Off the Street
In 7 days we saw 4 people who were homeless and living on
the street. After that they weren’t homeless.
One missed his family in a far away land and showed us his infected feet. One had been beaten within an inch of her life. One worked on a zero hour contract while her husband’s heart seized up. All of them catapulted to living on the pavement.
One missed his family in a far away land and showed us his infected feet. One had been beaten within an inch of her life. One worked on a zero hour contract while her husband’s heart seized up. All of them catapulted to living on the pavement.
Two were refugees. One has serious kidney problems. One was a domestic
violence victim. Two have serious mental health problems. One has been
mutilated. Three have benefit problems. One is on sick leave. One can’t work
due to homelessness. One is about to retire. One will have to move to Universal
Credit. One might have the wrong passport.
One has a phone that is almost out of juice. One doesn’t have a phone. One
shakes my hand, one rails at me on a daily basis and we agree to do better next
time.
One shakes in a place of safety. One speaks excellent English but misunderstands certain words. One was sent to us only 2 hours before Bank Holiday weekend when every rightminded individual is going home.
One shakes in a place of safety. One speaks excellent English but misunderstands certain words. One was sent to us only 2 hours before Bank Holiday weekend when every rightminded individual is going home.
People are complicated. The river of facts that ran through their lives
led to one living on the streets for six months. Another for two weeks. Two for
one night.
And all struggled to show that they were vulnerable legally. And all had
roofs over their head by the Bank Holiday.
And that was just a sticking plaster.