This Holiday Season, We Should Focus on Homelessness

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<p>Every year, I volunteer to serve the Thanksgiving&nbsp;meal at a homeless shelter. And every&nbsp;year, I recognize that providing a Thanksgiving&nbsp;feast can’t replace long-term solutions to&nbsp;homelessness.</p>
<p>Every year, I see too many of the same faces&nbsp;— families and individuals still on waiting lists&nbsp;for subsidized housing.</p>
<p>And this year, I’m appalled that so many&nbsp;major cities have enacted laws regarding the&nbsp;homeless that are anything but in the holiday&nbsp;spirit.</p>
<p>Recently, a 90-year-old World War II veteran&nbsp;and homeless advocate, Arnold Abbott,&nbsp;was arrested in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., for the&nbsp;humanitarian gesture of feeding the homeless.&nbsp;“Feeding bans,” which prohibit sharing food&nbsp;on public property, are not uncommon: About&nbsp;70 cities in America have enacted them.</p>
<p>Instead of ignoring, or continually criminalizing&nbsp;homelessness we need to make a concerted&nbsp;effort to drastically reduce it. And it can be&nbsp;done.</p>
<p>First, we need to bolster programs that help&nbsp;struggling homebuyers and renters, such as&nbsp;Section 8.</p>
<p>Second, we need to enact rent control laws,&nbsp;which stabilize the household burden and stop&nbsp;vulnerable working Americans from becoming&nbsp;homeless.</p>
<p>Third, we need to reduce the waiting time&nbsp;for subsidized housing. The National Coalition&nbsp;for Subsidized Housing reports that rental assistance&nbsp;applicants have an average wait time&nbsp;of two years. Many can’t hold out that long.</p>
<p>And finally, we need to reject the stereotypes&nbsp;of the homeless as alcoholic, mentally ill, or&nbsp;weak-willed. One of every four of the adult&nbsp;homeless population is a veteran. Are we really&nbsp;so cynical that we would call our country’s&nbsp;veterans weak-willed or lazy?</p>
<p>For those who are addicted to drugs or alcohol,&nbsp;they will never end their cycle of addiction&nbsp;until they, too, achieve stability. A home is the&nbsp;most basic unit of a secure environment. Little&nbsp;progress in drug treatment is possible while&nbsp;addicts remain on the street or in temporary&nbsp;shelter environments.</p>
<p>This Thanksgiving, I will again help serve up&nbsp;a bountiful feast at a local homeless shelter.</p>
<p>But by next Thanksgiving, I hope we’ll have&nbsp;more humane policies in place — from the&nbsp;municipal to the federal level — for those who&nbsp;so desperately need a home.</p>
<p><em>critic living in Santa Fe, N.M. He can be&nbsp;</em><em>reached at <a href="mailto:pmproj@progressive.org">pmproj@progressive.org</a>.</em></p&gt;

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Darryl Lorenzo Wellington