Yeah... I half expected her to speculate all the way to "If a meteor wiped out the Landlord & Tenant courthouse, maybe she would not have been evicted." |
I don't think you can blame the school. When a parent constantly lies to the school and submits fraudulent notes what do you expect them to do? I think they handled it as best they could. When the lies got to be to much they referred it to social services. Relisha's Mom let her down not her school. |
+1 it is a little much. How about "if she paid her rent she wouldn't have been evicted" |
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This weeks episode criticizing the Days Inn was similar. Of course the Days Inn on New York Ave is going to be depressing but if you literally have nowhere else to go, it is a roof over your head.
I'm not crazy about the parents sharing a room long term with children of mixed genders but before the Days Inn they were bunking with the sister and her family in a one bedroom so the Days Inn may have given them more space. The shelter sounds like a disaster and it does seem like no one wanted to commit to improving it since was supposed to be temporary but again, any roof over your head is better than none. |
Also the complaints about it not being walkable. Like, they aren't purchasing a condo... it's somewhere to keep you off the street and out of the elements. Also, while it's not a super beautiful area there are sidewalks and crosswalks, there's McDonald's, Taco Bell, and if you want some fresh air it's walkable to the Arboretum. |
The mother initially lied about her "treatment" so the school didn't know for a while. This is 100% on the mother, whatever her impairments. Birth control after having 4 kids kind of defeats the purpose. I know a few years ago she was fighting to get her other kids back from foster care. I believe her oldest was actually adopted but not sure of the others. |
| What’s the answer though to prevent another story like this? |
Mandating a family mentor or you lose your kids. |
+1 Or more resources for social services and really strict attendance policies at school. Like regardless of an excuse note from a doctor, after three days in a row a social worker or some other program worker does a well check on the child. That won’t happen because of the resources needed and the parent complaints you will get from kids on ski vacations with their parents, but attendance policies have little backbone right now. |
a family with multiple evictions and small kids should be put on a track for intensive interventions and stable housing. |
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Intensive MANDATORY interventions and stable housing while being taught how to literally pay your bills and budget. Shamika had a rent subsidy and Antonio said he gave he money for rent but she didn't pay. Sitting her down and showing her that if you don't give the landlord $xx you won't be able to stay in the apartment, might have been a good start.
Having affordable housing available is critical too of course and this impacts more than the completely disenfranchised. Housing costs in major US markets have widened the divide between the have and the have nots. If you work full time you should be able to afford housing without 1000 roommates. To those spitting on the low paying jobs, I think the pandemic should have shown you that somebody being willing to perform these jobs is critical. |
Birth control after having 4 kids kind of defeats the purpose. I know a few years ago she was fighting to get her other kids back from foster care. I believe her oldest was actually adopted but not sure of the others. A PP posted about this. Child 1 was adopted, Child 2 has been difficult to place, and Child 3 is in foster care. She will never get them back, and truly hope she does not have any more. |
I think my issue is that a single parent with four kids will not be able to afford affordable housing on a minimum wage job. Having kids really young is one of the factors keeping people in poverty. Have five kids by the time you are 28 with no college degree or stable partner? How can you possible afford housing? And also she had subsidies for housing and still was evicted multiple times. The system was trying to help. |
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Stating the obvious but there are no easy answers. I'm uncomfortable with forced sterilization or birth control but very few people even with a college degree and a two parent family can manage easily 4 at 28. Throw in a minimum wage earning potential with not much hope for advancement and it would be near impossible. Someone has to watch the kids so working is limited by one parent.
A few years ago Shamika posted on her Facebook page that life was peaceful. That was after losing the kids. As much as I judge her for her choices, I believe the sincerity of that post. Four kids and another adult in one room must have been a nightmare. As far as I can tell, she hasn't has any more children and I hope that as she ages, she doesn't. I hope the other boys are doing well. The hard to place child probably isn't but maybe there is hope for the adopted one and the one in foster care. |
| The podcast has made no mention of Irving Rudd, Relisha's father and the father of the oldest boy. He was sent to jail for beating to death an infant in his care so he is no prize. He's out now and was accused of further bad behavior but beat the charges (no pun intended) The entire situation is beyond awful. |