Anonymous wrote:Would you buy a house on the same street as a shelter? The question was asked on a Reddit sub and most people said no, they wouldn’t want to live there. How about you?
Anonymous wrote: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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fine with small longer term/transitional family shelter housing women and kids but absolutely a no on a big night shelter providing space for men.
Right, men don’t deserve shelter.
Anonymous wrote:Fine with small longer term/transitional family shelter housing women and kids but absolutely a no on a big night shelter providing space for men.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people saying "no" would have no problem scooping up foreclosed properties where prior owners are no homeless
Correct, because I don’t have to live next to them in that case.
Anonymous wrote:The people saying "no" would have no problem scooping up foreclosed properties where prior owners are no homeless