Our Homeless Experience Part 6: The Shelter, Part 1

in homelessexperience •  7 years ago  (edited)

For most people, the only way they can imagine what a homeless shelter is like is from what media portrays in movies and television shows. Perhaps the odd newscast now and then.

I had no idea what to expect when we were pushed into the shelter by CPS, but it's worse than my imaginings. In many, many ways.

We were fortunate in having an advocate on our side. She had been helping me for a couple of months. She was able to get us a spot in the family shelter so we never had to go into the general population shelter, which is usually required.

The Family Shelter is located on the main level of an apartment building in the Hillside neighborhood of Duluth.

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I was impressed the first time I saw the building, knowing that the upper levels were all permanent supportive housing and the shelter was downstairs. It looked modern and well kept, I was told the building is only a couple years old and was built to lead the way in helping homeless families.

Their creed: Helping children recover from the trauma of homelessness.

We needed a little of that after the fear of CPS.

I had Sparrow with me, she wasn't feeling well, so she, too, was impressed when we walked into the communal area with nice sofas, a computer room, laundry and then saw the offices where the social workers, housing folks and the like hang out.

It was clean, smelled nice and everyone was pretty friendly.

Obey every rule, no exceptions.

I filled out a mountain of paperwork, among which we were given our restrictions. A curfew, 10pm. We cannot go upstairs. We cannot enter other people's apartments. I cannot allow someone upstairs to babysit my children.

No visitors. Not even family. No allowing other people in our apartment. No drugs, alcohol or fighting (duh). Children must be with me at ALL TIMES, not even a quick run to the laundry room.

Pretty restrictive, a couple of those rules, but whatever, I'm not a rebelious youth, it's only temporary. But I can see how they could chaff on other people.

I was then told our apartment was not yet totally cleaned. It would be a few more hours.

I took Sparrow to lunch and we returned and waited, and waited. Inari and Willow finished classes and we waited some more.

Things were not as they seemed.

Finally we were given keys and our worker bustled out the door, since she'd stayed past 5 to wait for us.

We walked in expecting by now that the shelter would be as nice as the public face they put on.

Wrong. So. Freaking. Wrong.

We walked in that door and my heart sank. Immediately we were hit with the smell of curdled dairy and mold. Every wall was covered in marks of some kind. Crayon, marker, nail polish, someone had even etched their name and a date into the bathroom wall.

In the bedroom, there was dried blood on two walls. Reaching above my head. And on the floor in that same room was a large patch of filth with a bloody gauze from a previous tenant.

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Nothing says recovering from trauma like blood on the walls and a risk of AIDS or Hepatitis!

There was still food from the previous tennant in the cabinets. I bagged that up and brought it to the front counter as much of it was open.

There was also a torn and stained baby's playpen left on the bed.

Under it was this.

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My new worker had boasted that there were not bedbugs here yet but she didn't mention the mold on the matresses!

There's a second bedroom that we do not use. The four of us stay together in one room. I do not feel comfortable being seperated from my babies in this place.

That other room has nice french doors. At least they used to be nice. One of them has a broken window pane with jagged edges and glass shards on the floor. Even my youngest is capable of reaching it.

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Super safe! Speaking of safety, there are three microwaves in the apartment. Two of those are old and I assume do not work. One of the extras is on top of a lightweight storage unit that is not tethered to the wall.

Could you imagine if this thing were to topple over onto your toddler??? Why haven't the microwaves been disposed of properly?

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Then there are the provided sofa and loveseat. They look like this.

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Part of that mess is plastic bags, the rest is stuffing from inside the sofa. Oh yeah, and it's covered in pudding, or baby food, or peanut butter, or SOMETHING. I wasn't about to sniff it to find out.

I called a friend who brought cleaning supplies and met me outside the security door.

I was in tears by then. I felt more homeless in the shelter than I ever did in our camper. At least the camper was clean and comfortable and sanitary.

I turned on some music and cleaned for three days straight. Scrubbing walls, the fridge, the grimey tub, the absolutely disgusting stove and oven, oh and that smell? That was the kitchen sink. Which didn't work by the way.

Dishes had to be washed in the bathroom.

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I did tell several staff members what the place looked like. Asked them for cleaning supplies, which they did not give. Asked them to remove the broken glass, which they did not do.

That is, until the local news station was contacted. They did a story on the condition of the place. We were given donations of lots of household items, beds, blankets, a kitchen table, even a coffee maker, because of that story. Things all sitting in storage, waiting for us to move.

It's clean now, our shelter space. I've scrubbed everything. The family that comes after us will have a far better first day than we did.

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This is the place other shelters are supposed to be modeled from. People told me I ought to be grateful they gave me a roof over our heads.

I'm sorry, but no. The state of the rooms was only the start of what we would see in this place.

To continue in Part 2

If you have read this far, thank you! I know it was a long read!

