Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A home for intellectually disabled adults opened directly across the street from my house a few years ago. Now, I regret not arguing against it at the time. We live in a relatively new cul-de-sac subdivision.
The employees are all weirdos who drive pickup trucks (multiple parked on the street at a time) with stickers on them I don’t like DD seeing when we go for walks. They’re all smokers so lots of cigarette buds on the street and sidewalk. At odd hours of the day you can hear the residents screeching. And so on.
Wow you're something else aren't you.
Anonymous wrote:Not unless there is something super appealing about that particular house and location that overrides the negatives.
Anonymous wrote:A home for intellectually disabled adults opened directly across the street from my house a few years ago. Now, I regret not arguing against it at the time. We live in a relatively new cul-de-sac subdivision.
The employees are all weirdos who drive pickup trucks (multiple parked on the street at a time) with stickers on them I don’t like DD seeing when we go for walks. They’re all smokers so lots of cigarette buds on the street and sidewalk. At odd hours of the day you can hear the residents screeching. And so on.
Anonymous wrote:A home for intellectually disabled adults opened directly across the street from my house a few years ago. Now, I regret not arguing against it at the time. We live in a relatively new cul-de-sac subdivision.
The employees are all weirdos who drive pickup trucks (multiple parked on the street at a time) with stickers on them I don’t like DD seeing when we go for walks. They’re all smokers so lots of cigarette buds on the street and sidewalk. At odd hours of the day you can hear the residents screeching. And so on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, of course not. Absolutely not. I'd fight one tooth and nail. But thankfully our area is too expensive.
I'm not unsympathetic to the plights of the homeless but most are deranged people with psychosis issues and serious drug and alcohol habits.
Silly question to ask on DCUM. Way to many paranoid nimbys here.
Anonymous wrote:No, of course not. Absolutely not. I'd fight one tooth and nail. But thankfully our area is too expensive.
I'm not unsympathetic to the plights of the homeless but most are deranged people with psychosis issues and serious drug and alcohol habits.
I don't think living a mile from a shelter is the same as living on the same street. I'm assuming the OP was meant within a block or two.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live within a mile of a nice shelter for women and children. There have been no issues with it.
But the overnight shelters for people where they kick them out every morning at 6? Nope. Also would not be crazy about the short-term shelters for single men. Sorry, but the majority of single men who are homeless have issues—sometimes perfectly harmless disabilities but more often addiction and problematic mental health issues, and the shelters can’t really filter for this. Women and children are different — there’s a lot of different reasons why a mom with kids can end up homeless.
+1 We also lived about a mile from a home that housed women and children who were escaping abusive conditions. The home and yard were as carefully maintained as any others on the street. Even had ferns hanging from the front porch.