Homeless in need of student help
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Also by Samir Jaber:
- Homeless in need of student help (September 30, 2008)
by Samir Jaber
Tuesday, September 30, 2008 00:00
There is a significant portion of the Madison population that experiences criminalization, neglect and abuse by both the populace and government. While they have an unalienable right to live in peace and prosperity, they are relegated to the lowest dregs of society, where both citizens and institutions look down upon them, ignoring the misery they suffer on a daily basis. I’m not just referring to the immigrant population; I’m also talking about the homeless.
There is no doubt that the homeless population has suffered greatly in Madison. With few resources, a lack of commitment from elected officials and a government that spends more time fining than supporting them, the homeless are stuck in a pit of both injustice and inequality.
Progressives on the city council have been attempting to come up with a viable solution on this issue, but the results have been mixed at best. Ald. Brenda Konkel, District 2, has introduced an ordinance that both protects the belongings of homeless individuals and, among other things, eliminates fines the homeless face when they sleep in public areas. According to Konkel, it is unfair to fine the homeless for sleeping in public when there are few reasonable and affordable housing projects in the city.
Sounds like a good idea, right?
Well, according to Joe Lindstrom, chair of the Student Tenant Union and member of Progressive Dane, Konkel’s legislation “will almost certainly not pass”. While the Progressive Dane caucus and a few liberal allies have been working feverishly to gain the 11 votes necessary to pass the legislation, several so-called liberals (read: Democrats) have refused to commit to supporting the legislation.
The city attempted to tackle both these issues last year, but was not successful. In particular, the city council debated a piece of legislation to increase funding for eviction prevention. After compromising on an amount of $10,000, the city council deadlocked on the issue with a vote of 10-10. Mayor Dave Cieslewicz, a Democrat, then cast the tie-breaking vote. Against the funding increase.
When asked why he chose to vote against it, Cieslewicz “dodged the question” according to Lindstrom, failing to justify a vote against essential funding — funding that had the potential to prevent many more Madison citizens from falling into homelessness.
The issue of affordable housing projects has also been addressed in the council. This year, the federal government offered to give the Truman Olson Army Reserve Center on South Park Street to the city for free, with the caveat that the land and facilities would be used to establish 38 spaces for permanent and temporary housing for homeless individuals. Instead of accepting this grant and using it to help the homeless population, several members of the council, including Julia Kerr and Tim Bruer, requested the city move the project elsewhere and purchase the land from the federal government and use it for economic development. The proposed swap has the affordable housing initiative moving to a swamp on the east side, a site largely inaccessible to those without a car.
The concern many left-wing council members have with the potential swap is the cost. First, the purchase of the land could set the city back several million dollars, a figure which doesn’t even take into account the cost of the economic development project. Lindstrom states he was “shocked that the city would propose a project without a solid idea of how much it’ll cost them.” Additionally, budget restraints have made it such that if the cost does exceed the expectations of the council, there is little doubt that essential services will have to be cut. The twisted irony is that these cuts will undoubtedly have a further negative impact on the homeless community, an impact that could have been prevented if the city had simply used the site for its original purpose —helping the homeless.
Among those who voted on the wrong side on this resolution was student Ald. Eli Judge, District 8, who ran on a pro-homeless platform in 2007.
So the cycle continues. The denial of fundamental services to the homeless continues to be a sad, predictable trend in this supposedly progressive city. While several attempts have been made to address the needs of the homeless, obstructionist liberals and moderate Democrats have continued to drop the ball, favoring the needs of the wealthy over the needs of the oppressed.
In a city that prides itself on a progressive approach toward the welfare of its constituents, it is mind-boggling that the homeless population continues to be criminalized, abused and ignored.
Call your representatives and encourage them to vote for Konkel’s legislation. In the meantime, organizations like Progressive Dane are mobilizing around this issue and demanding an end to the unnecessary misery of those living on the street. It is important for us as a student body to fight for just treatment of the homeless.
Because if we don’t, who will?
Samir Jaber (sjaber@wisc.edu) is a member of Student Progressive Dane.
Feedback
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 1:18am):
$10,000 this was written by Brenda Konkel. You think this is going to change anything? No. Insider, far-leftist politics. Smells like the days of Austin King.
Samir Jaber (September 30, 2008 @ 1:33am):
As an addendum to the article:
The editors of the BH made some edits that may cause confusion in the column.
After the paragraph which ends: "several so-called liberals (read: Democrats) have refused to commit to supporting the legislation..." should be a paragraph stating
"It is, as Lindstrom states, 'sad that it has even come to this'. He believes that 'the best ways to support the homeless are to aggressively pursue affordable housing projects within the city and to further enhance eviction prevention efforts.'"
Then, when the article continues, "The city attempted to tackle both of these issues last year...", it should make more sense what "both of these issues" refers to...i.e. eviction prevention and affordable housing.