Click the link to read the second post.

Our Homeless Experience 7: The Homeless Shelter, Part 2

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This post has been Resteemed and Upvoted by @familyprotection

Governments around the world,
are using "Child Protection Agencies"
to take children away from loving families
and place them in foster care or group homes
or put up for adoption.
THESE FAMILIES NEED PROTECTING.

UPVOTE This Comment .. & .. DONATE a Portion of the Liquid Rewards from this post,
TO HELP US HELP FAMILIES IN CRISIS. *** { How Do I Donate? } **

Thank-you @hickorymack for supporting @familyprotection

Thank you. 💜

I seriously believe the child of the previous tenant here would be much better off being sent to foster care.

The US CPS may be be utterly broken, but I still remain convinced that the concept of an agency protecting vulnerable children is good.

This type of behaviour is so typical of CPS (Child Protective Services.)

They force you away from a home (your RV) that was WAY BETTER than the shelter they made you and your children stay in. They actually put your children into danger, when there was very little danger to begin with before they got involved.

They do the same thing when they remove children and put them into foster care -- much of the time their parents (even if they had some real problems) were MUCH MUCH better and more loving than the Foster Parents who they are forced to live with.

They consistently put the children in worse situations than they were in the first place.

I am so sorry that you were forced to go through this, and live in deplorable conditions all because they blackmailed you that they would kidnap your precious innocent children if you did not do it.

Thanks for sharing your story here on Steemit with us.

This type of behaviour is so typical of CPS (Child Protective Services.)

Most likely the lady at the CPS believes the family shelter is an OK place - and who would blame her with such a spotless first impression of that shelter. It could also be that the other rooms are OK, that @hickorymack has just been super-unlucky with her room.

Based on what I see, the children of the previous tenant there would probably have been much better off in a foster home than with their mother (or perhaps, father).

Unfortunately it was not just our space. I publicly embarassed these people by getting these photos on the news. They then did an inspection of all six family shelter apartments. Three other sofa sets soon sat at the dumpster next to mine.

Four out of six are bad odds.

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

maam @canadian-coconut i hope you will recognize me someday , and support me :)

Oh my Gods, that's awful! And yet people always get into it in comments of news stories, "why don't these people just go to the shelter?" And the general population shelters are even scarier! People have no idea. I am, even understanding that shelters generally suck, amazed at the condition of that place, being a family shelter! You'd think they'd at least be safe and sanitary. Holy wow. :(
I am so glad you are out of there!

We will be soon. They're taking their time with the freaking background check. Grrrr.

Argh. I hope they hurry up! I'm sorry. :(

Based on this, one can sort of understand why they are so strict on those rules. There is a difference between people that are "just" homeless, and people that are total bums.

That must have been one traumatizing experience especially for the kids, Just because they are giving you shelter they should try and atleast habitable.

Totally agree. My kids have always lived a "sheltered" life. They'be never been around the sort of person that would beat on others. For them to see that much freaking blood on the walls, the things they spoke aloud while imagining what happened...

Not good. Especially since we waited hours for them to finish cleaning! What did it look like before then?!

That place was repulsive. A place where nightmares come from. How can the people that work there not do anything? Why the hell do they work there in the first place if they are not doing their job??? They are luck to have had you do all this work for them. You should have been paid! Thank God for Steemit cause I am losing hope for humanity.

Right?! The lady who does the caretaker work is the same lady that cleans the apartments when someone moves out.

She said she was told it "Doesn't have to be perfect."

For one, there should be more than one cleaning lady, and for two, I get that it doesn't have to be perfect as she is only one person, but when it comes to the shards of glass and blood on the walls... It should have been the first thing to do. And the mold on the beds out in the garbage and replaced.

Disgusting .. and then they tell you that its not clean yet...uhu.. sorry for you and your children that you need to stay in a place like this. But I saw good things too, people that donated stuff, wonderfull! I have been homeless to, lost everything, my 2 oldest live with the father thanks to cps and me, my boyfriend and then 3 month old daughter fled from Holland to Spain to escape from the hell we went trough. I feel your emotions, coming in an unknown place so you have a roof. It is hard, but let me tell you, that in a few weeks things will be normal .. and you will be very happy when you found your own place after this. I guess about anything will be an upgrade. I wish you much strenght and love, upvote will be following tomorrow due to low power.. I will follow you too.. take care!

I'm so sorry. Do you get to see your boys? That's so heartbreaking.

