COMMUNITY COMMENTARY:
Join Forces to Tackle Homelessness
February 26, 2008
GLENDALE - We all know that emergency shelters aren't an endgame solution for
the chronically homeless (“Council questions shelter,” Jan. 23). Many of us
understand, however, the role they must play in the interim.
For years, the daunting question has been, “How do we move beyond the interim?”
And in the meantime, the “interim” has become the status quo.
The question often proves so daunting as to discourage our engagement at all.
But even though Im without an answer, I still want to engage the question. I
believe each of us should. Without our engagement, the question remains worse
than unanswered; it goes unacknowledged.
And the thing about this question — too often its not just a question that goes
unacknowledged, but a person. A person who sleeps on a bench through the din of
foot traffic on San Fernando Road;
someone who beds down each night in the stairwell of a parking garage; a woman
searching through a Dumpster for breakfast in the alley behind your apartment.
The men and women sleeping on the streets of our cities are wrestling and often
succumbing to the demons of addiction, of mental illness, of hunger and
exposure, of social ostracism, of deteriorating health.
As a citizen living in relative comfort and privilege, I believe when others are
weighed down with such burdens that I can hardly imagine, its on me to help
where I'm able. And if I don't know how, its on me to ask and engage.
I'm not going to suggest its not complicated. It is. Incredibly. I'm never sure
what may be helping, what may be enabling, what may be harming. I'm not an
expert, so I'm not going to suggest what you should do. I just want to offer a
chance to engage the question.
I'm inviting you to lunch.
This Saturday at noon, Rudy Salinas, director of community outreach at PATH
(People Assisting the Homeless) will facilitate a discussion on chronic
homelessness. Hell share insights into the challenges faced by the chronically
homeless, address practical concerns like safety, basic dos and don'ts for
interaction, offer advice for engaging people in conversation, and suggest local
referral resources. Bring your questions, bring your anecdotes, just be willing
to engage.
The lunch will be hosted at Glendale Church of Christ, 2021 W. Glenoaks Blvd., in Glendale. You can RSVP to
community@glendalechurchofchrist.org or call the church office at (818)
843-3636. There is no charge.
Your engagement will look different from mine. But the strength of this strategy
is that we engage together.
Whether you're an individual, a family or an organization, you're invited to be
a part of this discussion. I hope you'll join me for lunch on Saturday. Its on
me.