Down, But Not Out

An introspective examination of the tragedy of homelessness in the richest society ever to exist on Earth

Homelessness is not an accident. Homelessness is not a problem. Homelessness is a political agenda. Why else would there be so many homeless people in the richest country that ever existed on the face of this planet.

Friday, June 29, 2007

More Evicting Chris (click here)

On August 23.2006 city workers with trucks, heavy equipment and a contingency of mounted police demolished Chris Gardiner's home under the on ramp to the Gardiner Expressway. Chris is a gentle person who does no harm. I have known him for many years and can testify that he is supportive and helpful to others. His squat was always neat and clean and he is not a drug addict. Similar scenes occur on a regular basis in Toronto, as authorities pursue a policy of harassment designed to drive homeless people from the city. People who were born and raised here are being driven out to seek shelter in a more friendly location. The same thing and worse has happened to me on several occasions. Each time I gathered up the few belongings that remained after they took my home to the dump, found a new secluded site and started over. Every homeless person who ever had a squat will speak of similar experiences. They don't want homeless people in Toronto, but they won't make affordable housing available. It's cheaper to just drive us away and let someone else deal with the problem. I wonder what an eviction like this costs the City.

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Evicting Chris Gardiner (click here)

This article appeared in the Toronto Star Pubdate:August 24, 2006Page: A12Section: NewsEdition:MET Length:498 Highway shanty knocked down. City bulldozes shack by Gardiner Man lived there for several years Byline/Source: By Christopher Maughan Toronto Star Photo Caption: TORY ZIMMERMAN TORONTO STAR Ron Craven, a friend of Chris "Gardiner," was among those who objected to the removal of Chris' shack beneath the downtown highway. He was so at home he named himself after the place. But after eight years living there, a homeless man who became known as Chris "Gardiner" has been evicted from his makeshift house underneath Toronto's downtown highway. City officials and Toronto police arrived at around 7 a.m. yesterday to try to persuade Chris, 44, and five other residents to agree to move into social housing. An hour and a half later, police dragged all of them from the home, taking him and three others into custody. Then the bulldozers went to work, trashing the walls of his small, three-room shack. About 30 people showed up to protest the eviction. Many knew Chris personally and wondered why he was being targeted now, given that he had lived there peaceably for so many years. "He's an easygoing, gentle person," said Ron Craven, an elderly man who lived with Chris while he was still on the streets. "There's no criminality in him at all." Shawn Simpson, who was evicted yesterday morning but not taken into custody, said he thought he knew why the shack was torn down. "See behind there, the condos being built? Nobody in there wants to look at this," he said over the roar of nearby dump trucks. Still, it's hard to see how people would have even noticed it, tucked underneath the on-ramp, inside a chain-link fence around an old hydro transformer. Chris had put up sticks on the fence to screen off his shack. Inside, he had a propane-stove, a TV and light running off batteries, even a sink. It took him almost two years to scrounge up boards, nails, and scrap metal to build the place, after police tore down an earlier shack. Simpson said he'll remember Chris' shack as a welcome spot. "He would cook Christmas dinner for all the homeless people who get a little depressed that time of year. But no matter what I say, people won't understand, they'll just judge us." But Iain De Jong, an outreach worker with the city's Streets to Homes project, insisted he had Chris' and his roommates' best interests at heart. "My message is pretty clear: we're there to provide services and we're there to provide help." He said the eviction is due to refurbishment being done on the underside of the highway. Since it began a year and a half ago, the Streets to Homes project has successfully gotten 730 people into social housing, De Jong said. This article appeared in the Globe & Mail

