The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition-City - Thursday, September 10, 1992 - Page 3 Sgrows worse for Anna bor's honmneless comma Despite student concern, city, state, and 'U'offcils ignore plight hip by Tami Pollak. News about the homeless is easy to ignore - because so much of it isn't new at all. While the numbers continue to grow at an insidiously steady pace, facts about the homeless can turn from striking to stale within a week's worth of news. 300,000 or 500,000 nationwide, recession vic- tims or mentally ill or drug addicted, pan handling or empty-can collect- ing, no matter how loud the reports grow, they inevitably blend into one inconspicuous murmur. Although hands reaching out from sidewalks in front of Ann Arbor convenience stores are less easily ignored than front page head- lines, students from Beverly Hills will learn almost as quickly as those from Brooklyn that street people will disappear, at least for the moment, if they turn their heads and cross the street. The unending rumble about the homeless is easy to ignore. This past year, howeverthe steady hum of Ann Arbor's home- less problem reached a higher pitch when Michigan's legislature and Gov. John Engler decided to cut-off its General Assistance (G.A.) program. G.A. - a welfare program which helped single, able-bodied people without dependents - allowed 83,000 people in Michigan to make ends meet. When it was cut in the fall, people who could once pay their rent were back on the streets. And while assistants to the gov- Together, these cuts bled Ann Arbor's homeless dry. With Washtenaw County, which encompasses Ann Arbor, vacillating between second and third as one of the state's largest recipient's of Emergency Aid, area shelters were forced to cut their services - some that previously provided 24-hour shelter were cut to night shelters, work training programs were com- promised so that basic necessities could be met, stricter deadlines were put on the amount of time any one person could reside at the shelter. Furthermore, with the loss of thousands of jobs from shut down of General Motors' Willow Run plant in Ann Arbor's neighbor city, Ypsilanti, the economic situation for many Ann Arbor residents has never looked bleaker. But economic hardships were not the only factors plaguing Ann Arbor's homeless this year - they were also, many local homeless say, victims of class discrimination by campus officials. Within the first two weeks of the fall semester, University administra- tors enacted a policy which required non-students be accompanied by a student with University I.D. in order to gain entrance into the Union. At the time the Union policy was instated, officials said the action was meant simply to monitor weekend traffic in and out of the building - and had nothing to do with homeless people, who often ate at the public restaurant's in the Union basement. However, when a homeless man University Department of Public Safety (DPS) Lt. Vernon Baisden says that the homeless are not dis- criminated against any more so than any other non-student who does not have business on campus. Baisden said it is department pol- icy to read the trespass act to any non-student who appears to be lin- 'I don't like to sit on my tush and collect welfare. When you hold a job, at least you have some sense of pride. There just aren't any jobs.' - Gary Lamb gering on campus without a set purpose. Baisden added that it is up to an officer's own discretion to decide what constitutes lingering, and what a key candidate to approach looks like. Such selective and sporadic en- forcement of trespassing laws stems from the University's need to uphold a certain image, say many of the homeless. "The University police don't re- ally bother us too much until some- one like George Bush is coming to at City Hall, and culminating in April with the establishment of Salvation City: The Poor Peoples' Park - a square of land just blocks from city hall taken over by tents of Ann Arbor's homeless - Ann Arbor's homeless and homeless ac- tivists have turned up the volume of their demands. Perhaps the most vocal amongst the activist groups is the Homeless Action Committee (HAC). An orga- nization of both students and Ann Arbor community members and the homeless themselves, the group has been responsible for organizing many of the recent rallies against homelessness. HAC's most memorable offen- sive this year was a building takeover on a Friday afternoon in late November. After investigating a partially un- occupied office complex downtown, HAC members tookover the fourth floor of the building for about five hours, until 9 p.m. that evening, when the Ann Arbor Police Department sent officers to arrest the group for trespassing. At that time, HAC members Jenn Rubin and Jennifer Hall, who served as tour guides for Ann Arbor resi- dents who were invited into the building by HAC protesters, told passerbys that the building was 60 percent vacant. HAC protesters said until 1982 the building had provided more than 60 units of low-income housing. "It could easily be converted into an overflow shelter for Ann Arbor's homeless," Rubin explained. She went on to say that once First of America Bank, which was in the process of repossessing the building, gained ownership, they could allow the homeless to occupy it through the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977. While no significant gains came as a result of that protest, nor any other of HAC's activities this past year, perhaps what HAC did succeed in accomplishing is an image im- provement and a heightened sense of community awareness. Marian Faupel, an attorney who works in the building HIAC took over in November, said she was im- pressed by HAC's protests, although she was put off by them at first. "When they first came here, I felt threatened," Faupel said. "But once I started to get to know some of the individuals, I began to have a differ- ent attitude ... I would like to stay here, but it would be easier for me to find a new place than it is for the homeless." Such a willingness to help seems to be a general trend in the commu- nity and amongst students, even if University DPS and building policy seems to go against this grain. Indeed, the specific goal of many University courses, like the Psychology department's Project Outreach and the Sociology depart- ment's Project Serve