Thanks a lot, BH.
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 3:01am):
The BLOB, Brenda Konkel, writes in again.
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 3:03am):
......................why is anyone still taking Joe Lindstrom seriously anymore?
Is this a sign to get ready to welcome back the Quieto-King-Kumar crowd back in town??
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 3:12am):
I cannot believe the Herald continues to let articles penned by city council members be passed off as student work. If Konkel wants to express her feelings, then she should write an LTE, like the rest of the campus and city has to do.
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 3:14am):
Lindstrom has been in the student press for something like 8+ years, he literally has a tyrannical reign over issues. When will they stop letting him be the dark hand running opinions?
This editorial is shit, LOVE how it doesn't mention how Konkel wants to let homeless people pee with no punishment, all over the place, because they know it would make people hate her. I think she wrote this.
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 4:08am):
Samir... "Thanks a lot, BH."
This article makes you seem like you are a writer for the paper, are you not normally?
Seems a little bit childish to post on here whining about their attempt to correct your confusing writing, instead of just sending them a memo to fix it...
Explain yo'self.
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 8:32am):
The homeless already get plenty of student help. Why do you think they panhandle on State?
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 8:41am):
totally unnecessary to infer Judge hates homeless people. You had me up until that point, now I just think the student progressive dane group are hacks. If you want ordinary students who casually follow madison politics like me to get involved, you better watch who you alienate.
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 9:36am):
Maybe when they put in some effort to change their own lives rather than sitting on the same sidewalk saying "does anyone have 25 cents" every day for the 3 1/2 years that I've been there...maybe then I'd support putting some money into them.
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 9:37am):
How about the actual alternatives proposed in the meeting? Just because Konkel didn't get her pet project doesn't mean that the world hates helping people.
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 10:20am):
I love how this editorial does not even mention why Judge voted against it (idk, like $20 million for the city if the parcel is developed) or the fact that Judge proposed an alternative site along with several alders. This is the pragmatic alderman I am proud to say I voted for. It seems Madison's ultra far left are just upset because they didn't get everything they wanted, dismissing the alternative site as "a swamp on the east side", despite the fact that it is very accessible by bus, is hardly a swamp, and would of course be fully developed and landscaped into a state of the art facility few would complain about. Then again, if the have nothing to complain about, what else is Madison's far left to do.
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 11:56am):
eli judge is a great student representative and I think it's sad people who did nothing to help him with his past successes helping those with no voice (namely, students) would stoop to such a low level
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 1:47pm):
So, we should vote for legislation which allows one portion of the population to do something that another portion of the population is not allowed to do?
I am obviously misunderstanding something here...
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 1:59pm):
I think it's about time that people started to realize that Judge hasn't done crap since he got elected. He's a resume padder, like most of the College Dems.
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 2:03pm):
Anonymous #1=Danny Spirn=LOSER. Grow a pair you weakling.
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 2:42pm):
SCANNER DAN '08
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 4:09pm):
Does anyone else get that this article is just a partisan hack-job against Eli and the Dems from the far left crew on campus? I'd say this was more likely to be ghost written by Kyle S instead of Brenda Konkel (who would never have sunk THIS low). Still unable to get over the Lauren Woods loss I guess.
The sad thing is that most College Democrats probably agree with a lot of what the author has to say here. If the PD crew would stop with the personal attacks and pettiness we could probably get a lot more change accompished in Madison. Oh well.
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 6:21pm):
Get a job, ya bums!
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 6:41pm):
Photo Ordinance anyone?
Anonymous (September 30, 2008 @ 10:08pm):
Anon 1:47...I completely agree!
While I understand that some of the homeless people do not have a place where they can use the bathroom and have to resort to going on the streets I don't think making a city ordinance that would allow them to is right. What is going to happen when a drunk college student gets ticketed for urinating in public or a homeless person urinates on a park bench? The city should stop wasting their time on thinking about useless ordinances that won't solve any problem and dedicate that time to developing more low cost housing and programs to help the homeless population become "unhomeless"
Anonymous (October 1, 2008 @ 5:38am):
OMG... Eli has spent 1.5 years on the council and these loser dems are still obsessed with one wimpy photo ord. GREAT JOB guys you did something! (that's two Eli's two loser friends that fill this message board with comments). Let's just compare that to King or Kumar's record of passing dozens of laws THAT ACTUALLY DID SHIT. PD 4 Life!
Anonymous (October 1, 2008 @ 4:24pm):
And funding the rape crisis center, and the textbook ordinance, and watch programs, and stripping power back from the powerful, connected, PD members (kumar) to the students (read: everyone else). Reality hurts.
Anonymous (October 6, 2008 @ 9:41pm):
Great Article Mr. Jaber, I could not agree more. Keep up the good work.
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