ProPublica: What I Learned Reporting in Cities That Take Belongings From Homeless People [View all]
ProPublica - What I Learned Reporting in Cities That Take Belongings From Homeless People
Some cities take peoples belongings ignoring their own policies and court orders and then fail to store them. Our reporting shows there are more effective and compassionate ways to deal with homeless encampments.
by Nicole Santa Cruz
Dec. 27, 5:05 a.m. EST
On a May afternoon, Teresa Stratton sat on her walker near a freeway in Portland, Oregon, talking about how much she wanted to live inside. She missed sleeping uninterrupted in a bed and having running water.
When you live outside, the dirt embeds in your skin, the 61-year-old said. You have to pick it out, because it just doesnt come out anymore.
Living inside would also mean no longer having her belongings repeatedly confiscated by crews the city hires to clear encampments. These encounters, commonly known as sweeps, are the biggest letdown in the world, she said, noting that she lost the ashes of her late husband to a sweep.
Over the past year, my colleagues Ruth Talbot, Asia Fields, Maya Miller and I have investigated how cities have sometimes ignored their own policies and court orders, which has resulted in them taking homeless peoples belongings during encampment clearings. We also found that some cities have failed to store the property so it could be returned.
People told us about local governments taking everything from tents and sleeping bags to journals, pictures and mementos. Even when cities are ordered to stop seizing belongings and to provide storage for the property they take, we found that people are rarely reunited with their possessions.
The losses are traumatizing, can worsen health outcomes, and can make it harder for people like Stratton to find stability and get back inside.
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An injustice added to heartbreaking tragedy...