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How Hurricane Response Efforts Are Sorting People Into "Deserving" and "Undeserving" Poor [truth-out.org]

 

Hurricanes Irma and Harvey delivered a devastating one-two punch to Texas and Florida, forcing millions to evacuate and leaving thousands displaced. Now, as emergency responders try to help hurricane victims cope with the aftermath of the storm, previously homeless residents are taking a particularly hard hit.

In Florida, as officials rushed to open emergency shelters for those forced from their homes by Irma, some residents who had been homeless before the hurricane were forced to wear bright yellow bracelets to mark their status. In St. Augustine, previously homeless people reported that they were not only forced to wear wristbands, but that authorities warned newly homeless hurricane victims to stay away from people with the yellow bracelets because they were criminals, thieves, and drug users. One woman described her experience to a local service provider this way: "They treated me like I was non-human, insulted me and others … [They] separated us from other people."

In New Smyrna Beach, Florida, a community volunteer said that previously homeless people -- including some in wheelchairs -- were turned away from hurricane shelters and later directed to the Volusia County Fairgrounds, which served as a segregated shelter for pre-hurricane homeless people. A homeless man in Daytona Beach said, "[We] were treated like animals … like we got a disease or something."

[For more on this story by Maria Foscarinis, go to http://www.truth-out.org/news/...and-undeserving-poor]

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This is so disheartening to read.  Although I am currently in the midst of the Sonoma County fires - the fires did not discriminate - families at all income levels have been impacted.  

The overwhelming response from the community has been to support one another - the shelters are not at capacity because so many of us opened our homes to people - often people we often didn't even know well before the fire.

Restaurants are providing incredible meals using an honor system - pay if you can - no questions asked. The Teamsters have truckloads of essentials - just let them know what you need and they pull it from their vast inventory - if they don't have it, they'll find it for you.  For example, one elderly couple needed a wheelchair and within an hour they had one ready for them.

There is such a sense of community - of coming together around a shared experience - it is truly incredible - #SonomaStrong 

 

Last edited by Karen Clemmer
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