Current:Home > StocksMoving homeless people from streets to shelter isn’t easy, San Francisco outreach workers say -ValueMetric
Moving homeless people from streets to shelter isn’t easy, San Francisco outreach workers say
Robert Brown View
Date:2025-04-10 22:53:21
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Outreach worker Edgar Tapia hit a San Francisco neighborhood on a mission to find people to take eight available shelter beds, including a tiny cabin perfect for a couple.
He approached a cluster of tents in the Mission District, calling out greetings and offers of snacks and water bottles. He crouched to chat with tent occupants and asked if anyone was interested in moving indoors. He reminded them city street cleaners would be by to clear the sidewalk.
“Do you have any more hygiene kits?” asked a woman inside an orange tent with five friends. “Can we get some socks?”
The job of Tapia and others on San Francisco’s Homeless Outreach Team is to match eligible people with vacant beds. But it’s not a straightforward process as was clear on this September day, despite more shelter beds than ever before and a mayor who says she will no longer tolerate people living outdoors when they’ve been offered a place to stay.
Sometimes a person is eager to move inside, but there are no beds. Other times, a spot is open but the offer is rejected for a host of reasons, including complications with drugs and alcohol. Outreach workers plug away, reaching out and building trust with the people they call their clients.
“Today somebody wasn’t ready because they were hanging out with their friends. They’re not ready because they don’t like the options that we have,” said Jose Torres, Homeless Outreach Team manager with the city’s Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing.
“Sometimes we get lucky and they accept the one thing we have available, and if that doesn’t work out, we try something else,” he said. “It’s that ‘try again, try again’ system.”
Tapia, 34, was excited because a man he’d been talking to for two months might be ready to accept a shelter spot. The first time they talked, Tapia said, the man asked no questions. But the next time, the man asked what the shelters were like.
“It just gives me the chills, because it’s progress,” said Tapia. “I want to see these people off the streets. I want to see them do good.”
The woman inquiring after socks, who gave her name as Mellie M., 41, said her group wants hotel rooms or an apartment. She wants a place with locked doors and a private bathroom because she was raped while homeless.
“In order for us not to live in tents anymore,” she said, “they need to give us a place that we can call home.”
Torres, the manager, left to check in with other outreach workers, thrilled because Tapia had found a couple for the tiny cabin. There was more good news when he arrived in the Bayview neighborhood, where other outreach workers told him that a client, Larry James Bell, 71, was moving into his own studio apartment.
Ventrell Johnson got emotional thinking about the discouraged man he found living under a tarp eight months ago. Johnson eventually got Bell a bed in a homeless shelter, and now Bell was ready for his own bedroom and a shower he didn’t have to share.
“I’d like to have a house one day,” Bell said, sitting on a chair with a plate of eggs and sausage on his lap, a walking cane nearby.
Bell’s departure means a free bed at the shelter. Johnson said he’s noticed that people are a bit more likely to accept shelter now that the city is cracking down on encampments.
“They know that it’s a little less tolerance,” he said. “It’s a little less leniency.”
By the end of the day, outreach workers had found seven people for seven shelter beds.
They returned to the Mission neighborhood encampment to tell the couple they could move into the tiny cabin. But when they got there, the couple had packed up and left.
veryGood! (659)
Related
- Connie Chiume, South African 'Black Panther' actress, dies at 72
- American workers are feeling confident in the current job market: 4 charts explain why
- 41 states sue Meta alleging that Instagram and Facebook is harmful, addictive for kids
- Strikers have shut down a vital Great Lakes shipping artery for days, and negotiations are looming
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- 41 states sue Meta alleging that Instagram and Facebook is harmful, addictive for kids
- Scott Disick Introduces Adorable New Family Member
- 3 children, 1 adult killed in Canada shooting; wounded victim survives
- Immigration issues sorted, Guatemala runner Luis Grijalva can now focus solely on sports
- Dueling Russia and US resolutions on Israel-Hamas war fail to advance in UN
Ranking
- Shilo Sanders' bankruptcy case reaches 'impasse' over NIL information for CU star
- South Africa begins an inquiry into a building fire that killed 76 people in Johannesburg in August
- Scientists discover hidden landscape frozen in time under Antarctic ice for millions of years
- Richard Roundtree, Shaft actor, dies at age 81
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Al-Jazeera Gaza correspondent loses 3 family members in an Israeli airstrike
- The World Bank approved a $1B loan to help blackout-hit South Africa’s energy sector
- Police in Illinois fatally shoot sledgehammer-wielding man after reported domestic assault
Recommendation
Olympic men's basketball bracket: Results of the 5x5 tournament
South Korea, US and Japan condemn North Korea’s alleged supply of munitions to Russia
Clarence Thomas loan for luxury RV was forgiven, Senate Democrats say
Greek army destroys World War II bomb found during excavation for luxury development near Athens
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Judge says he’ll look at Donald Trump’s comments, reconsider $10,000 fine for gag order violation
41 states sue Meta alleging that Instagram and Facebook is harmful, addictive for kids
What we know about the mass shooting in Maine so far