tv The Stream Al Jazeera December 10, 2013 12:30pm-1:01pm EST
12:30 pm
they don't send a freshman meteorologist to check that temperature. >> dave thank you very much. homeowners, one minute home he is. what is going on. talk rabbiting numbers we have more homeless school age kids in america than ever before. >> right. >> so we have to have a whole new conversation about american families.
12:31 pm
>> with a whole new face. >> yeah. >> to the old stereotype. we asked our community, what do you think about the statistic, that 28% of folk whose are homeless, have one employed person in that family, and on facebook check it out. that is a mind blowing, i'm blessed to have this roof over my head, i knowky lose it at any time, it is very humbling. same thing on facebook, the employees should not have to struggle or go without the basic necessities. maybe not other populations a bunch of factors are being discussed. and again, allot of americans are saying you know what, we could be homeless too. >> and that raise as great point, but it is so much bigger than just affordable housing, so we will definitely get into that. the kids attend school they take part in after school programs. and then suddenly my last job left to
12:32 pm
mexico, and went from over $14 an hour, to $8 an hour. so we lost a house. i am without a job, and my husband got a job, and we did pretty well. then i got layed off, then he got layed off. >> everybody is one screwed up pay acheck away from being where we are. >> the number is on the rise. the national coalition estimates 41% of those without a permanent place to live are parents with children. these families are in plain sight, returning to shelters for help, living in hotels. >> the hardest thing about being homeless is explaining it to my daughter. trying to make her believe that it is okay even when you don't. >> but a smile on for your kids and make the best that you can it is hard on them, and they take a lot of flak for
12:33 pm
it. >> okay. >> come bounding the problem, the children are more likely to have chronic imness, develop member tool and behavior problems. to address the issue, president obama has vowed to end child and family homelessness, by 2020. limited optioning and communities passing laws that some say penalize homelessness, is it even possible? joining us by skype is richard chow. a policy director for the interagency council. let part of the government, working to end chronic homelessness. those winter stormed grounds hi flight, so as we so often do here, we are using social media to end up what planes, and trains, and cars sometimes can't do. it does allow us to bring some of the best visions into our conversation.
12:34 pm
donna anderson, also joins us, she is the director of the institute of children, poverty, and homelessness. a nonprofit, dedicated to changing the way we think about the homeless. and also on google plus, wendy alexandar, a working mother of three, who along with her kids has been homeless. welcome everyone to the stream. so donna, when you think about homelessness it is those very visible examples that come to mind. the reality is we have more homeless families than ever before, what is going on? >> well, exactly as you mentioned earlier. the face of homelessness in america is changing. what we once thought of the single adult, that face is transformed into the face of a school kid.
12:35 pm
that is the new face of homelessness, and unfortunately it is also rah face that those numbers are getting better. there are more and more of them. >> richard to what do you attribute this rise in homeless families? >> well, i think we recognize that what drives homelessness is the lack of affordable housing. as i think the people who commented earlier said. and i think that as we have seen, incomes start to come down, and the price of housing going up. we are just seeing a growth of the families that experience homelessness. >> you are working with a full time job, you had three kids at home, walk us through your story of what happened? >> well, hay add full time job, yes, sir, and then my area of work took a decline. i was working in construction, and dry wall, and my hours got cut back, and then you take whatever job you can get, and the job that i
12:36 pm
had taken after that 1,000 it was a great job in pay, it wasn't a healthy job for me, and i ended up getting hurt. i lost that job, and in the process i had to take another part time job. just to try and survive. and it wasn't enough to survive. it wasn't enough to pay my rent. it wasn't enough to pay for shoes and clothes and food. so i did have to give up my own to live with family. you do not look like the typical face, you were working, you tried your best, and the community has chimed in about these misconceptions. honestly the biggest misconception is thinking that homelessness will not happen to you. homelessness does not discriminate. the biggest myth that the homeless are fundamentally different from everyone else, that data shows most americans are now a pay check or
12:37 pm
two away from being in that state, and finally, people look down on the homeless. as if they couldn't be in the same situation, i have been homeless, it is no way to live. and mark, you have been dealing with the homeless communities. talk to us about how detrimental these misconceptions are when it comes to helping homeless communities? >> well, first, let me -- the begin hog if show was great. but it was very statistic heavy. and we need to understand like housing hud, housing and urban development, they leave out a big section of homelessness. for instance, he was having problem delivering to houses because there are so many names at the one unit. especially with family
12:38 pm
homeless. parents aren't raising their hand and saying we are homeless. that's a lot of reasons for that, pride, worried their kids will be taken away, but my point is, that whatever number that you are putting out there, it's way worse. it is way worse. the other issue is -- and i have been considered lucky, i have been to over 200 cities in several different countries. we don't make it easy for a homeless family to get out. so going back to the hud thing, if a family pays for their own hotel room, and they come to a service provider we have to say sorry, you aren't home legislation, go sleep in your car, go sleep outside before we can help you. the me that's pretty stupid. the other thing is -- it's called the continuum of care, which has set up for families to find
12:39 pm
help. but we don't talk to each other, nor is there availability. i am a family, i find help someplace. i hair about it, i go there, i sit there for five or six hours like it is a dental office, and even if they can't help me, they get paid by your data. it is so hard for rah homeless family to find help. >> and mark, we will get more -- >> may i jump in on this. >> sure. >> and i just wanted to sort of back that up, because i think he is making a good point about how systems are not really put in place to be responsive not only to the needs of the parent, but also the children. so if -- kids and families are not easily able to access their day care, then it is very difficult for a parent who has lost their job to then be able to go out
