty line.

  • Nearly 15% of people with disabilities live in poverty, 59% of which are women.

  • Estimates place the number of homeless individuals living with a disability or mental illness as high as 45% of the overall homeless population.

  • Children with disabilities are twice as likely to live in households relying on social assistance

 

Women

  • 21% of single mothers in Canada raise their children while living in poverty (7% of single fathers raise their children in poverty).

  • Women who work full-time earn about 72 cents for every dollar earned by men.

  • Women parenting on their own enter shelters at twice the rate of two-parent families.

  • to learn more click here

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