Showing posts with label path achieve volunteering end homelessness glendale registry week homeless tropico station homeless 100k homes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label path achieve volunteering end homelessness glendale registry week homeless tropico station homeless 100k homes. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Homeless Survey Results

The data gathered in the 100,000 Homes/PATH Achieve Glendale survey of Glendale's homeless population (previously: part 1, part 2) has been compiled and was announced at a community briefing at Glendale City Hall last Friday.

Some of the key findings:

  • 73 homeless individuals were identified on the streets of Glendale
  • 43 agreed to be surveyed
  • 35 of those had risk factors that increased their vulnerability
  • 19 of those have health conditions associated with high mortality risk and are at dramatically increased risk of dying if they don’t gain access to housing
  • 7 are veterans, comprising 16 percent of homeless individuals surveyed in Glendale.
  • 13 of the 43 surveyed were over 55 years of age
  • 10 reported being homeless longer than 5 years
  • 13 report being the victim of a violent attack since becoming homeless
  • average time on the street was 4 years
  • those with vulnerable risk factors had been on the street an average of 7 years

At the briefing, Mayor Laura Friedman announced that the city would be devoting 5 units within a low-income housing project that is already in the works specifically for veterans. So between those new units and existing housing resources, the city has the goal of ending veteran homelessness in Glendale within the next year.

The full fact sheet is available as a PDF here. It's interesting reading:
Glendale Registry Week Fact Sheet

More info is also available from PATH Achieve Glendale and Common Ground's 100,000 Homes Project.

Glendale News-Press article on the community briefing. I'm quoted.


previously:
Interviewing Tropico's Homeless at 4am

Searching For Glendale's Homeless: Days 2 and 3



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Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Searching For Glendale's Homeless: Days 2 and 3

Today and yesterday I continued my volunteer efforts with PATH Achieve as part of a 3 day survey to count and identify the most vulnerable homeless people living in Glendale. The actual surveying takes place between 4-7am. My account of the first day is here. On the first day, our team discovered 6 individuals within a block and a half radius of Los Feliz Blvd and Central Ave. An excellent start, but we didn't cover much ground beyond that block and a half. So on day two, we conducted a broader search so we would comprehensively cover the area to which we had been assigned - everything between Forest Lawn/the LA border to the east, the railroad tracks to the west, Chevy Chase to the north and the southern border with Atwater Village.

Our search area.


Day 2

My worry was that if we found six people within a mere block and a half, who knows how many we'd find when we broadened our search?

Our team - leader Sgt. John Gilkerson of the Glendale Police Department, volunteer Ron Crosthwaite and myself - started by searching the deep minimalls in the southern portion of Glendale Avenue and found nothing. We headed to the secluded back roads and alleys along San Fernando east of Glendale Ave. Nothing. We drove to Glendale's historic train station, awakened the security guard, and asked him if he knew where we could find any homeless nearby. He replied with his entire english vocabulary - "Metrolink nine-fifteen" - so we fanned out around the railroad tracks on our own. We walked between the railroad tracks with our flashlights and didn't find anyone. We combed all of the other back alleys and couldn't find any new homeless. We went back to the spots where we had better luck the night before, and reapproached two people who had refused the survey previously. They refused again. We gave them the bagged lunches we had with us that were donated by a local church.

On our way back to Registry HQ at 6am, I spotted a woman breaking down cardboard boxes behind Tacos El Sauz and piling them into a stroller. The taco place was closed, but she could have been an employee. We approached her. She spoke only spanish, and with Ron's basic spanish language skills, we were unclear on whether or not she was actually homeless. She was clean and industrious, but from what we could understand, it sounded like she lived in a baƱo...a bathroom? We needed a spanish speaker. I called PATH Achieve's Christina and handed the woman my phone. She talked to Christina for about 5 minutes. The woman handed the phone back to me and Christina told me that yes, the woman was homeless but didn't want to take the survey.

While it was disappointing to not survey more people, it was a relief to see firsthand that homelessness in Tropico is not as widespread as I had initially feared. Many of the other teams had similar experiences - they found nearly everybody on the first night.

Day 3

With our initial search area covered comprehensively, John, Ron and I were assigned a new zone near the 2 and 134 freeways. We covered the usual alleys and loading docks, then worked our way up to the now-closed Minx night club near In-N-Out. We parked and explored the hillsides with our flashlights. We walked around the perimeter of Minx. I explored a dark patio and noticed that a nearby door was ajar. Hmm. In a high voice I called for John, our police officer. We opened the creaky door and stepped inside. There were many tense moments as we explored a series of perfect hiding places, but no one was there. We drove around more. John spotted a hole in a fence alongside the freeway that seemed suspicious.

A hole in a fence by the freeway.


We got out of the car and ducked through the hole. We walked through the thick vegetation of the hillside for about ten minutes and found evidence of habitation, but none of it seemed recent.

