Re: Homeless Population
Originally Posted by
PhiAlpha
I don’t know what the right answer is at this point. In Tulsa the problem downtown is getting bad enough that women I’m fiends with don’t feel safe walking their dogs outside after sunset and under some circumstances during the light of day. The city of Tulsa hadn’t seemed to give a crap about acknowledging the problem until recently and I’m F’ing sick of it. Had a friend from Detroit that moved in to our building. Her dad was helping her moved in and a homeless guy asked them for money. They said no…and the dude stared at her and literally started stroking himself. Her dad from DETROIT was afraid to leave his daughter in downtown Tulsa after that.
I’m as afraid of giving the government too much power as anyone is but the repeat offenders need to be rounded up and taken to a mental institution, rehab, jail or and anywhere else but here if they aren’t willing to go to live in a shelter or housing provided by the city and abide by the rules of that housing. My compassion is gone at this point and if you don’t deal with them on a daily basis your opinion shouldn’t even be considered. I’m tired of all the bleeding hearts that don’t deal with them on a day to day basis acting like those of us who do are terrible people for wanting some kind of resolution.
it is a massive, growing problem. It’s time to drop the candy ass feelings bs and find a real solution to deal with it. If it isn’t already, it will become a massive problem toward the goal of having people living downtown…especially single women and families. My girlfriend and my neighbor’s girlfriend shouldn’t be concerned about walking their dogs at night down here when we’re out of town and can’t walk with them.
you hit on a key point here, mental institutions. I recall Congress cutting budgets for mental health back in the Obama years - to me this is why we have the homeless crisis across the country; once funding at the federal level was cut, states came in to do what they could and then that dried up. Now beds aren't available and there's few to staff, so the "problem" is out in the open yet nobody seems to recall what started this. It's a systematic issue that should have its funding not only restored but surged for a period to catch-up.
It would be great if we could get half or more of the current homeless into treatment where they very likely need to be (rather than solo-housing or jail), THAT would be a huge step in not only removing the undesired impacts of homeless but also helping them towards a better, supervised outcome. The remainder that don't require mental health who prefer to be homeless could be tolerated just as they were back before 2010. ...
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
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