programs, is to get students out into the community, to increase awareness of the prob- lems that students can easily forget about while on campus. Students in Outreach and Serve programs volunteer a minimum of four hours a week at various sites, " HIA I. LUWMANI A homeless man watches two children playing in a park on the comer of South University and Walnut, where many homeless people gather. Mly like the Shelter Association of Ann Arbor, or Prospect Place Family Shelter in Ypsilanti. "It really gives you a perspective on the situation that you could never get from reading coursepak articles on the homeless," said LSA graduate Jesse Snyder, who completed a Project Outreach course last winter. Additionally, classes that have not always incorporated community outreach into their curriculums, like sections of Women's Studies 240, and Political Science 300, have re- cently decided to include action pro- jects - like working with homeless - in their requirements. Outside of school, many Greek and Black Greek Association orga- nizations fulfill philanthropy goals with fund-raisers for the homeless. Alpha Phi Omega, a co-ed service oriented fraternity, organized a shell ter clean-up near the end of school last winter term. Furthermore, campus kiosks are always filled with announcements from various student-organized However, just 30. days later, when the permit ran out, the city re- fused to grant a new permit. The reason for rejecting the Homeless Union's request for an extension, said Robert Gunzel, of the County's Corporation Council, was that homeless were sleeping and putting up residence on the land. Gunzel said such arrangements were not allowed for by the original permit. Thus, while the city .has filed an injunction against the Homeless Union in order to remove the tents from city land, neither the city nor the county has helped make aly plans fors where people currently living in Salvation City will be able to pitch their tents next. But the activists at Poor People's Park have not lost hope, and say the possibility for change is strong with the upcoming election season. "They keep telling us that they can't afford to have us in their bud- get. Well, we can't afford to have them in office anymore," said 'The University police don't really bother us too much until someone like George Bush is coming to talk to the graduating class, or if it's the big Notre Dame-Michigan game. Then it's like 'time for all the homeless people to crawl back into their holes - we're having visitors." - John Putney groups which gather food for thel homeless.1 In the community, Food Gatherers, a group of restaurants which includes Ann Arbor's ownj Zingerman's Delicatessen, helps do-. - nate food and money to Ann Arbor's needy. Therefore, although' the commu-l nity - to a measurable extent - appears to be aware and concerned about the local homeless problem, the city appears to be doing little to .i remddy the situation. Tent city - established by the Homeless Union, an organization of mostly homeless Ann Arborites - has become the latest evidence of the city's failures to deal with the issue. Rallying around the cries of "Housing is not a privilege, it's a right," a group of homeless received' a permit to put up tents on a square of land at the outskirts of downtown. Rhonda Sweed, speaker at a recent Salvation City rally. But one powerful state politicea position that people will not have the power to change for two more years is the governor's office. And although bumper' stickers urging the recall of Oov. Engler have dotted Ann Arbor's streets since just after his inauguration, the Republican governor's plans for welfare rehauls continue to leave out the group plagued by G.A. cuts and Emergency Aid reductions. "The shelter is not' giving us time," said Roy Cartwright, an Ann Arborhomeless man. "But it's not the shelter's fault, it's the bureau- cracy that's behind all this. It's Gov. Engler. He can go to hell as far as I'm concerned. He cuts off tur gen- eral aid and says.were should be working. Can I put him down as a job reference?" Cartwrig'ht asked. 0 SHARON MUSHER/Daiy Two homeless men display the Ann Arbor News article which tells of the county's decision to close the "poor people's park," Salvation City, the day the permit ran out. The man on the right, who identifies himself as Sylvester, is pictured on the paper's front page. error said the cuts were meant to en- was stabbed in front of the building talk to the graduating class, or if it' courage people who were depending in January, LSA senior Priti the big Notre Dame-Michigar ..on welfare to get out work, many of Marwah, who chaired the Michigan game," said John Putney, a homeles Ann Arbor's homeless said they feel Union Board of Review, admitted man in Ann Arbor. "Then it's like that is easier said than done. that the move was, in part, meant to 'time for all the homeless people t "I don't like to sit on my tush and keep out street people. crawl back into their holes - we're collect welfare," said Gary Lamb "It breaks my heart to even have having visitors,"' Putney said. last fall. "When you hold a job, at an access policy," Marwah said. The state budget cuts, couple d least you have some sense of pride. "But someone has to take a hard-line with the general state of recession There just aren't any jobs." approach and protect the students of and mixed together with the To make matters worse, at the the University." University's -increasingly obvious same time the G.A. cuts were en- But the Union is not the only anti-homeless policies, have given -.acted, the Michigan legislature chose University facility that seems to treat homeless advocacy groups in Ann to limit the state's Emergency Aid the homeless like undesirables, Arbor reason to scream louder thi Program - which helps fund home- many of the homeless say. They are year in an attempt to stir the inerti less shelters and soup kitchen - by kicked out of libraries, off of Diag of the homeless situation. X65 percent. grass, off of benches in Angell Hall. Beginning in the fall with a rally s n 3s :e o .e ;d n e is n n is .a y St. Mary's Student Parish and Newman Center Serving the Roman Catholic Community at the University of Michigan with -__ .. ,'~uc-t on r Mir ". ..$ ,4Ai~UA 0 "I " Faith Sharing Groups *Newman Club OPPnar Minictrt *Christian Service Outreach " Bible Stud "C ithnlir, T TntP C Iccc 4 I