Blog

April 16, 2010

Brooklyn’s Homeless

To the residents of Park Slope, being named the #1 neighborhood in the city may not have come as any big surprise.  What may surprise many is knowing that there are homeless people living in the Slope every day.

I met a couple of gentlemen recently who are active members of Old First Reformed Church, but have no stable home to sleep in each night. They’ve been waiting for Section 8 housing to come through for over  a year now, and their efforts to connect to city services (with lots of loving help from the Old First pastor Meeter and other members) have so far been unsuccessful.  I spoke with them, talked to them about some of the options they may not have considered, like public housing, so they put in a public housing application, but that could also be many years of waiting, even for two homeless gentlemen.

Part of the problem is the city policy of distinguishing between “street homeless” and people like these two fellows I met, who manage to keep off the streets each night but have no permanent place to stay. For example, one fellow in the Slope raises enough money each day panhandling so he can buy a bed night by night in a rooming house. It’s not his apartment. He can’t stay there during the day or keep things. He just has a place to sleep at night. If he’s not found on the street, city “outreach teams” won’t assist him. His only other option is to take himself to central intake in mid-town Manhattan, to enter the “Wheel” of the city shelter system.

Many homeless persons fear the shelter system (not unreasonably) for safety concerns. It’s also an exhausting process, requiring them to  shuttle around the city from central intake to a remote shelter placement and back, often in the wee hours of the morning.

This week, Reverend Meeter, Brian Steadman, members of Old First, and I met with city council members Brad Lander and Steve Levin to talk about our concerns for the needs of the homeless in general, and for the two homeless gentlemen attending Old First in particular. The council members were kind and empathetic, and promised to look into our concerns. Stay tuned…

~Sandhya

July 17, 2009

Why Park Slope? – the Start of Brooklyn Jubilee

Filed under: Affordable Housing, Park Slope — Tags: , , — brooklynjubilee @ 1:11 am
Photo by Ji Eun Kim

Photo by Ji Eun Kim

If you’re at all familiar with Brooklyn, you probably know Park Slope as the increasingly yuppie and stroller filled community that has boasted celebrity residents like Jennifer Connelly and Maggie Gyllenhaal.

But as a Brooklyn poverty lawyer, I (Sandhya) knew this assumption about Park Slope was wrong. I had clients in and around Park Slope, and knew the unseen needs of our neighbors around us. I knew the stories of long-time senior citizen residents who were being evicted from the only homes they’d lived in for decades, because rising property values simply made it too profitable for landlords NOT to sell their buildings. I had heard the stories of tenants, living in horrible conditions, who couldn’t get repairs from landlords because these unscrupulous owners were hoping that tenants with regulated rent would give up and leave, making room for new tenants who would pay market rate and inflated rents.

Mindful that we had a lot to learn about our new community, Brooklyn Presbyterian Church — which was then a network of churches in Brooklyn, the first of which was Park Slope Presbyterian Church — conducted a needs assessment of Park Slope.

In the story of the Good Samaritan, Jesus taught the importance of serving our neighbors in need. But how can we serve our neighbors if we’ve never spoken to them? How can we serve our neighbors if we’ve never asked them what they need? Too often charities are formed without asking these basic questions. As a result, precious resources may be directed to the squeaky wheel of a community, rather than its greatest needs. The two-year study was fairly comprehensive, exploring many aspects of physical “felt” needs.

The needs assessment revealed many key areas of need, including housing, and access to food. These were not the only needs we found, but some of the few where our available resources could be mobilized to have an immediate impact. We later formed a partnership with the Fifth Avenue Committee, an affordable housing developer and social service group with 30 years’ experience in serving low-income residents in Park Slope and beyond.

At the food pantry, we see residents from the public housing developments, a homeless shelter, supportive housing for the disabled, and subsidized housing developments, all of which are located within walking distance of the food pantry in Park Slope. Some of our volunteers have discovered for the first time that serious poverty exists in Park Slope, even though they had never recognized it before. As low-income residents are increasingly forced to leave Park Slope due to high rents, Brooklyn Jubilee has begun to serve in other neighborhoods further in to Brooklyn, including Brighton Beach and Bay Ridge. But we will continue to serve in Park Slope as long as low-income residents continue to stay in their community.