Tiny houses ending homelessness

when I was five years old I saw my first

homeless person a man was standing in a

vacant lot and I knew something was

different so I turned to my mom for

answers she did her best to explain but

it was confounding to me because I knew

there were empty homes in my

neighborhood my fascination grew from

there the first time I met a homeless

person I was in California when I was 8

I asked if he knew the homeless guy in

Kansas City I guess I thought they all

had some kind of secret connection

that’s about how well most of us

understand the homeless we don’t

understand them because of our world

views and there are two kinds of people

who see homelessness in two different

ways both unhelpful about half of us

just want homeless people to stop

behaving like homeless people get a job

quit asking me for money don’t be crazy

don’t be an addict don’t scare me go

away the other half of us want

homelessness to be comfortable here’s

some cash here’s a coat you volunteered

a shelter you work at a soup kitchen on

Thanksgiving from one of these two

perspectives we’ve lied to ourselves

about what might solve the problem and

we feel the tension between these

worldviews every time we see a homeless

person on the street and you know how it

is you pull off the freeway and there

they are at the light or you walk by

that corner storefront and you’re

suddenly forced into two decisions one

after the next first do I acknowledge

this human being look them in the eye if

I do I’m gonna feel things I don’t want

to feel like fear or sorrow or annoyance

or guilt or disgust then if I have money

on me I’ve decide whether or not to give

give don’t give it’s the paper or

plastic conundrum which is worse for the

planet I promise you by the end of this

talk you will know how to decode at that

moment now I misspoke earlier when I

said there’s two kinds of people there’s

the third kind and they work in social

services I spent years and organizations

trying to help the homeless and social

service people really want to help but

I’m telling you there’s a lot of

systemic self-deception in this racket

the system we’ve set up is pretty much

based on a lie we tell ourselves

that there’s this linear process if

homeless people can just meet a few

demands will move them right on through

from the street to shelter to

transitional living to permanent housing

it seems logical right but let’s look at

what these phases actually offer the

typical homeless person on the streets

the positives are you aren’t being

bothered by a lot of people all your

decisions are your own but the price of

that autonomy is extremely high it is

dangerous and you’re always in survival

mode the shelter the positives are you

get a meal and a warm place to sleep but

the negatives but there was a ride at

Disney called shelter there’d be a

three-hour line to get in all of your

stuff could get stolen or you could be

assaulted in shelters you spend all

night worrying about both it’s like that

loud sound that wakes you up at night

who’s going back to sleep transitional

living or halfway houses the positives

are you start to feel like you have a

place of your own I’m sort of because

the negatives are it’s like living with

