Houseless folks in Arizona die due to inhuman heat and severe lack
of shelter beds
Michael Woodard/PNN poverty Scholar
August 13th, 2005
"Hey joe… joe… JOOOOOOE!" But he didn't answer back, as I screamed at my
friend to wake up, rivers and oceans of sweat crawled down my back. Every
stitch of my tattered clothing clung to my overheated body, adhesed by days
of Phoenix's inhuman 110 and above summer heat.
Old Black Joe, as he called himself ever since he landed on Arizona's homeless
streets several years ago, was an African Descendent elder with a bad story,
a sad story and left-behind life, just like all of us have, but in Joe's case,
somehow it was sadder, at least to me. Joe was decidedly un-political, and
if you tried to talk to him about the plight of the Black man in Amerikka,
he would tell you once very politely in his well-enunciated, Southern hotel
bell-man trained English, to hush, if that didn't stop you he would tell you
again but this time it wouldn’t be so polite.
Of course I learned fast cause I wanted to be Joes' friend, he was full
of some of the best Lousiana-Cajun-African folk-tales and it made Summer
on the streets of Arizona a little less painful.
But this Summer was different. Instead of a few days each week above 100
degrees, 110, 112, 115, and even the whopping 116 degree weather has rolled
on and on for over three weeks. That kind of weather is hard for everyone
but the little known story, is the houseless victims who are literally stuck
outside, on the sidewalk with little or no access to water, air conditioning
or even the much sought after, shade, die. So far this summer the homeless
death count is over 14 people
Now, the story is complicated; first it begins with the root causes of homelessness
and poverty in Amerikka, leading to the break down of the psyche, the power
and the humanity of black people, brown people and poor white people, which
leads to mental illness, and substance abuse, but the other equally important
issue is the fact that there is a serious shortage of shelter beds in Arizona
and in the heat, which in some ways is more dangerous than cold weather for
folks living outside, is actually deadly.
According to Bill Manson, development coordinator for Central Arizona Shelter
Services (CASS), an estimated 8,000 homeless people live in Maricopa County,
where Phoenix and its suburbs sit, but only 1,600 shelter beds are available
citywide. Add to that, there are a lot of houseless folks, like Joe and up
until last week, me, so oppressed, so tortured by their many past lives and
spirits, that they refuse the help that is available, i.e., in the depth of
some of the worst heat there were government workers, social service agencies
and volunteers driving across the city giving out fluids and medical care
out and some of the folks they reached refused the help.
I guess for me the wake-up call was the death of Joe, who after I kept yelling
at for almost an hour that 115 degree afternoon in July, until I realized
he wasn't waking up. Ever again.