Expert on Homelessness, Award Winning Author
Homelessness 101: Housing First??
Okay. Okay.I was a skeptic. I didn’t believe that Housing First could work in Memphis, or any other city that didn’t have an Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) team. Why didn't I believe it?
Can we Really End homelessness?
I believe that everyone who is really aware of homelessness and/or homeless people wants to see an end to homelessness. Nobody wants to end it more than those who've been "literally homeless," e.g. slept in shelters, on the streets, or other places "not meant for human habitation," and those who care about them. That includes those of us who have worked for years (or decades) to help homeless people break the cycle of
Is there a "street uncle" on your city's streets?
There’s at least one “street uncle” on the downtown streets of Memphis. I didn’t even know we had one
Is Housing First Sustainable?
This a must read for people who wonder how well the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s focus on Housing First works—or not. When dozens of chronically homeless people with varying, untreated disabling conditions are placed in apartments with little or no supportive services, the outcome is, unfortunately, predictable and ultimately unsustainable, especially in cities with extremely high rental costs.
Helping Homeless People...Are You a Catalyst?
Aren’t sure? If so, it's not surprising. Originally the term “catalyst” was a scientific term to describe a combustible. However, more recently, definitions of a catalyst (per Webster's New World Dictionary) include…
Keepsakes??
Keepsakes are something kept, or to be kept in memory of the giver. I love keepsakes. The ones I treasure most are from my three sons and my grandchildren… hand-made cards, drawings, dried-out bits of flowers, weeds, and rocks picked up and brought to me by small hands and big smiles—and all the cards
Homelessness 101: "It's about Sharing"
The holidays are coming and lots of people of good will be doing whatever they can do to help those who are homeless. Many, if not most, will be volunteering to serve food at shelters, churches and "soup kitchens." Most will feel better when they leave. Some, or many, may walk away wishing they could do more.
Pat’s 12 Steps for Helping Homeless People
Following are the 12-Steps I wrote (and tried to follow) when the frustrations that went hand-in-hand with spending most of my time trying to help homeless people break the cycle of streets, shelters, and, for far too many, jails, became overwhelming.