| the Homeless: Mental
Health, Drug Addiction, & Poverty Rudy's
right and Rosie's wrong New
York's feisty mayor is the best thing that ever happened to the city's homeless. by
Jonathan Foreman - Jan 4, 2000
New York - What passes for an urban policy debate
in New York can look surreal after a trip north of Central Park.
At the Ready, Willing and Able shelter on 155th Street and Frederick Douglass
Boulevard in Harlem, a former homeless crack addict I'll call Tom walked me through
immaculate, pleasantly furnished dormitories where books and telephones were kept
by the beds.
He took me
to the computer room where men were quietly studying for the G.E.D. He showed
me the room where members of the program have their urine tested twice a week.
There was no violence, no drugs and none of the filth and chaos that everyone
remembers from the thousand-bed armory shelters in the 1980s.
Those were the days when the Coalition for the Homeless monitored conditions in
the mega-shelters, steadfastly ensuring that there was three feet between each
bed and at least one shower for every 15 people - even if no one felt safe enough
to use it. Lately the advocacy group has joined with talk-show host Rosie O'Donnell
and other Celebrity Friends of Hillary
Rodham Clinton to excoriate Mayor Rudy Giuliani for his policies on the homeless.
The barrage of criticism has eclipsed revolutionary improvements in the way New
York deals with the homeless. Whatever you may think of the mayor's dubious record
on police brutality,
media and free
speech, it is Rudy Giuliani who has brought that revolution about by implementing
the suggestions of a 1990 report authored for then-Mayor David Dinkins by Housing
Secretary Andrew Cuomo, who was working for the alternative housing nonprofit
H.E.L.P.
Sure, people are
aware that there are fewer vagrants, panhandlers and muttering schizophrenics
in Gotham these days.
And
though most have no clue how or why that came to be, they're generally so pleased
by the change that Clinton and Co. have probably picked a losing political strategy.
It's telling that only 1,000 people turned up at a demonstration against Giuliani's
homeless policy in Union Square in early December.
And even with the mayor's strange genius for attracting negative publicity, the
more New Yorkers learn about his genuinely humane and effective homeless policy,
the more damaging it will be for Clinton if she makes it an issue in her New York
Senate campaign.
With the
help of the nonprofit organizations that now run 90 percent of New York's shelters,
many homeless are getting their lives together and joining the mainstream. And
when New Yorkers discover that the homeless haven't been chased out of town by
the New
York Police Department or packed into penitentiaries (though far too many
mentally ill people do end up at Rikers Island, rather than in the asylums and
halfway houses where they belong) but are instead rejoining the community of those
who live according to the social compact, it will only help Giuliani's political
prospects.
Yet it's the
very programs that have most helped the homeless - drug testing, work requirements
and other programs that help acculturate them into the mainstream -- that make
the Coalition for the Homeless and its allies wax hysterical. If you believe their
most recent sallies, you'd think that requiring work from able-bodied, mentally
healthy people in the city's shelters was the ultimate unspeakable act of a monstrously
uncaring city government.
You also might be bamboozled into thinking the city's homeless policy is the product
of financial stinginess. Yet New York now spends $800 million a year on the homeless
-- with $438 million budgeted for the Department of Homeless Services and another
$360 million that gets filtered through other agencies. And under Giuliani, even
as the number of people on the streets has shrunk, the city's budget for helping
the homeless has grown beyond what was spent under the supposedly more compassionate
Mayor David Dinkins.
The
most recent salvo in the battle between the mayor and the alliance of Clinton
supporters and advocacy groups came from federal Housing Secretary Andrew Cuomo,
who since endorsing Clinton has apparently disavowed his own report, which was
the foundation for Giuliani's policies.
In late December, Cuomo took control of the $60 million the federal government
provides New York for its homeless programs. The housing secretary said his decision
to resume control was a response to a recent federal court ruling that the city
"improperly" blocked funds to the activist group Housing Works. But
despite the mayor's often deserved reputation for punishing groups that criticize
him, Housing Works actually lost its funds because it may have misappropriated
a half-million dollars in 1998 grant money. (The organization denies any theft
but cannot account for the missing $500,000.)
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