the strictest parents ever parents who

answer to institutional rules you have

to give up who you are and be who they

require you to be just so you can stay

I’ve seen dozens of people kicked out of

halfway houses for not attending their

programs or classes because they had

jobs now permanent housing the positives

are you aren’t homeless and I’m gonna

say this knowing I’ll offend

well-intentioned people who believe in

what they do the middle piece of this

puzzle that we call shelter and

transitional housing or halfway houses

do not work and we need to gut this

system shelters have no impact on ending

homelessness and I know what you’re

thinking it’s below zero outside what do

we do so yes they can temporarily help

someone but they continue to be homeless

you want homeless people to get jobs how

does that work if they have to be in

line by 3:00 p.m. or they don’t get a

bed and I won’t describe the hoops you

have to jump through to get into most

halfway houses or how likely a homeless

person is to break one of their many

or look the wrong way at a staffer and

wind up back on the streets starting all

over

seriously we’re asking people to solve

all their problems first then give him a

place to live

shelters enforce homelessness

transitional living reinforces

homelessness ask any homeless person

have them tell you their horror stories

if you can bear it and they’re used to

war by the way eighty percent of

homeless adults were homeless at some

point as a child

eighty percent chaos when they’re little

chaos as adults and they’re used to it

but some are traumatized by it many

self-medicate and all are in one kind of

negotiation or other with the system to

get help the system remember that third

kind of person social services people

are good-hearted and they’re especially

vulnerable to the beliefs of the system

in which they work when you work in a

system it’s hard to see that homeless

people really just need a place of their

own house the homeless first ask

questions later house them and they get

them healthy and in recovery and

contributing house them and don’t make

it impossible for them to stay house the

homeless first

what does housing them do think of it as

the ultimate medication imagine the

change in a homeless person’s life if we

can give them these things first sleep

homeless people on average sleep three

hours a night and I don’t need to tell

you how unhealthy that is if we can even

double that imagine the health benefits

the physical the mental and the

emotional benefits of sleep housing is

an immune booster in an anti-psychotic

second thing it gives safety and privacy

imagine worrying 24/7 about being mugged

or raped or trafficked a lot of homeless

people are on the autism spectrum the

bipolar the physically disabled they’re

vulnerable to mockery or bullying on the

streets there’s nowhere to hide and

shelters aren’t much better coming into

a shelter is like being last in Group C

when you board Southwest everyone is

watching you wondering what spot you’re

gonna pick and you know it if you ever

make it into transitional living

constant fear is a beat

kicked out now imagine eliminating all

of those worries the safety and privacy

provided by housing they’re like

