Public housing = crack houses
Sorry, but this happens all the time around my parts.
Hey BigJimW,
I'm in Canada and we have a Public Housing program as well.
I have seen what you are referring to where going
through one of these neighborhoods, particularly on check day, you find a lot of drug use, needles in the community park, alcohol in heavy use, kids running in packs with no respect for property or their elders, police making several appearances a day due to being called for fights, raids, dropping off the delinquent kids ..... I could go on and on.
I would just like to mention that there are many people in public housing that are there due to making a choice between bad and worse. I have known them myself since my family lived in such a community for over 3 years.
We had been going
through a rough patch and separated prior to the birth of our 2nd child and she had applied for housing and was approved for 1/2 a duplex, when we reconciled we talked to them and they approved us staying there under a rental agreement that was 30% of our pretax income which was approx 600.00/month. This was better than we could do renting a smaller apt so we stayed to save up for a down payment on a house.
I will say that we always supervised our children, took them to a park outside the neighborhood daily(weather permitting), limited our contact with the community as much as was practical. We kept our lawn mowed, yard clean and driveway shoveled. Other family's we knew did the same. I did not fear my community and they for the most part left us alone since we minded our own business.
When my wife became mentally ill(postpartum depression, suicidal tenancies, apathy, diagnosed bi polar, seizures and more issues) and had to be hospitalized social services stepped in and said she would not be able to be left alone with our 3 children. I was instructed that in order to work I would have to hire a care worker to assist/monitor her with the housework and care of the children while I was not home. This would have cost a good percentage of what I was bringing in.
We tried having her stay at her parents while under initial treatment and they chose after a week to drop her off at the house and advised me that she was married to me and my problem, not theirs (nice huh?).
When we contacted social services we were advised that they could not subsidize a care worker but they would approve us for a monthly check if I was to quit my job to stay home to care for her and the children, and be able to cover the cost of the many prescriptions she was now on.
The other option proposed to me was that I could divorce her and gotten custody of the kids since they would have subsidized daycare. This would have left her on her own but she probably wouldn't still be with us if I had done that.
If it wasn't for housing and them adjusting our rent much lower we would be in very bad circumstances and am thankful for the programs available to people in hard circumstances making hard choices.
She is better now and can be left with the kids for short periods of time but due to medical issues and continuing seizures her doctors filed paperwork recommending I continue to stay home at this time.
On a positive note a year ago we qualified for a program run by a local Headstart that put us in a duplex with a fenced yard for the kids that is integrated in a "regular" community.
I am looking forward to the day when all
three kids are in school and the doctors say she is able to take care of herself so that I can return to work so we can have the car we need and the house we want.
I know this was a long story but I wanted to show that not everyone that lives in public housing is running a crack house, some of us have just hit circumstances that are very difficult and are doing what we have to to put a roof over our kids heads and hoping for a better future.
Highest regards and best wishes,
Wing.