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  #2281  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 12:44 PM
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ahealy ahealy is offline
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I agree with Paul and others, there are great points on each side. I personally will be voting for B due to how it's destroying the local ecosystem with the massive amounts of litter in most of our green spaces (I realize it might just divert that waste to other areas).

When we look at homelessness, it is almost always a dual diagnosis--mental illness & drug addiction. I feel for each person I see absolutely struggling to make it through the day and this current set-up is absolutely not a helpful solution for them. I sometimes feel as if certain friends will post all about how we "must keep camping legal" blah blah blah and it just feels like an attempt to grab social brownie points and not really understanding this grave catastrophe.

It truly is hurting the city and especially downtown. The ritz is gone, mainly due to specialized screenings slowly moving to S. Lamar over time + pandemic final nail. How many more will eventually do the same overtime?
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  #2282  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 2:01 PM
drummer drummer is offline
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Super complicated, to say the least. While I don't have a catch-all solution to the problem, I do think that the public camping along the river, sidewalks, under bridges, etc., is damaging to the city. I don't think folks should be thrown in jail or fined for being homeless, but we have to keep the city functional, safe, and clean as well.

I've been fortunate enough to be involved in a handful of organizations which work with folks in these situations. It's amazing how much people light up when they see that others see them as human rather than only a nuisance to society. There will always be folks who want to "work the system" and take handouts, but in my experience, those folks are few and far between. Most people genuinely want to get back on their feet. Those who do have mental issues and/or drug addictions are more complicated. I'm not an expert there, but I have experience with family members who have refused help from loved ones, much less strangers. It's very painful and difficult for all sides when folks simply do not want help because their addiction is so controlling.
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  #2283  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 2:40 PM
lonewolf lonewolf is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by paul78701 View Post
You're making it sound as if there are people who want to be homeless. Nobody wants to be homeless.



I've heard this claim repeated ad nauseam. It's become one of those things that people hear and then repeat without giving any thought as to whether or not there is any evidence to back it up. If it's not already obvious, I question whether or not there is any evidence to back up this claim.
1. some people absolutely want to be homeless

2. WELL over 50% of the homeless here are from out of the city

3. if you really gave any effort to interact with those who are dealing with this, 1&2 would be obvious to you. talk to an EMT/firefighter with APD/nurse etc. talk to people who work at a shelter. if you want to take the risk, talk to the homeless themselves.
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  #2284  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 2:46 PM
StoOgE StoOgE is offline
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You know what, if this is going to be allowed to go on, I'm just gonna throw down my gauntlet.

Homelessness is the end-result of an increadibly wealthy society that has a winner take all mentality that views poverty as something that is in some way earned or deserved. We tell ourselves this because those of us who are extremely rich like to also believe that our wealth is 100% earned by the individual and luck or fortune of what circumstances you were born into had nothing to do with it.

It means we ignore the actual causes of homelessness, but what we really dont ever want to do is look at the abject failure of our society in the face, so we would rather arrest people, break up camps and shove them into a green belt where things are actually less safe just so we don't have to look at it.

The homeless population in Austin is going up because the cost of living in the city has gotten out of hand and we've done next to nothing to help the problem. Our country at large views illness, mental illness or addiction as a personal failing and not a societal failing despite all science being to the contrary. We have set up an entire society that is based upon rich people having better access to everything, including what is viewed in much of the world as basis rights.

No one should be happy to see homeless encampments under the streets, its a dark mirror on our own society and are complete lack of a social safety net, and making being homeless illegal so that we don't have to look at it is reductio ad absurdum for how utterly selfish we all are. We want to look at the pretty buildings and cool developments that explosive growth bring without dealing seriously with any of the downsides. East Austin looks absolutely nothing like it used to and housing for lower-middle class people let alone poor people is becoming an endangered species in this city. What low-income housing is being built is not actually for low-income people, its for lower-middle class people and even that is often gamed by land-lords renting to graduate students or people who can hide income when they apply.

I fully expect that we will reinstate the camping ban with zero plan as to what to do to tackle poverty in our society because I think most people just don't want to see people that they don't view as human on a daily basis so they can go on with their lives guilt free.
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  #2285  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 2:48 PM
StoOgE StoOgE is offline
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Originally Posted by lonewolf View Post
1. some people absolutely want to be homeless

2. WELL over 50% of the homeless here are from out of the city

3. if you really gave any effort to interact with those who are dealing with this, 1&2 would be obvious to you. talk to an EMT/firefighter with APD/nurse etc. talk to people who work at a shelter. if you want to take the risk, talk to the homeless themselves.
The risk? GTFO out of here. My dad was a preacher and did homeless outreach my entire adult life. The vast vast majority of homeless people are extremely nice, friendly people. There are people with mental illness and there are people with anger management issues, that is absolutely true.