anti-anxiety meds the third thing it

does it gives you connection and hope

taken together

what all of this gives homeless people

is relief from the constant battle of

survival on the streets housing connects

you to a neighborhood a community when

you’re not just surviving you can

actually plan for the future you may

have a sense of hope housing is an

antidepressant immune booster

antipsychotic anti-anxiety

antidepressant it’s like we have this

wonder drug that does all of these

things but we’re saying get well first

and you’ll qualify for that drug so

housing is the prescription working

homeless people pick it up in Kansas

City they can come to 89th and Troost we

build tiny houses for homeless vets we

started with vets because we knew we

could get support and we have tremendous

community support for everything we’ve

done and it’s a good thing because what

we’ve done has been one happy accident

after another BCP started because a

bunch of us new homeless vets and we

couldn’t stand it we knew if we could

show the community the effectiveness of

being real and honest with this

population alongside the safety and

comfort of a tiny house we can make a

dramatic impact on ending homelessness

70% of each house is built by volunteers

you want community buy-in invite them to

be a part of your idea

I promise they want to people like

community America Farmers Insurance Bank

of America have sent hundreds of their

employees to help us build an entire

neighborhood the houses are built

understanding the danger filled mindset

of a homeless person using the parlance

of our time

these are trauma-informed tiny houses

there’s one way in and out the bed faces

the entrance it’s low to the ground the

windows never face the windows of the

other house so no one’s staring in at

you you’re secure you can rest and heal

while at the same time finding your way

to become a part of a community and we

place folks who live in this

neighborhood with intention we are

about community and safety our family

houses are built in the interior of the

village with houses facing each other we

want to place our female veterans and

their kids in this area it takes a

village and people with like problems

can rally around each other other

residents they want to keep to

themselves and there it’s even people

who don’t want to talk to me which is

insane we put all of our vets who would

prefer to be alone on the edges of the

village these folks make excellent de

facto guards for the community because

they recognize anyone who isn’t part of

the village we like our veterans to

police themselves this is real

functional transitional housing and we

focus very simply on five supports that

lead to permanent housing readiness if

you want to keep the community of

housing providers like landlords and

property managers in this game we need

them and they need us to help our

friends become community ready apartment

ready permanent housing ready we focus

on income stability education and

training fiscal understanding health and

well-being and network of support these

lead to permanent housing readiness and

we’re already seeing how well it works

we had a vet addicted to meth who lost

his entire family and who detoxed while