TORONTO -- A man who has been living under a highway off-ramp for the past eight years was evicted from his makeshift home yesterday morning, following a standoff between police and activists who accuse the city of treating homeless people without respect. Chris "Gardiner" - named after the roadway that sheltered him - was arrested along with five friends who stood by his side as police entered the small three-room house built out of scrap wood. They were all released yesterday afternoon, after being charged with trespassing and failure to leave the premises when directed, and fined $70 each. TD "It is the end, but it's also the beginning," Chris said in an interview after his release. "The city has not heard the last from me. They have no idea what's in store for them." A 44-year-old with a bushy brown beard, glasses and long, brown dreadlocks tied up under a navy blue bandana, Chris held his ribs in pain, saying police had "dropped him" during the arrest. His eviction follows a year of formal requests by the city that he move on so that construction could begin on the pillars that hold up the highway above. On Friday, he received a written notice from the city warning him to leave his shack by 12:01 a.m. yesterday. Nearly 30 bystanders, many who camped overnight to support Chris, chanted "Shame" and "Leave Chris alone" yesterday morning as officers handcuffed and carried him out of his shack. The dwelling, complete with a well-stocked kitchen, a propane-powered camping stove, a sink (but no running water) and a light bulb hanging from the ceiling, powered by the same battery that ran his stereo and hand-held television, was torn down by hydro workers shortly afterward. His belongings, city officials said, have been "put away in safe storage." Chris said later that he doesn't want any of his possessions back. In fact, he has refused to accept anything from city outreach workers, who have offered him an apartment and other help. Iain De Jong, manager of the city's Streets into Homes project, said he has been trying for months to convince Chris to move into subsidized housing. "Look around, this is a construction zone," Mr. De Jong said. "There's work being done in this area, it is not a safe environment to be living in. There will be equipment, there will be trucks going in and out, there will be dust and debris falling down from overhead." In anticipation of the construction, Mr. De Jong said an intensive outreach program has had city workers visiting homeless people underneath the Gardiner "multiple times each day" for the last month. But Kolin Davidson, once homeless but now an activist with the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty, said such programs don't respect people's rights. "You don't send outreach workers down simply as a precursor to an eviction notice," said Mr. Davidson, who was one of the supporters arrested yesterday. "Chris was a lot safer [underneath the Gardiner] than in the slums that are available to him. The City of Toronto has a lot to learn about building trust with people." Mr. De Jong argued that moving people into special housing is the only way the city can solve homelessness. "I've seen people's lives change for the better when they make the move from living underneath bridges or out in parks and into safe and affordable housing," he said. Between February, 2005 and June, 2006, the city's Streets into Homes project moved 730 people directly from the street into housing, Mr. De Jong said. According to a city report, only 11 per cent of those people became homeless again. "When we bring someone from the streets to a house we don't just say goodbye after that," he said. "There are dedicated staff who follow up with these individuals." Chris says he makes $35 to $50 a week returning empty beer bottles and picking up dropped change. Originally from Montreal, he came to Toronto when he was 19. At 31, he said he went through "a kind of revelation" and adopted religious convictions that include a rejection of the notion of land ownership. "You can worship your false god - the law - and claim that he owns everything. I do not," he said. "I claim that the real God owns everything including the Gardiner Expressway itself, the land under the Gardiner Expressway and the air over the Gardiner Expressway."

Squats (click here)

Squats are what we call our makeshift homes. When you see someone sleeping on the sidewalk and you think there are so many of us, you're only seeing the tip of the iceberg. I never slept on the sidewalk. I ALWAYS had a squat hidden away somewhere, a place to sleep in safety, to store my few possessions, to relax, to get high. So, although I was homeless in the traditional sense of the phrase, I was never without a home. If you look in the hidden places you will find that most of us are squatting in tents, in homemade shacks, in abandoned vehicles, in abandoned buildings, in culverts, in containers, under bridges, anywhere we can find to be safe, invisible and sheltered from the weather. There are a lot more of us than meets the eye. the disgrace of homelessness in our town is much worse than you could imagine. Here are some squats that were photographed by an outreach worker from Street Survivors, a program attached to Central Neighbourhood House and dedicated to helping the homeless. There is a whole industry that has been created in response to this problem. Services such as health, outreach, drop in centres, shelters, housing search assistance, legal assistance, advocacy groups and more have been implemented at a cost far in excess of what it would cost to prevent the problem in the first place. AFFORDABLE and ACCESSIBLE HOUSING.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Alleys (click here)

There used to be a swing in there where I would sit and smoke a joint and rest. Now there is a fence. We try to stay out of sight as much as possible, so Rooftops, Lanes and Alleys are our natural habitat, but the authorities are fencing off all of our hiding places and forcing us to stay out in plane view. This seems counter productive to me. They say that all the homeless people sleeping on the sidewalks is bad for business, so why do they force us out of our hiding places? We don't want the tourists to see our misery any more than you do.

Friday, June 22, 2007

The Art of the Street (click here)

Graffiti is an art form which exemplifies the lifestyle out here. It is bold and free in spirit and totally irreverent. Many of these works are produced by homeless people, but most are created by others. The artists all have a common link, they are drawn by the magnetic appeal of a wild and undisciplined lifestyle. The rules that society places on us all are ignored or, more often flagrantly broken. While the authorities view graffiti as vandalism, many property owners actually post signs inviting the artists to apply their skills. Because the venue is usually in secluded and perceptively dangerous locations, the so called normal citizens rarely see the best of it. The range of styles, subject matter and talent is limitless and the effect on our environment is a testament to the times in which we live.

Familiar Faces from the street (click here)

Everywhere you look you will see us. We're out here doing what we need to do to stay alive and hanging of to our sanity as best we can.

Homeless Vigil at Church of the Holy Trinity behind Eaton Centre (click here)

Every month someone from the homeless community dies. Some of the causes are Exposure, Violence, Disease, Substance Abuse and Hopelessness. There is only one Reason, MONEY. In this rich and self indulgent society, the politicians tell us that we can not afford to house our people, so thousands are left to die on the streets. Every month there is a vigil in remembrance of those we have lost at the Church of the Holy Trinity. Family and friends come to honour their memory. I took these photos at one such vigil last November. Most of the people on this list would be alive today if they had a home.