Although even these charities can be ineffective spreaders of Christianity. George Orwell in “Down and Out in Paris and London” mentions that mandatory Christian services did not inspire the homeless. Though clearly the fault may not be with the services per se.
Maybe not. But when compared to ‘wet shelters’ (the type the government runs) which essentially mean you can come in as high and drunk as you want, you just can’t bring booze or drugs with you. And at least in the state of MA there is NO time limit on how long you can stay. So what often happens is people sign up for disability (shouldn’t be a streach of the immagination that a lot of ppl who cross the threshold of a shelter have significant problems, a large portion of them qualify for mental disability). After applying it takes 6 mon minimum before you are deemed ‘disabled’. Often times people are denied the first time, and eventally win on appeal. It’s very rare for a person to continue to live at a homeless shelter for a year or 2 and not work and not be declared disabled.
So what happens is the clock starts counting the day you apply. When you receive your benefits you receive a retroactive payment (referred to as a ‘retro’ check by those in the system). Where you get your monthly benefits in cash for each month since the day you applied. If it takes a year you get a check for about 9K.
Now most people in homeless shelters use and abuse alcohol and other drugs. What do you think they do with this 9K? It’s party time and then the money is gone.
In private charity run homeless shelters they have rules one must abide by. Like no drinking and drugging, actually making efforts to find a job, etc. So if people successfully adapt to living in one of these shelters they actively are working with a social worker, a counselor, etc and these people know about the person and the details of thier lives, their past, their needs, etc. They are getting services and treatment geared towards assisting them in stabilizing and making improvements in their lives. If they happen to be applying for and awaiting for disability they are much more likely to have and receive and be receptive to counseling where a representative payee will be appointed. This is important because even if a person is clean and sober for a year, dropping 9K in their hands is a prescription for disaster in most all cases.
With the payee and services they can use it to set themselves up in an apartment, get furniture, etc, etc…
Services are available in ‘wet’ shelters but the mileau of those shelters makes it extremely hard for people trying to do the right thing. The norm is to go use drugs and alchohol and hang out all day and panhandle (or worse, rob and steal or sell drugs).
The diffrence with the private charity shelters is that it is the NORM that people are plugged into services, it’s like a condition of them staying there. They and their fellow residents develop friendships and bonds centered around trying to improve their lives and taking steps to do so.
The bonds in ‘wet’ shelters are more like prison atmosphere. The strong prey on the week. They follow the old people when it’s check day so they can rob them. And they can’t ‘tell’ just like in jail because then their life will be even worse, they will get beat, etc, etc… It’s just not condusive towards any type of reasonable living at all. Once this becomes a lifestyle for someone their chances of gettng out are pretty low. Maybe after 5-10 years they eventually move into a mental health group home. In the private shelter they would get screened and identified and worked with to steer them in this direction much, much sooner. They are not a nameless person that just drifts in and out with no expectations other than they don’t do violence.
Not everyone is ready to stay away from booze and drugs the first time they cross the threshold of a private shelter that is not ‘wet’ but they get the seed planted. So there is the possibility to probability that they will come back at some point. If all they know is the wet shelter, they will be lucky, very lucky, to make any kind of reasonably stable life for themselves (be that working or not) because it’s like jail where you can leave during the day and go get drunk and high.
I wound up at a ‘wet’ shelter 2 months sober, running from my parents house in order to escape abuse and neglect and an enviornment where I was destined to probably be living in their basement as an adult and forever and probably wouldn’t have even ever gotten food stamps or disability because I didn’t know anything aout any type of government programs. I was fortunate that I had a strong desire to stay sober and learn life skills in how to live and learned that my partents house was very bad for me and learned about homeless shelters and that they had counselors there and you could have a locker to keep your clothing, etc. So despite being in culture shock big time, I had the background of not growing up in a family on the public dole and also had the strong desire to get help. And it was hard as hell as it was like living in prison. Immagine yourself tomorrow thrown into prison with a bunch of armed robbers, etc… your lost and lucky if you survive…
In private shelters run by someplace like Catholic Charities they are at least going to introduce you to God. And again, while the relationship might not take hold at that time, the seed gets planted.
I speak from personal experience. Public wet shelters, with no time limits…enables drunk and drug addicts to continue to use and they go from jail to shelter to jail to shelter. And they blow their monthly disability check in literally a few days. And do this for months and years… I can’t see how someone thinks this is a good way to interact with needy people, it’s enabling, and people die because of it too.