at BCP he’s got a high paying job now

he’s reclaimed his family and now they

have a house all of their own a woman

who fled domestic violence she lost

everything no income she recovered with

us and now has a three-bedroom house in

the suburbs a cataract blind homeless

fella who lived in his car and had his

car stolen he lived with us for one year

and now he owns property near his family

where he’s building his own house and

yeah we helped him get eye surgery and

he can see in his words in three

dimensions now these are low-hanging

fruit we’re building our legacy on

stories like this and people really get

it I toured a local business owner who

looked around the community he turned to

me he pulled out his checkbook and he

wrote us a $350,000 check they gave us

our community center and that’s where we

offered job training pet care dentistry

behavioral health care and other

services and yeah we throw a few parties

there too

we’ve got so many great supporters and

now they’re helping us expand into other

cities Longmont Colorado this year in

seven more by 2022 so veterans community

project is a construction company that

became a social services company if we

can make that transformation others who

want to solve this problem can make it

too

you can start right now remember that

terrible choice about whether or not to

give money next time remember this

giving a buck or two to a homeless

person is not going to end their

homelessness but investing that dollar

into something that works can so I’m not

letting you off the hook I’m not saying

don’t give money to homeless people I’m

trying to sink this hook deeper and keep

you engaged in solving this problem now

when you’re faced with that choice

instead of reaching for the change in

your pocket you can reach for your phone

and just say hey Suri

hey homeless vet $2.00 and there’s money

going to help people get the housing

they need remember when it comes to

homelessness we invented the rules we

invented the system that doesn’t work

why are we still playing by the old

rules pretending that this system can do

what we all want it to happen to get

homeless people off the streets

let’s stop lying to ourselves in a way

what we know to be true is just looking

for a home when we give truth a home and

act on that truth the homeless will have

a place to live - thank you

you

当我五岁的时候,我看到我的第一个

无家可归的人,一个男人站在一个

空地上,我知道有些

不同,所以我向妈妈寻求

答案,她尽力解释,

但这让我感到困惑,因为我知道

那里 在我

附近的空屋子里,

我第一次遇到一个无家可归的人时就开始迷恋

我8岁时在加利福尼亚

我问他是否认识堪萨斯城的无家可归者

我想我认为他们

都有某种秘密联系

这就是我们大多数人

对无家可归者的

理解程度 我们不了解他们是因为我们的

世界观 有两种

人以两种不同

的方式

看待无家可归 人们

辞职了 向我要钱 不要发疯

不要上瘾 不要吓唬我

走开 我们的另一半希望

无家可归者过上舒适 这里

有一些现金 这是一件你自愿提供的外套

如果你在感恩节在施舍厨房工作

,从这两个角度之一,

我们对自己

撒谎说什么可以解决问题,

每次我们在街上看到一个无家可归的人时,我们都会感受到这些世界观之间的紧张关系

,你知道它是怎么回事

你是从高速公路上下来,

他们就在那里,还是你走过

那个角落的店面,你

突然被迫做出两个决定,一个接一个,一个

接一个,第一个,我承认

这个人看着他们的眼睛,如果

我这样做我' 我会感觉到一些我

不想感到恐惧、悲伤、烦恼

、内疚或厌恶的事情然后如果我

身上有钱我已经决定是否

给予不要给予这是纸或

塑料的难题 对

地球更糟 我向你保证,在本次演讲结束时

你会知道如何解码

现在我之前说错了,当我

说有两种人时,

还有第三种,他们在社会

服务部门工作 我花了数年时间和组织

尝试 到 帮助无家可归者和社会

服务,人们真的很想帮助,但

我告诉你,

在这个球拍中有很多系统性的自欺欺人

我们建立的系统几乎是

基于一个谎言,我们告诉

自己有这个线性过程 如果

无家可归的人能满足一些

要求,他们就会

从街上搬到避难所,再到

过渡性生活,再到永久住房,

这似乎合乎逻辑,但让我们

看看这些阶段实际上为

街头典型的无家可归者提供了什么

,积极的是你 不会

被很多人打扰 你所有的

决定都是你自己的,但是

这种自主权的代价是非常高的 它是

