Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Update -- a fence has been erected and all the tents are gone.
Hooray!
Anonymous wrote:Update -- a fence has been erected and all the tents are gone.
Anonymous wrote:But there IS sufficient shelter; people are just preferring to live in a tent where there are no rules to living in a shelter where there are. What there is not enough of is mental health treatment, particularly with respect to long-term supervised housing. But again, there are going to be people who will prefer---due to addiction, mental illness, or sheer orneriness (or some combination of the three) to live in a tent even if a longer term alternative is provided. And I agree with the PP above, other wealthy nations provide for their indigent while also not allowing them to encamp on public sidewalks, parks, libraries, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No matter how we "feel" we can't change the reality that some people will choose to live outdoors. They just will. In this country, they are people who are choosing not to take social services and available shelter space, may due to mental illness, paranoia, ptsd... Who knows. But some people will choose that.
Correct.
And those that choose to live outside don't have to be permitted to live on public sidewalks or public property – which is for all of us to share.
This. It’s baffling that this is allowed in a city. Could anyone just set up a tent in the tree box in front of someone else’s house and start living there and there would be no recourse?
I really don't understand how it is allowed. If I want to park a dumpster temporarily in front of my house, or a storage pod, I need a public space permit. How is a public space permit not needed for pitching a tent by the sidewalk?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No matter how we "feel" we can't change the reality that some people will choose to live outdoors. They just will. In this country, they are people who are choosing not to take social services and available shelter space, may due to mental illness, paranoia, ptsd... Who knows. But some people will choose that.
Correct.
And those that choose to live outside don't have to be permitted to live on public sidewalks or public property – which is for all of us to share.
This. It’s baffling that this is allowed in a city. Could anyone just set up a tent in the tree box in front of someone else’s house and start living there and there would be no recourse?
Anonymous wrote:It's just part of city life. Get over it, or move to Ashburn if you want boring and homeless-free living.
Anonymous wrote:It's just part of city life. Get over it, or move to Ashburn if you want boring and homeless-free living.
Anonymous wrote:It's just part of city life. Get over it, or move to Ashburn if you want boring and homeless-free living.
No. It is NOT just "part of city life". I have lived downtown in DC east of Rock Creek park for over 25 years. While there have always been panhandlers and people in the downtown parks like Franklin and McPherson Square, this explosion of tent cities is relatively new in DC and camping on public lands should be banned. There are a lot of shelters in DC. There are a lot of services in DC. And camping needs to be banned in order to force people to avail themselves of those shelters and services.
It's just part of city life. Get over it, or move to Ashburn if you want boring and homeless-free living.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow you guys are the worst
I've been pleasantly surprised by how few people like you and the previous jackass have been in this thread. Just about every belief goes out the window when your kids are in potential danger.
My eye-opening experience was seeing a fake homeless encampment being used as a drug dealing/stolen property hiding/prostitution location. Anyone with eyes could see what was going on. And yet, you still had people on Nextdoor talking oh-so-virtuously about "our homeless neighbors." There are legitimately people who chose to live on the streets, and I actually respect their right to do so, but not in a way that interferes with public space and safety. And there are also very bad elements who exploit those homeless people and their encampments, either by masquerading or just opportunistically using them for their crimes.
This is what I'm seeing too. Not at Seaton, but it's clear that very vulnerable people, including children, are in serious danger at and near (like schools) exposed encampments. It's not a housed vs homeless issue. It's an intersection of public safety, public health, affordable housing AND criminal justice/policing reform. It's all connected. Like race, gender, and class inequities. I don't have any solutions, but I think school communities and families should keep this in mind. It's not us and them, and it's not just tents. We don't need to accuse each other of virtue signaling or NIMBYism.
On what level can or should DCPS/DME get involved? Ideas?