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AStern

(156 posts)
Thu Apr 3, 2025, 07:29 PM Apr 3

A New Book Details How Scarily Easy It Is To Be 'Pushed' Into Homelessness in America

In Brian Goldstone’s There Is No Place for Us: Working and Homeless in America, we meet Celeste, who is dealing with a cancer diagnosis and moves into an extended-stay hotel after a fire burns down her rental. But Celeste didn’t score high enough on a “vulnerability index (a “mechanism for determining who would—and would not—be eligible for support” developed by a consulting firm) to get housing aid. She and her children didn’t meet the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development’s definition of being considered “literally homeless.”

Celeste’s is one of the stories of five Atlanta families at the center of Goldstone’s extraordinary work of journalism. They work—constantly—yet struggle to remain housed amid rising rent, low wages, lack of tenants rights, predatory corporations and landlords, and gentrification. As Goldstone details in his introduction, the individuals at the heart of this book are Black (as are 93% of homeless families in Atlanta) and are part of the country’s low-wage labor force. America’s richest cities are sustained by people who are systemically priced out of housing: “Families are not ‘falling’ into homelessness,” Goldstone writes. “They’re being pushed.”

-snip-

I discovered that that has roots in the emergence of mass homelessness in the 1980s. There was a concerted attempt on the part of the Reagan administration to control the public narrative and perception of this mounting catastrophe. They systematically limited research on homelessness to studies that focused on mental illness, alcoholism, addiction. Researchers who wanted to study what, at that time, was the process of the administration’s shredding of the social safety net, of funding for public housing and housing assistance for low-income families, were not funded.

It’s all connected. Throw a dart at any one of the many things that make this country exceptional when it comes to not providing for the most basic needs.


This effort to shape public perception really was successful. As I point out in the book, surveys showed that most Americans, by the end of the 1980s, attributed homelessness to laziness, addiction, or mental illness. Nobody mentioned housing in the surveys, and nobody seemed to realize that the fastest growing segment of the homeless population was children under the age of six. If you can drastically limit the magnitude and scope of a crisis, or even deny the existence of a crisis, you can more easily claim that you’re tackling it. This has profound effects on who’s able to access resources and assistance. [According to Goldstone’s reporting, the true estimated number of people deprived of housing in America would be well over 4 million, roughly six times the “official” number.]

https://www.jezebel.com/there-is-no-place-for-us-working-homeless-in-america-book-interview
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Coventina

(28,287 posts)
1. As someone who spent the majority of their childhood homeless, this rings so true.
Thu Apr 3, 2025, 07:35 PM
Apr 3

My family was homeless because my father could not earn enough to house his family. Mom couldn't work due to small children and no money for childcare.

jmbar2

(6,778 posts)
3. How did your family make it?
Thu Apr 3, 2025, 07:55 PM
Apr 3

I was trying to remember when I first became aware of homelessness. I remember seeing obvious alcoholics/drug addicts on the streets in Seattle in the 1980s, as well as "street people" in Austin in the 70s-90s.

I don't recall being aware of homelessness again until much later. Then suddenly it was everywhere. I wasn't aware that the story of economic homelessness had been suppressed. Now it's starting to make more sense.

Coventina

(28,287 posts)
4. We squatted in a church basement for three years in Seattle.
Thu Apr 3, 2025, 08:03 PM
Apr 3

Finally the church kicked us out.

Seattle was just too expensive, so we moved to Arizona, where we couch surfed and made use of those short-term shelters, etc. until my dad finally got a decent enough job for us to rent a hovel. Also, as we kids got older, it freed up my mom to start working as well.

jmbar2

(6,778 posts)
6. Wow. I cannot imagine the stress your parents felt trying to keep it together.
Thu Apr 3, 2025, 08:20 PM
Apr 3

They deserve a medal. All of you do! Such strength and determination.

Coventina

(28,287 posts)
7. Looking back on it, it is pretty amazing.
Thu Apr 3, 2025, 08:31 PM
Apr 3

They really sheltered us from understanding how dire our circumstances were.
And, we were little, so didn't have a full understanding of the situation.

I do, however, remember a Christmas Eve, back in Seattle, when my mother found some money (a few loose bucks) frozen on the sidewalk and it really made a difference to our Christmas celebration!

A few bucks might not seem like much, but it was some Christmas candy for us!

FakeNoose

(37,107 posts)
5. Great post! We need to raise awareness of these issues on DU
Thu Apr 3, 2025, 08:19 PM
Apr 3

Sometimes it seems that everything is about Chump, but this post makes it clear that some Americans - not just minorities - are dealing with overwhelming problems like chronic homelessness.

Thank you AStern!

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