Helter Shelter
In 1983, a group called the
Coalition for the Homeless began handing out sandwiches and fruit every night
to the horde of homeless people who gathered around Grand Central Station. It
was a pretty dismaying experience, straight out of Les Misérables : the
tattered crowd, the forest of groping hands, the healthy-looking young guys who
conned their way to seconds or thirds while the quiet or confused went home
empty-handed. But at least the coalition was doing something . It was the
coalition, too, that had won a court order mandating a "right to shelter," a
signal victory in those Darwinian, early Reagan years. Throughout the '80s the
coalition--and its founder, Robert Hayes, a former corporate lawyer--was the
principal voice for the homeless, both in New York and nationally. Hayes
insisted the problem of the homeless could be summed up in three words:
"Housing, housing, housing."
The
coalition succeeded by turning homelessness into a simple, powerful moral
equation, but the equation wasn't actually so simple. In 1992, a commission
chaired by Andrew Cuomo, now the federal housing secretary, released a study
showing that up to 30 percent of single homeless men suffered from severe
mental illness, and 65 percent used drugs or alcohol. The numbers for families
were smaller but still substantial. Homeless advocates had always known
substance abuse was a problem, but they had rarely aired their knowledge in
public for fear that it would shift public debate and blur the image of the
homeless as victims of an unjust housing policy. They attacked the Cuomo study,
though they couldn't discredit its findings. In 1993 Hayes, who had returned to
private legal practice and had begun to question his old single-minded
formulation, proposed to Mayor-elect Rudy Giuliani that the court order be
revised so that the city would guarantee the homeless the "continuum of care"
that Cuomo had proposed, and the homeless in turn would be obliged to accept
counseling, work training, and the like. Despite Giuliani's interest the idea
went nowhere since, Hayes says, it "created a grave sense of panic, at least in
the coalition, because it was seen as undermining the ultimate entitlement to
shelter." The coalition seemed to be painting itself into an ideological
corner.
This past March, that corner became smaller still. George
McDonald, another longtime homeless activist, filed suit against the coalition
on the grounds that officials of the organization had engaged in "harassment
and physical interference" of his rival program, called Ready, Willing &
Able. The allegation would have seemed bizarre if it hadn't been familiar: Two
years earlier, coalition officials had accused another nonprofit of using "goon
squads" of homeless men to roust other homeless people from ATM
vestibules--charges later found to be groundless.
Ready,
Willing & Able, which runs private homeless shelters, requires participants
to submit to frequent drug tests, abide by a range of rules inside the shelter,
and make modest payments toward their own room and board. In exchange, they get
jobs renovating apartments or cleaning streets for $5.50 an hour, plus, when
they "graduate," a bonus that normally amounts to $1,000 to help them find
permanent housing. McDonald is a former sportswear executive with a
businessman's regard for the therapeutic power of the marketplace. The premise
of his program was that since society will never pay for the kind of long-term
drug treatment Cuomo and others have envisioned, and since such treatment so
often fails, the most effective form of treatment is, as he puts it, "the
positive reinforcement of a culture that's established around work, around
earning money." McDonald says that half to two-thirds of single men on the
street can benefit from his program. This sounds pretty optimistic, and Larry
Rhodes, a formerly homeless man who does "intake" at the shelter McDonald runs
in Harlem, says the program has succeeded partly because it screens out drug
addicts and hard cases. In other words, McDonald may not have so much solved
the Cuomo problem as avoided it.
Still, Ready, Willing & Able provides not
only work but what appears to be a relatively calm and secure environment, and
it would hardly be surprising if this drastic change from the world of the
streets, or even of the typical shelter, motivated men to turn around their
lives. McDonald says two-thirds of those who graduate from his program hold
down permanent jobs and apartments--an almost unheard-of success rate among
single homeless men. Most of the nine or 10 men I interviewed at the shelter
spoke of their experience in overtly moralistic terms: They talked about taking
responsibility for themselves, for the money they earned, and even for the
children whom they had fathered and then neglected. The program, with its
combination of rules and incentives, had prodded them to do something they
would not have done for themselves.
McDonald's problems began when he tried to impose his program on men in the
Harlem shelter who were accustomed to getting their three squares with no
questions asked. McDonald acquired control of the Harlem facility, widely
considered one of the most dangerous and disorganized in the city, when the
city turned over the shelter system to nonprofit providers. When McDonald took
over, many of the men rebelled against the program's strictures, especially the
random drug testing. Some left for shelters elsewhere. The coalition serves as
the court-appointed monitor for the shelter system, and what McDonald alleges,
and others at the shelter corroborate, is that the official who represented the
coalition at the shelter worked actively with the dissidents who remained to
disrupt the program. In a meeting of all the tenants in late January, the
coalition's monitor allegedly called McDonald a "Nazi" who was enriching
himself by exploiting poor blacks, and berated the black shelter manager as
McDonald's lackey. Coalition director Mary Brosnahan supposedly stood nearby
and said nothing. The dissidents, lead by the former head of the coalition's
"client advisory board," urged the other homeless men to stop working and
allegedly issued threats of physical violence.
McDonald claims the coalition is "ideologically opposed" to
his program. Brosnahan has lent some credence to this charge by describing
McDonald's work program as "indentured servitude." She declined to talk about
this case, but her lawyer, Steven Banks, says the defendants deny making the
statements McDonald attributes to them. It is true, Banks says, that the
coalition was so disturbed about the program that it contemplated suing him.
The reason, he says, is the $65 a week McDonald was withholding for room and
board, in violation of rules that govern the shelter system. But since
residents were free to go to a conventional shelter, it's hard to see what
right was violated. And since the money was being deducted from salaries they
otherwise wouldn't have had, it seems perverse to focus on the issue of rights
in the first place.
The
fundamental issue is whether it's permissible to impose obligations on the
homeless in exchange for various goods, to regard them as something other than
victims to whom certain rights attach. This is, of course, the same question we
are now asking about welfare recipients. We have moved very swiftly from seeing
welfare as an unconditional right to viewing it as no right at all. Perhaps we
could have found our way to a middle point if welfare's champions had seen
their way beyond the language of rights to a different, and more reciprocal,
kind of social contract. The sad story of the Coalition for the Homeless, and
of its decline from the moral pinnacle it once occupied, is a parable of that
failure of vision.