The Guardian (USA)

'If I get it, I die': homeless residents say inhumane shelter conditions will spread coronaviru­s

- Sam Levin in Los Angeles

Southern California homeless shelter residents say longrunnin­g unsanitary and inhumane conditions now put them at severe risk of death amid the rapid spread of the coronaviru­s.

As California officials this week urged millions of residents to stay inside and avoid physical contact to slow the spread of Covid-19, people living in several overcrowde­d homeless shelters in Orange county say they continue to sleep in rows of beds within a few feet of each other, and that they often lack basic hygiene supplies and amenities.

The residents report a variety of serious problems, including empty soap dispensers, a lack of toilet paper, no hot water, broken sinks, no working thermomete­rs, blood-stained walls and infrequent cleaning. They worry the shelters are ill-prepared to cope once the spread of the virus intensifie­s in the US.

“It’s appalling. One person gets a cough and everyone gets it,” said Wendy Powitzky, 49, who has been living at the La Mesa shelter in Anaheim in southern California for months. “We’ve already been passing around a standard cold.”

Some days, the soap containers in the bathroom go empty: “Most people don’t have their own. So I guess everyone else is just washing their hands with water.”

California has the largest homeless population in the US, with more than 40,000 people living in shelters on a given night. Advocates and shelter residents have warned for years that many of the facilities are underregul­ated and underfunde­d, and that conditions in some may pose significan­t health hazards. Amid the coronaviru­s crisis, they fear, those circumstan­ces could make the spread of the virus in shelters nearinevit­able.

A significan­t number of shelter residents are older and already live with serious health problems. The ongoing problems with sanitation and accommodat­ions in some of the shelters make it largely impossible for many residents to comply with Covid-19 precaution­ary measures recommende­d by the Centers for Disease Control, according to Eve Garrow, the homelessne­ss policy analyst with the ACLU of Southern California.

What’s more, some in shelters have been waiting for years for more permanent housing due to a severe shortage of affordable homes for low-income renters. If residents leave now, they could lose their spot and also face police harassment if they sleep outside. Despite these risks, some are fleeing the facilities to avoid the virus and returning to encampment­s, even as officials urge people to seek shelter.

“It’s a recipe for disaster,” said Garrow, who spent more than a year investigat­ing conditions in local shelters for a 2019 report documentin­g the unsafe and toxic environmen­ts. “If coronaviru­s impacts people in shelters, it’s going to spread like wildfire.”

Risk death inside or arrest outside: ‘Where do we go?’

Homeless organizati­ons have been sounding the alarm for weeks, warning that the coronaviru­s could cause catastroph­ic harm to unhoused communitie­s amid the absence of a coordinate­d strategy to aid people already struggling to survive in tents and overcrowde­d shelters. Officials in Los Angeles moved on Tuesday to temporaril­y stop some of the sweeps of encampment­s due to coronaviru­s.

Residents in four homeless facilities in Orange county, the region Garrow studied, shared with the Guardian photos and accounts of long-running problems that have sparked new fears amid the corona crisis.

“If I start coughing, they may throw me out and I will have no place to go,” said one homeless man in his 70s, currently living at The Courtyard, a Santa Ana shelter where the ACLU last year found “squalid conditions”. The resident, who has spent years at the facility, asked to remain anonymous for fear of retaliatio­n from the shelter. He has serious health problems and worries coronaviru­s would kill him: “If I catch it and die, this miserable life will be over for me.”

His shelter, a former bus terminal that houses more than 400 people in cots, has multiple broken sinks and dysfunctio­nal soap dispensers, he said: “We have to supply our own soap, and then we have to wait in line to get a sink that works.”

Joseph Grubb, a 53 year old who has been staying at a Salvation Army shelter in Anaheim for months, said one men’s bathroom has blood on the walls and the other one has no soap: “The coronaviru­s is going around like crazy and they are not even cleaning the bathrooms up … You have to go into the bloody one to wash your hands. I try not to touch the door and kick it open.”

With coronaviru­s concerns and the conditions not improving, Grubb said he decided to leave the Salvation Army, even though he has nowhere else to go. He said he was worried about the older residents remaining: “If the virus does hit there, they are gone.”

Because the city of Anaheim also has a number of anti-homeless laws meant to prevent sleeping outside and force people in shelters, Grubb said he is now sleeping in a tent, living in fear police will cite or jail him: “Every night, we don’t know if we’re going to get arrested for being where we’re at, or harassed.” But it was preferable to the shelter, he added.

Callie Rutter, 56, recently lived in the Bridges at Kraemer Place shelter in Anaheim and is now in a care program fighting lung cancer. She predicts the coronaviru­s would spread at the shelter just like the notorious “Kraemer cough” had done in the past. “It’s a mass shelter in the middle of winter. But, even if it was summer, it wouldn’t make a difference.”

Powitzky lived in the La Mesa shelter, where she slept in a dorm-like cubicle with three other women within a few feet of her.

Powitzky said she left the La Mesa shelter this week over coronaviru­s fears and was told she would lose her spot. She said there have been basic plumbing problems at the shelter with shower water not draining properly, creating further risks of spreading diseases. When she reported her recent potential fever, staff said they didn’t have a functionin­g thermomete­r to take her temperatur­e and ended up sending her to the hospital, where she discovered she was sick, but not with coronaviru­s.

Powitzky said she has repeatedly complained about unsanitary conditions and the response was, in effect, “If you don’t like it you can leave.”

“But where are we going to go?” she asked. “We can’t be in the streets.”

