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Author Topic: Homeless Tent City in Ontario grows from 20 to 400 residents  (Read 590 times)

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Offline Matthew

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Homeless Tent City in Ontario grows from 20 to 400 residents
« on: March 19, 2008, 08:16:46 AM »
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  • Officials begin thinning out the homeless encampment, saying the city can provide space only for those who once lived there and can prove it.
     
    Dozens of Ontario police and code enforcement officers descended upon the homeless encampment known as Tent City early Monday, separating those who could stay from those to be evicted.

    Large, often confused, crowds formed ragged lines behind police barricades where officers handed out color-coded wristbands. Blue meant they were from Ontario and could remain. Orange indicated they had to provide more proof to avoid ejection, and white meant they had a week to leave.

    City to reduce homeless numbers in Tent City
     

    Many who had taken shelter at the camp -- which had grown from 20 to more than 400 residents in nine months -- lacked paperwork, bills or birth certificates proving they were once Ontario residents.

    "When my husband gets out of jail he can bring my marriage certificate; will that count?" asked one tearful woman.

    Another resident, clearly confused, seemed relieved to get a white band -- not understanding it meant she had to leave.

    Pattie Barnes, 47, who had her motor home towed away last week, shook with anger.

    "They are tagging us because we are homeless," she said, staring at her orange wristband. "It feels like a cσncєnтrαтισn cαмρ."

    Ontario officials, citing health and safety issues, say it is necessary to thin out Tent City. The move to dramatically reduce the population curtails an experiment begun last year to provide a city-approved camp where homeless people would not be harassed.

    Land that includes tents, toilets and water had been set aside near Ontario International Airport for the homeless. Officials intended to limit the camp and its amenities to local homeless people, but did little to enforce that as the site rapidly expanded, attracting people from as far away as Florida.

    "We have to be sensitive, and we will give people time to locate docuмents," said Jєω=Brent Schultz, the city's Jєω-housing and neighborhood revitalization director. This was for Ontario's homeless and not the region's homeless. We can't take care of the whole area.

    Officials believe the local homeless number about 140, less than half of those currently in residence. Schultz wants to reduce Tent City to 170 people in a regulated, fenced-off area rather than the sprawling open-air campsite it has become.

    No other city has offered to take in any of the homeless who Ontario officials say must leave.

    "So far I have heard nothing," Jєω-Schultz said.

    Even before the large-scale action Monday, police last week moved out parolees and towed about 20 dilapidated motor homes. A list of safety rules, including one banning pets, has been posted. The city says there is a threat of dog bites and possible disease from the animals.

    The no-pet order caused widespread anger and tears Monday as some homeless people said they could not imagine life without their dogs. Many have three or four and vowed to leave Tent City before giving the dogs up.

    "I will go to jail before they take my dog," said an emotional Diane Ritchey, 47. "That's a part of me as much as anything. The dogs are as homeless as we are."

    Cindy Duke, 40, hugged Ritchey, who was sobbing.

    "I had to give up my 6-year-old son because I was homeless and I'll be damned if I give up my dog too," Duke said.

    Celeste Trettin, 53, rolled up in a wheelchair. She and her husband have an Ontario address but have lived for years in a truck, parking wherever they found a safe place. Trettin, who got an orange wristband, said she believed she would be able to find the paperwork to prove she was from Ontario.

    "We thought if we came here we could save some money, but now they have pulled the rug out from under us," said Trettin, who has fibromyalgia, a painful disorder.
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    Offline Dulcamara

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    Homeless Tent City in Ontario grows from 20 to 400 residents
    « Reply #1 on: March 20, 2008, 12:25:54 PM »
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  •  Well, it's sad, but... basically the laws do not allow for homeless persons who are unable to work but unable to prove it. So if you're still twitching, the state will tell you to get work, no matter how painful or really impossible it is for you. If you can't you don't even qualify to stay in a shelter, from what I understand. And getting caught sleeping on the streets multiple times = prison time.

     Eg. being poor, unable to work and not having the mercy of the state, equals that you are up the proverbial creek without a paddle. A tent city or some kind of general shelter for the homeless who don't qualify for the already packed shelters makes sense... which is why they have to get rid of it. You wouldn't actually want anybody to do something that made sense, would you?

     Maybe they're hoping the poor will literally just die. I guess that's one way to get rid of them. And we all know that *ahem* ... "certain people" ... er... dislike... the poor anyhow.

     This is yet another reason why the Catholic Church has got to make the biggest comeback ever. The Church used to do the charity the state is now not willing to. And I think it'd be a cold day somewhere before the parish priest gave the money to an able-bodied illegal alien before a disabled person legally living there. Just like the nuns used to care for the poor sick without robbing them on the way in.
    I renounce any and all of my former views against what the Church through Pope Leo XIII said, "This, then, is the teaching of the Catholic Church ...no one of the several forms of government is in itself condemned, inasmuch as none of them contains anythi