They are not generally speaking dangerous or any more dangerous than people who have money. They have a hard life and that often leads to them becoming hardened, but talk to Mobile Loaves and Fishes, talk to TOOF, talk to anyone involved in the multiple charities that have been helping for generations.

I would also like a citation for "50% of them aren't from here" because that feels like tales from my ass internet citation.
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  #2286  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 2:57 PM
lonewolf lonewolf is offline
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Originally Posted by StoOgE View Post
The risk? GTFO out of here. My dad was a preacher and did homeless outreach my entire adult life. The vast vast majority of homeless people are extremely nice, friendly people. There are people with mental illness and there are people with anger management issues, that is absolutely true.

They are not generally speaking dangerous or any more dangerous than people who have money. They have a hard life and that often leads to them becoming hardened, but talk to Mobile Loaves and Fishes, talk to TOOF, talk to anyone involved in the multiple charities that have been helping for generations.

I would also like a citation for "50% of them aren't from here" because that feels like tales from my ass internet citation.
yeah interacting with homeless people is higher variance than your average person. I can understand how someone would prefer to speak with an AFD firefighter or a shelter volunteer vs approaching a homeless encampment.

I said well over 50% are not from here. My citation is go out and talk to people working firsthand with the situation.
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  #2287  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 3:07 PM
paul78701 paul78701 is offline
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Originally Posted by lonewolf View Post
1. some people absolutely want to be homeless
Bullshit. Some people may not want to accept help or simply have a difficult time accepting help for various reasons. Some of this may be due to mental health, drugs, being embarrassed, or other issues. But nobody WANTS to be homeless.

Quote:
Originally Posted by lonewolf View Post
2. WELL over 50% of the homeless here are from out of the city
Correlation does not equal causation. I was doubting the claims that other cities buy one way tickets for homeless to send them here. Not the percentage of homeless that are from outside of Austin. For what it's worth, I also doubt this "over 50%" claim. Anecdotal stories are not the same as actual surveys/evidence.


Quote:
Originally Posted by lonewolf View Post
3. if you really gave any effort to interact with those who are dealing with this, 1&2 would be obvious to you. talk to an EMT/firefighter with APD/nurse etc. talk to people who work at a shelter. if you want to take the risk, talk to the homeless themselves.
You have no reason to assume that I know nothing about homeless people and then subsequently be an insulting asshole.

Edit: Another point, homeless people are more than those that are seen on the streets. You can't just speak to the random homeless person on the street and get a complete picture of the entire homeless population throughout the city.

Last edited by paul78701; Apr 7, 2021 at 3:25 PM.
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  #2288  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 3:21 PM
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JAM JAM is offline
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Originally Posted by drummer View Post
Super complicated, to say the least. While I don't have a catch-all solution to the problem, I do think that the public camping along the river, sidewalks, under bridges, etc., is damaging to the city. I don't think folks should be thrown in jail or fined for being homeless, but we have to keep the city functional, safe, and clean as well.
It is damaging to the city. I know traveling sales managers who visit multiple accounts a day all over TX and get asked about it, wondering how bad it is and are afraid to come here for tourism from rumors (what ever you want to call it) they hear. And there is the pollution thing mentioned. Its in Lady Bird Lake - like never before.

And its damaging to the people in those tents.

As far as the getting fined and thrown in jail - this sort of talk is being spread by the city council, as if it will happen to every single one of them. The cops or hotel/condo security guards usually just ask them to move along, no tickets, no jail. For most part, its a scare tactic used to get you not to vote.
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  #2289  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 3:36 PM
StoOgE StoOgE is offline
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Originally Posted by lonewolf View Post
yeah interacting with homeless people is higher variance than your average person. I can understand how someone would prefer to speak with an AFD firefighter or a shelter volunteer vs approaching a homeless encampment.

I said well over 50% are not from here. My citation is go out and talk to people working firsthand with the situation.
I volunteer about twice a month at Esperanza and bring food to shelters through a couple of nonprofits, but ok. I'll be sure and ask a cop/
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  #2290  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 3:45 PM
Novacek Novacek is offline
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Originally Posted by JAM View Post

And its damaging to the people in those tents.
More damaging than living in those _exact same tents_ hidden further back in the greenbelt? Or more damaging than not even having a tent at all, and crawling into a storm sewer somewhere and risking drowning?

Quote:
Originally Posted by JAM View Post
As far as the getting fined and thrown in jail - this sort of talk is being spread by the city council, as if it will happen to every single one of them. The cops or hotel/condo security guards usually just ask them to move along, no tickets, no jail. For most part, its a scare tactic used to get you not to vote.
This claim just doesn't make any sense. So we need a law to make it illegal, but we won't actually arrest anyone, we swear. We'll just ask them to move along 200 feet to another street. And this is going to somehow cleanup the streets.

If you want to clean up the streets by arresting everyone, own it. We'll debate that on its own merits.

