Easter Outreach Event Needs

URM is hosting an Easter Outreach on March 31 where all will be invited to URM to celebrate Easter and receive items they need.  But we need your help to provide these items!  Here they are:

Bibles – Spanish and English versions appreciated

Socks – for men, women, and children

Toothpaste/Toothbrushes – travel size is best

Deodorant – again, travel size is ideal

Undergarments – Bras for women and underwear for men and women

For more information on a donation or if you have any questions please contact Celena Juarez at (213) 316-2703 or cjuarez@urm.org.

Thank you!

The Reality on Skid Row Since Home For Good Launch

I’ve tried to keep folks up to date on what is happening on Skid Row.  On September 28th, I wrote of a growing desperation on Skid Row in Los Angeles, a doubling in the number of people and an increase in crime and I shared,

”I attribute this to 3 major factors: the worsening economy bringing high unemployment and a lack of services to people in need, the one size fits all move to Housing First which has caused the limited resources available to move away from emergency services and to permanent supportive housing only, and the recent federal court ruling in favor of LACAN which protects the property of people experiencing homelessness to the extreme point that any type of clean up of Skid Row by anyone is not allowed.”

Today, I received an update from a dear friend of URM, Estela Lopez. Estela heads up the local Central City East Association, and her security officers are often 1st responders to difficult situations and have 1st hand information on Skid Row.  Estela wrote, “The downturn in the economy, the release of state prisoners, and the court injunction limiting removal of property is having a cumulative affect on skid row.  Some streets have become tent villages once again as they were prior to the 2006 implementation of the Safer Cities Initiative.  I had my staff do a quick re-cap of key indicators, comparing January 2011 to January 2012:

Abandoned property                  Up    158%

Encampments                           Up      97%

Illegal dumping                         Up    500%

LAFD Assistance                      Up   1000% (persons sick, injured or deceased)

LAPD Assistance                      Up    500%

As you may have gathered already, I would add to Estela’s list of causes the “Home For Good” push as one of the causes.  “Home For Good” backers, The United Way of LA and the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, as well as Federal and local government, strongly marketed “Home For Good” as the one size fits all solution to homelessness and even contrasted this new “better” solution to the “archaic” “ineffective” shelters and services that have failed to solve the problem in the past.  I even heard that now, instead of “managing” the problem of homelessness, as in the past, “Home For Good” would solve the problem. I would counter that, now, we are not even coming close to managing the problem.  It is out of control! This unfortunate, inaccurate marketing has funneled resources to “Home For Good” and away from many very effective non-profits around LA County, and has caused the closure of much needed beds and services, producing a lack of services to people in need, and placed an incredible amount of people on the streets, doubling the number of people on the streets of Skid Row since “Home For Good” was launched!

Before “Home For Good” LA was launched, and I do not doubt the good intentions, the cost savings that were projected from this new approach were astronomical…something in the range of $750 Million.  I have to ask, where is the cost savings in this?

LAFD Assistance                      Up   1000% (persons sick, injured or deceased)

LAPD Assistance                      Up    500%

The truth is if “Home For Good” was the most effective strategy for all people experiencing homelessness, there would be a cost increase, not a decrease.  The capital costs alone to permanently house all people experiencing homelessness in LA alone would be $15 Billion and the operating costs to provide supportive services would be around $5 Billion per year.  I’ve based these estimates on the original costs of the Project 50 in LA.

Certainly “Home For Good” was established with an eye on Skid Row and a wish to positively impact Skid Row, next to the business center of Los Angeles?

Those in leadership and authority should not have taken their eye off the ball.  We had worked on a multi-pronged strategy to reduce homelessness on Skid Row from 2000 people to 600 over the course of several years and lots of hard work.

Marketing what should have been simply yet another added strategy to a continuum of strategies as the silver bullet solution to homelessness was a big mistake, and instead of assisting in providing a solution, along with other factors, it has taken us to the tipping point of chaos here on Skid Row.