My oldest is a girl and she has a little brother.. As soon as my ex gaine full custody (cps didnt let me know about the request nore the court hearing) he had total controll and I could not.see them. when I told this to cps they said: this is between you two figure it out.. which gave him even more power of course. I am writing every day to work to the goal of going to the court for violation of human rights. Its a long complicated story which I was writing in Dutch before .. but I now had lots of time to think of a plan what will be the best tactic.. and it needs to be in English. I will not be silenced anymore and I will get them back.. I have abdolutely no doubt about that. It may take me maybe a year more to get everything in order and prepare the case before going to.court, but it will be done in the best way possible. They will know that I am a mother with lots of potential and I will keep my promisses .. justice will be done but it will be hard and for.my own piece of mind I need to cover every possible option that will be brought up.. But its hard yes, this is my way coping with it, and I am pretty proud that we got back on our feet because of our own power and listened to our gut feeling. thanks for your kindness

CPS is ripping families apart all over the world :( What if everyone from all over the world could get together and fight this system as a whole? Even though the laws are different in different parts of the world, they are still doing the same things. One organization. Some people do deserve to have their children taken away and put in better loving homes but we need true people to see what is what, not people that abuse the power. Who would know how to do such a thing to fight this system, to get everyone together and fight it hard?

I have been homeless to, lost everything, my 2 oldest live with the father thanks to cps and me, my boyfriend and then 3 month old daughter fled from Holland to Spain to escape from the hell we went trough.

A friend of mine lost her daughter to foster care (she got divorced, the granny of the child hated both her and the step-father and was almost daily in touch with the Norwegian CPS). Her immediate gut reaction was to send her younger son to her grand parents in Belo-Russia.

oh my .. sorry to hear that about your friend.. but her daughter did fall in the claws of cps ? its a bit like us in a way.. we fled out of the country to make sure our daughter (from me and my boyfriend so not the dad of the 2 oldest) would escape from this. they will.not stop investigate and always find something.. my gut feeling also said I needed to get away.. and so we did.. always trust your gut feeling.. ive learned this the hard way..

oh my .. sorry to hear that about your friend.. but her daughter did fall in the claws of cps ?

This is the Norwegian CPS, Barnevernet. I've heard rumors they are internationally known for being one of the more agressive child protection agencies ... it's particularly an issue for many immigrants (just google for "norway stole our child" or "barnevernet stole our child", plenty of bad press there). Quite much cultural issues, conflicts where the Norwegian staff in the CPS has very different opinions than the immigrants on how to raise a child. Some things are just absolutely not OK in Norway, including spanking a child or female genital cutting - and I do tend to side with the CPS under those two circumstances.

There is always two sides of a story - we have of course heard one side of the story extensively, which includes an evil and mentally unstable granny that was doing her best to get the CPS to intervene, and some very stubborn employees at the CPS, in the end it seemed more important for them not to lose face than what was the best for the child.

Once (long before the CPS intervened) the mother was away, and the daughter was staying with me for a week. She was so different from my son - she was always positive, looking forward for going to the kinder garden and still dropping everything yelling ... "hurray, uncle Tobias is here to pick me up" upon home-going time. It was a wonderful time - at the end I delivered the child to the said granny, and I didn't get any good impression of her indeed ... it was like an aura of disrespect hitting me as I entered the door.

In this case the step-father of the child was accused for being violent towards her. If their accusations were true, then I believe it's right to intervene. Now their daughter is 13 or 14 and old enough that she can witness in court, and as far as I heard, the latest court decision was that she can move back to the mother if and only if the step-father moves out.

I got the feeling that the couple (and particularly the step-father) from the start chose to fight with the CPS rather than cooperate, that probably didn't make things better.

We've also had encounters with the CPS, and we've chosen to cooperate. I'm not sure the case is finally closed, but at least they conclude that it's sufficient with some parental guidance (PMTO).

Man that really sucks. We used to complain about our college dorms, but even those didn't have broken glass and dried blood (about everything else you mentioned was par for a dorm room). Here's to hoping you can improve your digs soon.

Omfg ... I am speechless. I think I would prefer a camper anytime ...

Yup. It's nuts. And this post only describes the physical nature of the place. Tomorrow I will write part 2, the psychological effect of the violence surrounding us.

Violence in a family shelter? Indeed, seems like the US CPA is not doing their job.

You are worth reading it!

I´m glad for you using Steemit and you are doing next to all these steps and your kids an amazing "job"!

You get my full respect!

Keep posting and I keep resteeming!

your @mynaturebody 🌱

This very beautiful post i appreciate your hommeless thanks for sharing this familyprotection ..carry on..resteemit..

Terrifying experiece for you family. I'm sorry you are on this state.
My support and best hopes.

This post has been upvoted by @thethreehugs

Thank you for your support of @familyprotection!

OMG, I am so glad you are getting out of there. For people to tell you that you should be grateful to have a roof over your head, is ridiculous. You HAD a roof over your head until they stepped in. Please let us know the second you get out of there. Oh and btw, excellent idea to call the news. You are one sharp cookie!

This post has been upvoted and resteemed by @thethreehugs

Thank you for your support of @family protection

I feel sick just looking at those pictures. Now I know why you're not allowed to have anyone in the apartment; they wouldn't want them seeing the state of the place!