Dupont circle deteriorating

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Saw Gonzaga students handing out care packages and talking to residents in the NoMa encampments today. We can sit behind our screens and complain about how things should be, but nothing is going to change until a quorum of people put actions behind words.


They've been really active on that front! I saw a ton of them doing the same thing a week before. Lots of volunteers in NoMa and by the Hill are coming to the encampments with wheelbarrows of food, supplies, etc.


I'm sure that makes them feel good, but all it does is help/encourage these tent communities to stay, which isn't good for anyone.


Agreed.

How does this help the problem long-term? It just encourages people to stay in these tent communities, which are definitely not what the city should be aiming for as a permanent solution.


Liberal here. (non-fascist, opposed to the GOP from Reagan through Trump and all in between. Does that make me a liberal? Anyway.)

The tent cities are bad. No one should be living on the streets. This is 100% Bowser's problem to address and the only way to fix it is to provide services to get people off the streets (carrot) and then require they not camp on the streets (stick.)

Is there any effort out there to do this?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Saw Gonzaga students handing out care packages and talking to residents in the NoMa encampments today. We can sit behind our screens and complain about how things should be, but nothing is going to change until a quorum of people put actions behind words.


They've been really active on that front! I saw a ton of them doing the same thing a week before. Lots of volunteers in NoMa and by the Hill are coming to the encampments with wheelbarrows of food, supplies, etc.


I'm sure that makes them feel good, but all it does is help/encourage these tent communities to stay, which isn't good for anyone.


Agreed.

How does this help the problem long-term? It just encourages people to stay in these tent communities, which are definitely not what the city should be aiming for as a permanent solution.


+1 to both PPs

It’s not just the Gonzaga boys; I’ve lots of other volunteers (women in their 30s, families with small children) doing the same thing all over the city. It’s truly door-to-door, A+ service. Why wouldn’t the homeless stay?


And then these women go back to their suburban homes, where they can live without having to deal with the direct effects of homelessness on THEIR neighborhoods. And feel good about themselves, to boot.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Saw Gonzaga students handing out care packages and talking to residents in the NoMa encampments today. We can sit behind our screens and complain about how things should be, but nothing is going to change until a quorum of people put actions behind words.


They've been really active on that front! I saw a ton of them doing the same thing a week before. Lots of volunteers in NoMa and by the Hill are coming to the encampments with wheelbarrows of food, supplies, etc.


I'm sure that makes them feel good, but all it does is help/encourage these tent communities to stay, which isn't good for anyone.


Agreed.

How does this help the problem long-term? It just encourages people to stay in these tent communities, which are definitely not what the city should be aiming for as a permanent solution.


+1 to both PPs

It’s not just the Gonzaga boys; I’ve lots of other volunteers (women in their 30s, families with small children) doing the same thing all over the city. It’s truly door-to-door, A+ service. Why wouldn’t the homeless stay?


And then these women go back to their suburban homes, where they can live without having to deal with the direct effects of homelessness on THEIR neighborhoods. And feel good about themselves, to boot.


Totally. Free sandwiches cause homelessness.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:

Totally. Free sandwiches cause homelessness.


I think we can all agree that the problem is lack of services -- mental health, shelter, food -- as well as secondarily, a tolerance for living in tents on a residential sidewalk.

(Liberal here again)
What's the Bowser plan for fixing this, for providing more services?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Saw Gonzaga students handing out care packages and talking to residents in the NoMa encampments today. We can sit behind our screens and complain about how things should be, but nothing is going to change until a quorum of people put actions behind words.


They've been really active on that front! I saw a ton of them doing the same thing a week before. Lots of volunteers in NoMa and by the Hill are coming to the encampments with wheelbarrows of food, supplies, etc.


I'm sure that makes them feel good, but all it does is help/encourage these tent communities to stay, which isn't good for anyone.


Agreed.

