The following is drawn upon personal experience (as homeless in the Seattle metro area) only, so take what you will from it and disregard whatever you please.
Fishi3 wrote:Look about your comunity. Ask yourself are their less park benches and water fountains than there used to be? How about publicly available washrooms? There is a very purposeful campaign to make our citys and towns unhospitable to the homeless.
Too true. All too often, the "solution" is an attempt to drive away the homeless and others who are street-involved (for lack of a better term). "Anywhere else but here," seems to be the slogan.
When I was homeless, they ripped out a lot of bus stop benches to keep "non-patrons" from using them. (Side rant: this also meant patrons couldn't use them. And apparently those who were both homeless and patrons, which were a great many, don't factor into the equation at all.)
"Sweeps" were fairly common (particularly in spring and summer), in which the local police force were to focus on clearing certain areas (such as near the UW campus and tourist spots) of the undesireables (the homeless, street kids, etc).
There was also a huge difference in how the homeless were treated versus other citizens. College students liked to sunbathe/nap on blankets and towels in the park, but if a homeless person were sitting or lying on a blanket in the park during they day - they'd get run off. And it could get really messy if you tried to argue law with them (I don't know if the law's changed now, but at the time it was acceptable to lie on a blanket and sleep in the park during daylight hours - just not under one).
Similarly, laws pertaining to the blocking of sidewalks (either by sitting on them during certain hours or standing around in groups) only appeared to apply to the homeless population.
There are also businesses that pour bleach on food that's to be thrown out, so people don't go digging through their dumpsters in search of leftover pizza or whatnot.
That said, it just comes down to my original message. You don't have to do anything, but if you want to, do want you feel comfortable with. Anything helps, and it is appreciated (from my then standpoint and those I knew).
I shall call him 'Squishy,' and he shall be mine, and he shall be my Squishy.