Evidence of activity.


With no homeless in sight, we headed back to San Fernando Road to see if anyone new had shown up in our original search area. I thought I saw someone under a blanket and approached. I called out and there was no movement. I worried it was a body. Nope, just a bunch of clothes under a dirty blanket.

These discarded clothes under a dirty blanket gave me a scare.


We explored a tunnel filled with graffiti - mostly art, with surprisingly few gang tags - under San Fernando Road at Colorado, and then headed back to revisit one of our initial refusals one last time.

Some of the art in the tunnel linking Atwater Village and Glendale under San Fernando Road.


She and her boyfriend were in the same doorway, but there was a new homeless person near them! Another volunteer team spotted them as well and both teams pulled up simultaneously. The other team included two women, so they approached the woman who had refused the survey initially. We later heard that one of the registry workers from this team had her wallet stolen from her car by a random passerby while conducting the interview. Very bad karma. We heard about a possible lead on Chevy Chase, so we headed north and found a homeless man on the sidewalk. We approached him and he agreed to take the survey. He was a talkative and likable former Marine whose life had fallen apart after the death of his wife, a nurse, two years ago. He is 56 and has been homeless for 7 months.

For all of our spooky explorations, the only new survey we conducted was in the bright sunshine in front of the Glendale Recycling Center.

Sergeant John Gilkerson and volunteer Ron Crosthwaite.



The final results of PATH Achieve's vulnerability survey will be presented this Friday at 1pm at Glendale City Hall in the City Council Chambers. It is not a regular council meeting, and the Glendale Registry survey is the only item on the agenda.




Previously: Interviewing Tropico's Homeless at 4am


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Monday, May 2, 2011

Interviewing Tropico's Homeless at 4am

This morning I volunteered with PATH Achieve Glendale for Glendale Registry Week. Registry Week is a census of the homeless population within the city of Glendale designed to identify the chronically homeless individuals who are most vulnerable. Once they've been identified, resources can be targeted specifically towards getting those individuals into housing. It is part of the 100K Homes Project, which you can read more about here. How do you count homeless people? You divide the city into a grid, break up into teams, and walk and drive around until you see them...from 4-6am in the morning.

Registry Week leader Becky briefs us at 4am.

At first I thought that seemed extremely early, but after seeing the streets at that hour, I now see that by 5:30am most of the homeless in the area already are waking up and heading out for the day. Once we found an apparently homeless individual, one or two of us gently approached them and woke them up, asked them if they would participate in our survey...and by the way they would get a small McDonald's gift card at the end. The survey takes about ten minutes and includes questions about how long they've been on the street, health problems, etc, and at the end we take a picture of them so that the information can be entered into a database and outreach professionals can find them in the future.

Volunteers get caffeinated courtesy of Glendale First Baptist Church and munch on donated pastries and bagels from Panera Bread in Burbank.

My team was led by Sergeant John Gilkerson from the Glendale Police Department, and consisted of myself, Ron, Eddie, another John, and intrepid embedded reporter Emily. In a happy coincidence, the area our team was assigned to cover just happened to be Tropico - my exact neighborhood; including the block where I live. We started by driving down San Fernando and didn't see anyone immediately. I suggested heading over to Vons on Central, where I have frequently seen a homeless man in one particular spot. As we headed over, the thought crossed my mind that the one time we are specifically LOOKING for the homeless would be the one time we wouldn't see any. We didn't see the guy I was thinking of at Vons, but found another apparently homeless man on a bus bench. We parked in the Vons parking lot, made our approach, and the guy wouldn't talk to us at all, he just walked across Los Feliz to another bus stop on the other side of the street and appeared to have mental issues. I tried to cross Los Feliz to approach him again, and he just crossed the street again. We marked him as a refusal. A disappointing start! With no other homeless people in sight, we started walking around looking for less obvious hiding places. We quickly found a homeless man in an alley, and he was our first interview.

Emily and Ron conduct an interview.

While Sgt John, Ron, and Emily interviewed him, Eddie, other John and I set out on foot to see if we could find anyone else. I spotted a nook across San Fernando where I thought I saw movement. We approached and found two people, a man and a woman.

John and Eddie make a successful approach.

John and Eddie made a successful approach and I continued walking around the industrial area between San Fernando and the train tracks looking for individuals (and bravely tweeting). In an hour and a half of looking, we found 6 people within a mere block and a half radius of Los Feliz and Central. Here are some pictures from this morning's efforts. I also tweeted about the experience here, and you can follow the efforts of the other volunteers on Twitter by using the hashtag #100khomes. The count continues Tuesday and Wednesday, so I'll be up at 3:30am tomorrow.

Click to view large. Pink x's are refusals, red x's are successfully completed surveys.


Our stats at the end of the morning. I am on Team Rex.



*Update: My account of days two and three of the homeless vulnerability survey is now up here.

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