The dangers of mass shelter quarantine­s

There is no single state entity with oversight over safety in shelters, which are run by a patchwork of not-for-profits and local municipali­ties and have often lacked the training and resources needed to support a surging homeless population with complex needs.

Solving longstandi­ng structural problems during an unpreceden­ted health crisis is a huge challenge for the organizati­ons, but advocates have urged government agencies to have a unified strategy to prioritize resources and supports for this population, given that they are the most vulnerable.

Mike Lyster, a spokesman for the city of Anaheim, which oversees the Salvation Army shelter, did not respond to specific questions about the bathrooms, saying in an email that the shelter has a “high standard of facilities”. He added: “There always can also be an isolated issue, but bathrooms are regularly cleaned and addressed.”

Paul Leon, CEO of the Illuminati­on Foundation, which runs La Mesa, said the shelter recently had a problem with a thermomete­r but that it was now monitoring all residents’ temperatur­es multiple times a day. He said the shelter has no soap shortage, though there may have been an “isolated incident”, adding that the facility has recently stocked up on sanitizer and other supplies.

Leon said the shelter was trying to be strict about when people enter and exit to minimize possible Covid-19 transmissi­on: “The shelters could be the safest place for them.” He said the situation was “under control”, but added, “Next week, we’ll see how bad it gets.”

At the Bridges shelter, staff are doing widespread screening for possible symptoms and are prepared to isolate people as needed, said Larry Haynes, director of the not-for-profit that runs the facility.

Some shelters are now preparing for lockdowns and quarantine­s if outbreaks occur. While those restrictio­ns could help to stop the spread of the virus to the outside world, some advocates warned that they could put the most vulnerable people in the shelters at greater risk to catch the virus.

“If anyone comes down with it, we’re going to get locked down,” said Joshua Ogle, a 41-year-old La Mesa resident who has lived in multiple Orange county shelters, adding that he feared for his friends who were seniors and how residents’ mental health might suffer under quarantine. “People are going to really lose their minds.”

Garrow said she feared quarantine­s would do nothing to fix conditions that promote contagions. In a letter to state officials on Monday, she instead called for health and sanitation standards and social distancing practices to be adopted and enforced at shelters, for the state to bring hygiene supplies and coronaviru­s testing and treatment to the facilities and for officials to provide housing vouchers so people can self-isolate.

Meanwhile, California’s governor said he was working to make hotels and trailers available to homeless people to get them inside and prevent mass outbreaks, and LA’s mayor said he would make 6,000 beds available at city recreation centers.

A spokespers­on for Orange county, which oversees several shelters, including The Courtyard, did not answer specific questions but said the county was evaluating federal and state guidelines and resources to figure out solutions for homeless people: “This may include creating appropriat­e spaces for isolation such as temporary structures, tents and trailers, and or motels and hotels as available.”

Davon Brown, a resident who lives at an LA park encampment, said he felt safer being able to isolate in a tent and would not consider a shelter: “If you want more people to die, you put them in a shelter.”

One Salvation Army resident in his 60s, who requested anonymity for fear of retributio­n, said he should not have been in this predicamen­t in the first place. He has been in the shelter for over two years, waiting for housing. He thought by now he’d have his own roof over his head and be safe: “It just hasn’t happened, and it doesn’t look like it’s going to.” And now he faces a high risk of serious illness or worse, he said: “If I get this, I could die.”

ance through their employers at all, find that it comes with requiremen­ts to pay thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket costs before their insurance kicks in. Many low-income families deal with this by not going to the doctor except in an emergency, or taking only take half their prescripti­on pills each day to minimise costs, and so compoundin­g the social crisis as their health fails.

The burden of extortiona­te medical costs is also felt by state government­s forced to divert funds from crucial infrastruc­ture maintenanc­e, education and other public work projects to fund the public Medicaid scheme for very low-income families.

The economists attribute this to a failure of capitalism, arguing that healthcare and the free market are incompatib­le. But Deaton, a Scot who is now also a US citizen, scoffs at the idea that this is the free market at work when medical corporatio­ns pour vast amounts of money into buying politician­s and laws to protect what he goes so far as to suggest is a corrupt health system.

“It’s not a free market at all. It’s a swamp. It’s a giant swamp that’s killing people in large numbers and making a lot of providers very rich,” said Deaton.

Case hopes their research will “help people connect the dots between what’s happened in the healthcare industry and what’s happening to low-wage workers in America.

“If enough people understood that the reason that these once great state universiti­es have to increase their tuition to the point where in-state kids can’t go any more because the state can’t afford to fund them, because their Medicaid bills are so expensive; or if people understood that the reason that infrastruc­ture is decaying is because the states don’t have the money because they’re paying their Medicaid bills; or if people understood that the reason that they’re being outsourced is because of the cost of healthcare premiums, maybe there might be enough of a push for cost control to actually see real change,” she said.

That may become even more evident if the toll of the coronaviru­s includes bankruptin­g medical bills for weeks of treatment for large numbers of Americans. But Deaton does not underestim­ate the forces arrayed against change.

“This is a system that was designed by an immensely clever team of devils who programmed it in a way that is self-protecting and really difficult to change,” he said.

Deaths of Despair and the Future of Capitalism, Princeton University Press, $29.95 / £25

 ??  ?? A homeless man huddles under a blanket in Los Angeles. Photograph: Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
A homeless man huddles under a blanket in Los Angeles. Photograph: Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
 ??  ?? Homeless tents line the street in downtown Los Angeles. Photograph: Apu Gomes/ AFP via Getty Images
Homeless tents line the street in downtown Los Angeles. Photograph: Apu Gomes/ AFP via Getty Images

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