12:40 pm
and look for a new job. wendy, at the beginning of the show, we heard from some parents and you could see the pain on their face when they are talking about how hard this was in their kids. when we were just talking about this. talk about what this does to your kid's psyche? it is hard to deal with something that has to do with dignity when you are an adult, how hard was it for your kids? >> i think really early on in the whole situation they were really great about it. they were very understanding. my kids have been great. they are teenagers so they are older. but they start to get angry, and they start to feel like they have no
12:41 pm
space of their own. and they start to feel like they don't have an existence of their own. really. they don't have bedrooms, they have a couch that they sleep on, or my daughter shared a bedroom with me for a while, and they really have no sense of identity of their own. they just go wherever they have to go. and they have to follow another person's set of rules. i have my rules, and then my family has their rules. and i was confuse confusedd frustrated. so many times i would come home and my kids would be outside crying and they would say i don't know what to do. >> there has to be an limit of being worried about being found out with their peers too. >> absolutely. it wasn't something that they shared with people. they would say oh we are staying with grandma, other something along those lines. but it wasn't something they went and told
12:42 pm
people, we don't have a place to live, or i was working and i didn't tell my coworkers i didn't have a place to live. they didn't know, it's not so much okay i have to admit, it is it does feel like shame. i was ashamed that i wasn't able to take care of my family the way i felt i should be able to. so i think that create as problem with asking for help as well, there's this shame that have done something wrong. >> well, wendy our community has really chimed in on the impact it has on kids. what choices do these people children and families have but crime if we don't support them, this is society's fault. matt says 1.6 million children in the u.s. is proof that homelessness has shifted from just simply by driven by "mental illness." so you, each and every one of you are paying to deal with america's homeless problem. the question is your money being used effectively. the dollars and cents of ill all when we come back.
12:43 pm
>> this isn't a new channel, this is a watershed moment in media for america. >> this entire region is utterly devastated. >> people our here are struggling. >> the fire jumped the highway we took earlier. >> your average viewer want's to actually understand how the health care law is going to help them or hurt them. >> they know they can get extremist bickering somewhere else. >> people say that we're revolutionary. our revolution is just going back to doing the best in journalism. >> this is the place to go watch high quality journalism, period.
12:44 pm
while you were asleep news was happening. >> here are the stories we're following. >> find out what happened and what to expect. >> international outrage. >> a day of political posturing. >> every morning from 5 to 9 am al jazeera america brings you more us and global news than any other american news channel.
12:45 pm
12:55 pm
12:56 pm
think to yourself, if that person wanted to help me, they would blank. >> there's a couple of different things i always wanted to address with it, and one of them is quit cutting the budget for schools. that's where kids that are homeless are getting a lot of help. a lot of the school programs geared towards helping kids are coming out of teacher's salaries rather than coming from the community. donating, giving back to your schools to keep the budgets going, and the other thing is having programs for people that are slightly above whatever cults you off at. i have an income, but i made too much money to get help, but not enough to live. so having some kind of a program where you have an extension of that particular cut off line, that poverty line that everybody has a solid line at, go above and beyond that. okay, now we have these services for people that are in this situation. >> sure. >> that in between state, mark, a few minutes ago,
12:57 pm
you were started to talk about solutions and you mentioned that you thought faith based communities may be able to fill the gap, how so? >> with little time left, we all need to work together. we have the shelters, and the housing first, and the faith based, and the businesses and the government, home for good here in los angeles is a good example of getting all the strike holders at the table. getting rid of your differences. pooling your resources and really working together because you need national support, but you have to fight homelessness at a local level. and with family homelessness, a big thing is prevention. we need to prevent them -- we need to prevent all families from ever hitting a shelter. ever. happen -- >> it needs to 457 at the federal level as well, richard i know you want to jump in. >> , i couldn't believe with mark more. homelessness very much happens at the row call level, and it does take
12:58 pm
all of those stakeholders, whoing together. the challenge is that you have many different organizations. you have the business community, you have government on the other hand, all working at different pups and i think what we have seep to be effective is making a difference, and bringing their numbers down, is really where they are all working together towards the same goal and rowing together. i think we are trying to do that at the federal government, trying to coordinate between all the federal agencies. we coordinate the work of 19 different agencies to figure out how to coordinate policy to end homelessness, and i just want to go back to something earlier, that i think the solutions really need to look t a main stream resours that donna mentioned. we need to look at the food statute program, and all of the mainstreem programs that exist as a way to end homelessness. the community says
12:59 pm
everybody has a role on ending homelessness, james says private citizens, social groups should work diligently to come up with short and long term solutions. >> ux local issue all across the country. who are the people that are most active. talk to your local officials. talk to the service providers. talk to your school officials. finding out what are the underlying issues that cause family homelessness, and how can you address those issues as well as reduce the impact on kids. >> thank you to all our kids.
1:00 pm
>> welcome to the news hour. from al jazeera news center here in doe ha in london, the top stories. >> remembering mandela tens of thousands join a star studded memorial to celebrate a man that changed the world. a set back for civility in the central african republic, the fresh army suffers its first losses. is news
96 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=948569907)