危险的,你总是处于生存

模式 庇护所 积极的是你

得到了一顿饭和一个温暖的地方 睡觉,

但有负面影响,但在迪斯尼有一个叫做庇护所的游乐设施,

要排

三个小时的队才能拿到你所有的

东西可能会被偷,或者你可能会

在你度过一整晚的庇护所中遭到袭击

担心两者 就像

晚上吵醒你的响亮的声音

谁要回去睡觉 过渡

生活或中途的房子 积极的

是你开始觉得你有

自己的地方 我有点

因为消极的是它就像 与

有史以来最严格的父母一起

生活 遵守制度规则的父母,您

必须放弃自己,成为他们

要求您成为的人,这样您才能留下

来 或上课,因为他们

现在有工作 永久住房 积极的一面

是你不是无家可归 我会

这么说 我知道我会冒犯

那些相信

他们所做的善意的人 这个难题的中间部分

,我们称之为庇护所和

过渡性住房或中途住房

不起作用,我们需要破坏这个

系统 庇护所对结束无家可归没有影响

,我知道你在

想什么,除了我们做什么之外,它低于零

,是的,他们可以承受 暂时帮助

某人,但他们仍然无家可归

您希望无家可归的人找到

工作 如果他们必须在

下午 3:00 之前排队,那该怎么办? 或者他们没有

床,我不会描述你

必须跳过的箍才能进入大多数

中途的房子,或者一个无家可归的

人有多大可能打破他们的许多人

或以错误的方式看待工作人员

和风 重新回到街头

认真地开始 我们要求人们首先解决

他们所有的问题 然后给他一个

住所 收容所 强制无家可归

过渡性生活 加强

无家可归 询问任何无家可归的人

让他们告诉你他们的恐怖故事

如果你能忍受 他们已经习惯了

战争 80%

的无家可归的成年人在

孩提时代的某个时候无家可归

80% 的混乱当他们

成年后有点混乱并且他们已经习惯了,

但有些人因此受到了许多

自我的创伤 药物和所有人都在

与系统进行一种或其他的谈判以

获得帮助 系统记住第三

类人 社会服务

人们心地善良,他们特别

容易受到系统信仰的影响

当你在一个系统中工作时,他们在其中工作

很难看出无家可归

者真的只需要一个

自己的房子 无家可归者首先提出

问题,然后安置他们,他们让

他们恢复健康,并

为他们做出贡献,而不是

让他们不可能首先留在家中

无家可归者

什么是住房 他们确实将其

视为终极药物 想象

一下如果我们

能给无家可归者这些东西首先让他们睡觉

无家可归者平均每晚睡三个

小时,并且 我不需要告诉

你这是多么不健康,如果我们甚至可以

将健康益处加倍想象

睡眠住房的精神和情感益处是

抗精神病药物中的免疫助推器

第二件事它提供安全和隐私

想象 24/7 全天候担心被抢劫

、强奸或贩卖 很多无家可归的

人患有自闭症

躁郁症 肢体残疾 他们很

容易受到嘲笑或欺负 在

街上玩耍 无处可躲,

避难所也好不到哪里去

进入避难所就像是在 C 组最后一名,

当你登上西南航空时,每个人都在

看着你想

知道你会选择什么地方,如果你成功了,你就知道了

它进入过渡性生活

持续的恐惧是一个节拍

现在被踢出想象消除

所有这些担忧 住房提供的安全和隐私

它们就像

抗焦虑药物 它所做的第三件事

它给你联系和希望

把所有这一切放在一起 让无家可归的人

从街头不断的生存之战中解脱

住房将

您与邻里联系起来 社区 当

您不只是生存时 您

实际上可以为未来做计划 您可能

有希望 住房是一种

抗抑郁剂 免疫增强剂

抗精神病药 抗焦虑

抗抑郁药就像我们有这种

神奇的药物可以做所有这些

事情,但我们说先

康复,你就有资格使用这种药物,

所以 住房是处方工作的

无家可归者在堪萨斯城拿起它

他们可以来到第 89 和特罗斯特我们

为无家可归的兽医建造小房子我们

从兽医开始因为我们知道我们

可以获得支持并且我们所做的一切都得到了巨大的

社区支持

这是一件好事,因为

我们所做的是一个

又一个 BCP 开始后的快乐事故,因为

我们一群新的无家可归的兽医,我们

无法忍受,我们知道我们是否可以

向社区展示

真实和诚实的有效性 有了这些

人口,再加

上一所小房子的安全和舒适,我们可以

对结束无家可归产生巨大影响

每所房子的 70% 都是由志愿者建造的

你希望社区支持 邀请他们

成为你想法的一部分

我保证他们想要 像社区这样的

人 美国农民保险 美国

银行已派出数百

名员工来帮助我们建立一个完整的

社区 房屋的建造

了解充满危险的心态

一个无家可归的人 用

我们这个时代的说法

这些是受过创伤的小房子

进出只有一条路 床

面向入口 它离地很低

窗户从不面对

另一所房子的窗户,所以没有人盯着

你看 您很安全,您可以休息和康复,

同时找到自己的

方式成为社区的一部分,我们

有意安置住在这个社区的人们我们

关注社区和安全我们的家庭

住宅建在

房子面对面的村庄 我们

想把我们的女性退伍军人和

他们的孩子安置在这个地区需要一个

村庄,有类似问题的人

可以团结在一起,其他

居民他们想保持

自己,甚至有些

人不这样做 不想跟我说话,这太

疯狂了,我们把所有

喜欢独处的兽医都放在了村子的边缘,

这些人

实际上是社区的优秀守卫,因为

他们认识到 任何不

属于村子的人我们希望我们的退伍军人

自我监督这是真正的

功能性过渡性住房,如果您想保留房东和财产等住房提供者社区,我们

非常简单地关注五项支持,这些支持会

导致永久住房准备就绪

这个游戏中的经理 我们需要

他们,他们需要我们帮助我们的

朋友成为社区就绪 公寓

就绪 永久住房就绪 我们专注

于收入稳定 教育和

培训 财政理解 健康和

福祉以及支持网络 这些

导致永久住房就绪,

我们 “我们已经看到它的效果有多好,

我们有一位对冰毒上瘾的兽医,他失去

了整个家庭,在 BCP 戒毒

后他得到了一份高薪工作,现在

他重新找回了家人,现在

他们有了自己的房子,一个

女人 逃离家庭暴力 她失去了

一切 没有收入 她和

我们一起追回 现在在郊区有一个三居室的房子

白内障盲人无家可归

住在他的车里但

车被盗的人 他和我们住了一年

,现在他在他家附近拥有房产

,他正在建造自己的房子,

是的,我们帮助他进行了眼科手术,

他可以从三个维度看到他的话

现在这些都是唾手可得的

果实 我们正在像这样的故事上建立我们的遗产

,人们真的明白

了 给了我们

我们的社区中心,在那里我们

提供了工作培训宠物护理牙科

行为保健和其他

服务,是的,我们也在那里举办了一些派对

我们有很多伟大的支持者,

现在他们正在帮助我们扩展到

朗蒙特的其他城市 到 2022 年,科罗拉多州今年

将再增加 7 个,因此退伍军人社区

项目是一家建筑公司,

如果我们

能够做出这种转变,其他

想要解决这个问题的人可以成为一家社会服务公司。 也接受它,

你现在就可以开始记住

下一次是否给钱的可怕选择记住

给无家可归的人一两块钱

不会结束他们的

无家可归,但把那美元投资到有用的

东西上,这样我就可以了 不是

让你摆脱困境我不是说

不要给无家可归的人钱

对于

口袋里的零钱,你可以拿出手机,

然后说嘿 Suri

嘿无家可归的兽医 2.00 美元,有钱

可以帮助人们获得

他们需要的住房 记住当涉及

无家可归时,我们发明了规则,我们

发明了系统 行不通

为什么我们仍然按旧

规则玩 假装这个系统可以

做我们都希望它发生的事情 让

无家可归的人离开街头

让我们停止以一种

我们知道是真实的方式对自己撒谎

当我们给真相一个家并按照这个真相行动时,我们正在寻找一个家

,无家可归者将有

一个住所 - 谢谢你