I hope that before you believe any further marketing presentations from “Home For Good”, you’ll call me and come walk the streets of Skid Row with me to see this first-hand.  Thank you. Andy B.

Bottled Water

Union Rescue Mission passes out bottled water to the people in the Skid Row community during the hot summer months when it gets above 85 degrees.

If you can help out by donating bottled water, please contact Celena Juarez at (213) 316-2703 or cjuarez@urm.org.

Thank you!

The Mission Newsletter – February 2012

“I know the dark side. I’ve seen it and lived it — I know what evil is,” says “Pops,” a 68-year-old guest at Union Rescue Mission.

Pops grew up the son of a sadistic, alcoholic father who beat him almost daily. He still carries the scars from the whip his father used. By the time he was a teenager, Pops turned his hurt and rage into a string of armed robberies and car thefts. He ended up in prison at age 19, where he quickly earned a reputation as one of its meanest men.

After his release in 1968, he started smuggling drugs. After several ruthless gun battles with rival drug smugglers on the Mexican border, they dubbed him “El Diablo” — The Devil.

By 1983, Pops was one of the most influential drug dealers on the streets of downtown Los Angeles, where he dealt addiction, misery, and death for 26 years. Yet Pops’ own heroin and alcohol addiction slowly sapped the life out of him.

“By 2009,” he says, “I knew I was dying. My legs were black, I couldn’t walk, and I’d burned out every vein on my body from the needles. One night, God spoke to me and told me to go to Union Rescue Mission. I couldn’t fight anymore, so I did.”

For two months, Pops sat by a trash can vomiting and praying God would give him the grace to make it another day.

As his body healed, the love and grace he experienced at the Mission started to heal his soul. “One day, I went to my chaplain’s office and I started weeping and I haven’t stopped since. I’ve never experienced love before. But the love I experienced here saved my life,” Pops says.

“Colossians 1:13 says it all: ‘For God has rescued me from the dominion of darkness and brought me into the kingdom of the Son He loves.’”

Today, Pops’ only desire is to return to the streets where he used to deal death to get as many men, women, and children off those streets as possible. He’s already persuaded nine men and women to get help at the Mission.

“If anyone knows these streets, I do,” he says. “I’ve been in the worst areas with the meanest people. And I’ve seen the kids. When I see those kids now, I just start crying. I want to help them. And I believe that’s what God wants me to do.”

After a lifetime of dealing in darkness, Pops now lives in the light, where you’ll find him walking every day with tears of gratitude.

Our Winter of Discontent

After a lifetime of dealing in darkness, Pops now lives in the light, where you’ll find him walking every day with tears of gratitude. For more than five years, the numbers of people living outside on the streets of Skid Row were dropping. A couple of years ago, their number had dropped to 600 — which is still tragic, but far better than the thousands of people living on these streets 10 years ago. But this winter, the unthinkable has happened. Due to the economy, more people being let out of prison, more lost jobs and lost savings, and a decline in government services, the number of people living on the sidewalks and back alleys on Skid Row has more than doubled to nearly 1,700.

This winter they face bone-chilling rain and cold, nights without sleep, weather related sicknesses, and some will even die. We must take action.

Thanks to your support, Union Rescue Mission offers an additional 140 beds to hurting men and women every cold, rainy night — and we use that opportunity to invite every one of them to come in out of the rain and change their lives permanently. Our love, care, and humanity for hurting people demands it. I wish we could do more. But thanks to you, we’re doing what we can.

Blessings,

Rev. Andy Bales

Have You Created Your 120 Fund Yet?

I hope you will join us as we celebrate our 120th birthday — and 120 years of bringing compassion, love, and hope to people on the streets of Los Angeles.

None of this work would have been possible without the support of friends like you. YOU are the Mission. That’s why we hope you will go to urm.org/120 and create your own personal fundraising page.

Your birthday gift will help feed, shelter, and restore precious souls experiencing homelessness. Thank you.