Page 2 of 2   <      

Families In District Struggling For Shelter

D.C. native Kishi Washington, 25, says she hasn't lived with a parent since she was 3 months old. She and her 12-year-old brother are seeking housing.
D.C. native Kishi Washington, 25, says she hasn't lived with a parent since she was 3 months old. She and her 12-year-old brother are seeking housing. (By Lucian Perkins -- The Washington Post)
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

Washington is a District native who said she hasn't lived with a parent since she was 3 months old. She has lived with a cousin, an aunt and other relatives, including a sister, who died this year. After she died, Washington and her brother moved out of her home and started staying with friends.

When she agreed to meet a reporter, Washington was staying in a three-bedroom unit in a public housing complex in Southeast, which housed a friend and five of the friend's relatives. At night, Washington and her 12-year-old brother slept on a twin mattress in the living room, positioning her head on top while most of her body remained on the floor. Sometimes she moved to a chair, she said, because mice ran across the floor. Her friend was threatened with eviction if she housed the Washingtons any longer.

Washington, who is in a job-training program and seeking work, said she has looked for an apartment she could afford with her $320 monthly government assistance but has found none.

The District has 164 emergency or temporary shelter units for families, although homeless advocates insist that the largest shelter, D.C. Village, does not comply with local law requiring families to live in apartment-style units. Additional spaces are opened during winter months.

On Oct. 10, for example, 73 families -- 97 adults and 138 children -- stayed the night at D.C. Village, according to daily intake records. The former city-owned nursing home campus is largely abandoned, and families housed there speak about frequent water and sewer breakdowns, electrical problems and infestation of mice and other vermin.

Ward 4 D.C. Council member Adrian M. Fenty, the Democratic nominee for mayor, has chaired the committee with oversight of the city's homeless services for two years and has held several hearings at D.C. Village. Fenty is widely expected to win the mayor's race in the predominantly Democratic District.

"This government has not done enough to provide services and opportunity for those who need it. Going forward, we need less rhetoric and more follow through and accountability," Fenty said in an e-mail.

Walker, the deputy mayor, said she hopes the city will close D.C. Village by next year. "D.C. Village is fraught with a lot of problems," she said. "It's not an ideal situation for families."

Over the past few decades, the city has sought to provide, but not always achieved, acceptable conditions for the homeless. Under the District "right to shelter" law in the 1980s, families were sometimes given shelter in dirty, cramped rooms in budget motels that cost the city millions of dollars. The measure was repealed in 1990.

A few years later, the District teamed up with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development for an initiative in which administration, budget and services were controlled by the Community Partnership, but the city's fiscal crisis soon after led to sharp reductions in funding until recent years.

For this fiscal year, which started Oct. 1, the District has budgeted $29 million in city funds for homeless services, which is an increase of approximately $4 million over last fiscal year.

Even with more funding, the city will not be able to help the vast majority of families who ask for aid. The wait for emergency shelter is at least six months, according to the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless.

"There's a lack of political will to solve this problem," said Sczerina Perot, a lawyer with the clinic.

City officials said that creating a waiting list was more compassionate than assigning housing in a first-come, first-serve system under which families might otherwise camp out at 25 M St. for a spot. They said that case workers take a triage approach, prioritizing families who have the greatest need.

But in practice, the system doesn't always work that way.

Gail Plowden, 30, and her daughters have been seeking more permanent shelter for four years. Plowden works part time at Greater Southeast Community Hospital and has made trips to the 25 M St. intake center over the years with little success.

"The longer you keep people in crisis, the more damage gets done and the longer it takes to move on," said Mary Ann Luby, Washington Legal Clinic's outreach coordinator.

A growing number of homeless families have parents who work but still need help.

A father of two adolescent boys, Ronald, who did not want his last name published because his employer doesn't know he's homeless, also went to 25 M St. and was told there was no space for his family.

He said he earns $14.50 an hour at a full-time job in Northern Virginia, but he has had trouble finding an affordable apartment in the District. According to the Washington Legal Clinic, a family in the District needs to earn at least $23 an hour full time to afford the average-priced two-bedroom apartment in the city.

In September, Ronald and his two boys lived in motels. The lodgings might have had no frills but they weren't cheap. First, they stayed in a Travelodge on New York Avenue NE but moved to the less expensive Budget Motor Inn farther up the road. The boys stayed overnight with a relative when money ran out.

"There's just nothing out there for an average guy," said Ronald, who said that high rents and bad credit leave them few housing options.

"I hate it," Ronald's 9-year-old son, Da'myon, said of the family's nomadic housing as his father took him to school one morning. "It leaves us no money."

With a referral from 25 M St., Ronald found an apartment this month.


<       2


More in the D.C. Section

Fixing D.C. Schools

Fixing D.C. Schools

The Washington Post investigates the state of the schools and the lessons of failed and successful reforms.

Local Explorer

Local Explorer

Use Local Explorer to learn about Washington, D.C., Maryland and Virginia communities.

Top High Schools

Top High Schools

Jay Mathews identifies the nation's most challenging high schools and explains why they're best.

FOLLOW METRO ON:
Facebook Twitter RSS
|
GET LOCAL ALERTS:
© 2006 The Washington Post Company