How does this help the problem long-term? It just encourages people to stay in these tent communities, which are definitely not what the city should be aiming for as a permanent solution.


+1 to both PPs

It’s not just the Gonzaga boys; I’ve lots of other volunteers (women in their 30s, families with small children) doing the same thing all over the city. It’s truly door-to-door, A+ service. Why wouldn’t the homeless stay?


And then these women go back to their suburban homes, where they can live without having to deal with the direct effects of homelessness on THEIR neighborhoods. And feel good about themselves, to boot.


Totally agree with this statement.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Saw Gonzaga students handing out care packages and talking to residents in the NoMa encampments today. We can sit behind our screens and complain about how things should be, but nothing is going to change until a quorum of people put actions behind words.


They've been really active on that front! I saw a ton of them doing the same thing a week before. Lots of volunteers in NoMa and by the Hill are coming to the encampments with wheelbarrows of food, supplies, etc.


I'm sure that makes them feel good, but all it does is help/encourage these tent communities to stay, which isn't good for anyone.


Agreed.

How does this help the problem long-term? It just encourages people to stay in these tent communities, which are definitely not what the city should be aiming for as a permanent solution.


+1 to both PPs

It’s not just the Gonzaga boys; I’ve lots of other volunteers (women in their 30s, families with small children) doing the same thing all over the city. It’s truly door-to-door, A+ service. Why wouldn’t the homeless stay?


And then these women go back to their suburban homes, where they can live without having to deal with the direct effects of homelessness on THEIR neighborhoods. And feel good about themselves, to boot.


Totally. Free sandwiches cause homelessness.


Who said that? Nobody.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Saw Gonzaga students handing out care packages and talking to residents in the NoMa encampments today. We can sit behind our screens and complain about how things should be, but nothing is going to change until a quorum of people put actions behind words.


They've been really active on that front! I saw a ton of them doing the same thing a week before. Lots of volunteers in NoMa and by the Hill are coming to the encampments with wheelbarrows of food, supplies, etc.


I'm sure that makes them feel good, but all it does is help/encourage these tent communities to stay, which isn't good for anyone.


Agreed.

How does this help the problem long-term? It just encourages people to stay in these tent communities, which are definitely not what the city should be aiming for as a permanent solution.


+1 to both PPs

It’s not just the Gonzaga boys; I’ve lots of other volunteers (women in their 30s, families with small children) doing the same thing all over the city. It’s truly door-to-door, A+ service. Why wouldn’t the homeless stay?


And then these women go back to their suburban homes, where they can live without having to deal with the direct effects of homelessness on THEIR neighborhoods. And feel good about themselves, to boot.


Totally agree with this statement.


+1

And then the ones with kids will post about it all over FB about how it's a "teaching moment" for the children. How great that the homeless can serve as a live example of their ideology while the arbiters of that ideology go back to their suburban homes.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:

Totally. Free sandwiches cause homelessness.


I think we can all agree that the problem is lack of services -- mental health, shelter, food -- as well as secondarily, a tolerance for living in tents on a residential sidewalk.

(Liberal here again)
What's the Bowser plan for fixing this, for providing more services?


Bowser is incredibly busy with her graffiti and FACES successes to be bothered with the deteriorating city.
Anonymous
I agree stop passing stuff out in the street. Donate to a shelter or not at all. And we need beds in institutions and day shelters, period.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I agree stop passing stuff out in the street. Donate to a shelter or not at all. And we need beds in institutions and day shelters, period.


+ 1 DC used to have this. The city has truly gotten worse, not better.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I agree stop passing stuff out in the street. Donate to a shelter or not at all. And we need beds in institutions and day shelters, period.


+ 1 DC used to have this. The city has truly gotten worse, not better.


+2
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I agree stop passing stuff out in the street. Donate to a shelter or not at all. And we need beds in institutions and day shelters, period.