But if you claim no one is going to be arrested, just going to "move", where are they going to move? How is that going to prevent pollution?
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  #2291  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 3:46 PM
IluvATX IluvATX is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by StoOgE View Post
You know what, if this is going to be allowed to go on, I'm just gonna throw down my gauntlet.

Homelessness is the end-result of an increadibly wealthy society that has a winner take all mentality that views poverty as something that is in some way earned or deserved. We tell ourselves this because those of us who are extremely rich like to also believe that our wealth is 100% earned by the individual and luck or fortune of what circumstances you were born into had nothing to do with it.

It means we ignore the actual causes of homelessness, but what we really dont ever want to do is look at the abject failure of our society in the face, so we would rather arrest people, break up camps and shove them into a green belt where things are actually less safe just so we don't have to look at it.

The homeless population in Austin is going up because the cost of living in the city has gotten out of hand and we've done next to nothing to help the problem. Our country at large views illness, mental illness or addiction as a personal failing and not a societal failing despite all science being to the contrary. We have set up an entire society that is based upon rich people having better access to everything, including what is viewed in much of the world as basis rights.

No one should be happy to see homeless encampments under the streets, its a dark mirror on our own society and are complete lack of a social safety net, and making being homeless illegal so that we don't have to look at it is reductio ad absurdum for how utterly selfish we all are. We want to look at the pretty buildings and cool developments that explosive growth bring without dealing seriously with any of the downsides. East Austin looks absolutely nothing like it used to and housing for lower-middle class people let alone poor people is becoming an endangered species in this city. What low-income housing is being built is not actually for low-income people, its for lower-middle class people and even that is often gamed by land-lords renting to graduate students or people who can hide income when they apply.

I fully expect that we will reinstate the camping ban with zero plan as to what to do to tackle poverty in our society because I think most people just don't want to see people that they don't view as human on a daily basis so they can go on with their lives guilt free.
without joining this shitshow I’ll just agree with this.
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  #2292  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 4:52 PM
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JAM JAM is offline
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The cops have plenty of problems besides arresting homeless people, last thing they want to do. Grab the data on how many homeless arrests there were before we were not allowed to camp in public places - compare to other arrests. Its bull-roar to claim cops are gonna throw them all in jail. right........

When cops make arrests, these are the arrest they will be making : https://texasscorecard.com/local/aus...ing-dangerous/

Bottom line: City councils job is to make sure the parks can be enjoyed by all and to fix the homeless problem - which effects the city as a whole. Time for them to do their job. I read plenty of accounts where this is getting done for less than 100k a person - follow that model. Plenty of non-homeless people living on far less than 100K a year. Adapt, Improvise, Overcome.

Last edited by JAM; Apr 7, 2021 at 5:03 PM.
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  #2293  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 5:22 PM
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nixcity nixcity is offline
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If we are to put the blame on cities then we have to blame every city council in the country; this is a nationwide problem that will need major federal support to curb. This is how Finland completely ended homelessness and many other countries live with far fewer per population then we do. Here is an example from GOP third world crime and murder hotbed Ft. Worth.
https://www.star-telegram.com/news/l...247288709.html
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  #2294  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 5:23 PM
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If you are not willing to take the types of steps that Finland (and to a lesser extent every other modern nation on the planet) did then you are not a serious contributor to the solution.
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/sunday/the-...ness-1.5437402
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  #2295  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 6:10 PM
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kingkirbythe.... kingkirbythe.... is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by StoOgE View Post
You know what, if this is going to be allowed to go on, I'm just gonna throw down my gauntlet.

Homelessness is the end-result of an increadibly wealthy society that has a winner take all mentality that views poverty as something that is in some way earned or deserved. We tell ourselves this because those of us who are extremely rich like to also believe that our wealth is 100% earned by the individual and luck or fortune of what circumstances you were born into had nothing to do with it.

It means we ignore the actual causes of homelessness, but what we really dont ever want to do is look at the abject failure of our society in the face, so we would rather arrest people, break up camps and shove them into a green belt where things are actually less safe just so we don't have to look at it.

The homeless population in Austin is going up because the cost of living in the city has gotten out of hand and we've done next to nothing to help the problem. Our country at large views illness, mental illness or addiction as a personal failing and not a societal failing despite all science being to the contrary. We have set up an entire society that is based upon rich people having better access to everything, including what is viewed in much of the world as basis rights.

No one should be happy to see homeless encampments under the streets, its a dark mirror on our own society and are complete lack of a social safety net, and making being homeless illegal so that we don't have to look at it is reductio ad absurdum for how utterly selfish we all are. We want to look at the pretty buildings and cool developments that explosive growth bring without dealing seriously with any of the downsides. East Austin looks absolutely nothing like it used to and housing for lower-middle class people let alone poor people is becoming an endangered species in this city. What low-income housing is being built is not actually for low-income people, its for lower-middle class people and even that is often gamed by land-lords renting to graduate students or people who can hide income when they apply.