Nope. Shelters don't work. They can be truly awful, especially during a pandemic. Fund housing then we won't need to give them stuff on the street.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Saw Gonzaga students handing out care packages and talking to residents in the NoMa encampments today. We can sit behind our screens and complain about how things should be, but nothing is going to change until a quorum of people put actions behind words.


They've been really active on that front! I saw a ton of them doing the same thing a week before. Lots of volunteers in NoMa and by the Hill are coming to the encampments with wheelbarrows of food, supplies, etc.


I'm sure that makes them feel good, but all it does is help/encourage these tent communities to stay, which isn't good for anyone.


Agreed.

How does this help the problem long-term? It just encourages people to stay in these tent communities, which are definitely not what the city should be aiming for as a permanent solution.


Liberal here. (non-fascist, opposed to the GOP from Reagan through Trump and all in between. Does that make me a liberal? Anyway.)

The tent cities are bad. No one should be living on the streets. This is 100% Bowser's problem to address and the only way to fix it is to provide services to get people off the streets (carrot) and then require they not camp on the streets (stick.)

Is there any effort out there to do this?

Not all that liberal (well, by DC standards, but very "classically" liber) and I agree with you 1000%. Giving people the "freedom" to camp outdoors is a travesty.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Saw Gonzaga students handing out care packages and talking to residents in the NoMa encampments today. We can sit behind our screens and complain about how things should be, but nothing is going to change until a quorum of people put actions behind words.


They've been really active on that front! I saw a ton of them doing the same thing a week before. Lots of volunteers in NoMa and by the Hill are coming to the encampments with wheelbarrows of food, supplies, etc.


I'm sure that makes them feel good, but all it does is help/encourage these tent communities to stay, which isn't good for anyone.


Agreed.

How does this help the problem long-term? It just encourages people to stay in these tent communities, which are definitely not what the city should be aiming for as a permanent solution.


Liberal here. (non-fascist, opposed to the GOP from Reagan through Trump and all in between. Does that make me a liberal? Anyway.)

The tent cities are bad. No one should be living on the streets. This is 100% Bowser's problem to address and the only way to fix it is to provide services to get people off the streets (carrot) and then require they not camp on the streets (stick.)

Is there any effort out there to do this?

Not all that liberal (well, by DC standards, but very "classically" liber) and I agree with you 1000%. Giving people the "freedom" to camp outdoors is a travesty.


You think the problem is that they have too much freedom? I don't understand. Do you think that if we had the police kick them out and toss their belongings that they would suddenly clean up, get a job, and rent an apartment??
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Saw Gonzaga students handing out care packages and talking to residents in the NoMa encampments today. We can sit behind our screens and complain about how things should be, but nothing is going to change until a quorum of people put actions behind words.


They've been really active on that front! I saw a ton of them doing the same thing a week before. Lots of volunteers in NoMa and by the Hill are coming to the encampments with wheelbarrows of food, supplies, etc.


I'm sure that makes them feel good, but all it does is help/encourage these tent communities to stay, which isn't good for anyone.


Agreed.

How does this help the problem long-term? It just encourages people to stay in these tent communities, which are definitely not what the city should be aiming for as a permanent solution.


Liberal here. (non-fascist, opposed to the GOP from Reagan through Trump and all in between. Does that make me a liberal? Anyway.)

The tent cities are bad. No one should be living on the streets. This is 100% Bowser's problem to address and the only way to fix it is to provide services to get people off the streets (carrot) and then require they not camp on the streets (stick.)

Is there any effort out there to do this?

Not all that liberal (well, by DC standards, but very "classically" liber) and I agree with you 1000%. Giving people the "freedom" to camp outdoors is a travesty.


You think the problem is that they have too much freedom? I don't understand. Do you think that if we had the police kick them out and toss their belongings that they would suddenly clean up, get a job, and rent an apartment??


That's what has to be done unless DC decides they want to invest in homeless services. It's easy to talk about offering "services" yet no one in DC is willing to pay the taxes to implement.
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