I fully expect that we will reinstate the camping ban with zero plan as to what to do to tackle poverty in our society because I think most people just don't want to see people that they don't view as human on a daily basis so they can go on with their lives guilt free.
This.
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  #2296  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 6:48 PM
Sigaven Sigaven is offline
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Originally Posted by IluvATX View Post
without joining this shitshow I’ll just agree with this.
I 100% agree as well. However, I also believe that simply allowing these folks to pitch tents wheverever they damn well please and do whatever the fuck they want (litter, start fires, dart across traffic, harass passers-by etc) is not fair to the rest of the city NOR is it fair to them. These are essentially little villages of anarchy - they HAVE to be held to a system of rules/laws to follow to protect others as well as themselves. A good temporary solution is designated camping areas on city-owned land with 24/7 security, access to restrooms/kitchens and counseling/services. Idk whether or not city council is working on something like that or not, but we simply cannot let the current situation continue.
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  #2297  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 7:00 PM
paul78701 paul78701 is offline
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Originally Posted by nixcity View Post
If you are not willing to take the types of steps that Finland (and to a lesser extent every other modern nation on the planet) did then you are not a serious contributor to the solution.
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/sunday/the-...ness-1.5437402
Some of us would be more than happy to put forth the money (bonds, taxes, what-have-you) it really takes to fund the necessary initiatives to solve the issue. As Stooge was alluding to above though, a big hurdle to this is the overriding narrative that many present about the homeless. (This is also repeated by others without much thought.) They are painted as being lazy, irresponsible, immoral, and generally bad people who deserve what they get. That narrative is partly to blame for others not wanting to fund the programs necessary. Because few want to help others that they see as bad people.
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  #2298  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 7:02 PM
lonewolf lonewolf is offline
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Originally Posted by paul78701 View Post
Bullshit. Some people may not want to accept help or simply have a difficult time accepting help for various reasons. Some of this may be due to mental health, drugs, being embarrassed, or other issues. But nobody WANTS to be homeless.


Correlation does not equal causation. I was doubting the claims that other cities buy one way tickets for homeless to send them here. Not the percentage of homeless that are from outside of Austin. For what it's worth, I also doubt this "over 50%" claim. Anecdotal stories are not the same as actual surveys/evidence.


You have no reason to assume that I know nothing about homeless people and then subsequently be an insulting asshole.

Edit: Another point, homeless people are more than those that are seen on the streets. You can't just speak to the random homeless person on the street and get a complete picture of the entire homeless population throughout the city.
I feel strongly that some people do want to be homeless. I think there is a lot of fear that seeps in when you live in a high stress environment that results in people just wanting to burrow vs rising above their peers.

our one way bus system has been the center of several lawsuits and documentaries. it's not a secret. here is a link i found after 5 seconds of googling.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/...-country-study

I agree with your edit regarding sample size and forming opinions. If your dad is still with us his opinion would be a valuable one.
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  #2299  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 7:06 PM
We vs us We vs us is offline
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Originally Posted by Sigaven View Post
I 100% agree as well. However, I also believe that simply allowing these folks to pitch tents wheverever they damn well please and do whatever the fuck they want (litter, start fires, dart across traffic, harass passers-by etc) is not fair to the rest of the city NOR is it fair to them. These are essentially little villages of anarchy - they HAVE to be held to a system of rules/laws to follow to protect others as well as themselves. A good temporary solution is designated camping areas on city-owned land with 24/7 security, access to restrooms/kitchens and counseling/services. Idk whether or not city council is working on something like that or not, but we simply cannot let the current situation continue.
This has been my stance as well. Nicely said.

And fwiw, I'm thoroughly disgusted that I'm aligned with Matt Mackowiak and the political folks behind Prop B. I don't have any illusions that my vote to reinstate the ban won't be used as a cudgel against other parts of Austin's progressive agenda. It absolutely will. But the homeless situation has to improve, and this is the only vehicle available to take us there.
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  #2300  
Old Posted Apr 7, 2021, 7:25 PM
wwmiv wwmiv is offline
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Have any of you ever been homeless?
__________________
Houston: 2.4m (+3.9%) + MSA suburbs: 5.4m (+12%) + CSA exurbs: 200k (+5%)
Dallas: 1.3m (+2%) / FtW: 1.0m (+10%) + suburbs: 6.4m (9%) + exurbs: 566k (+9%)
San Antonio: 1.5m (+6%) + MSA suburbs: 1.2m (+10%) + CSA exurbs: 82k (+3%)
Austin: 994k (+3%) + MSA suburbs: 1.6m (+18%)
Texas (whole): 31.29m (+7%) / Texas (balance): 8.6m (+3%)
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