5 minute read
Homeless Policies
Production company helps house activists amid clash over city’s homeless policies
By Ben Abrams and Sean Keenan
Advertisement
Editor’s Note: Atlanta Intown has partnered with nonprofit journalism organization Atlanta Civic Circle (atlantaciviccircle. org) to bring our readers more indepth coverage about the critical issues surrounding affordable housing in the city.
A production company set to shoot a TV show downtown helped put homeless activists up in hotel rooms on July 13, after local leaders told them they couldn’t camp in tents along the sidewalk.
Activists with the Atlanta Homeless Union, a new advocacy group demanding more resources for unhoused people, claimed crews with Central Atlanta Progress’s Atlanta Downtown Improvement District (ADID) team robbed them of their tents and other belongings.
But that’s not the full picture,
Continued on page 8 Activists protest Atlanta’s homeless policies at city hall. (Photo courtesy ACC)
C O M I N G S O O N | 1 6 2 M E L L R I C H A V E N E 4 3.5
C O M I N G S O O N | 1 3 9 D E A R B O R N S T S E 4 3.5
Nancy Grieve, Senior Loan Officer
NMLS#552571 | GA#35969 | Corp NMLS#1616534
(770) 309 3745 nancy.grieve@sheltermortgage.com www.nancygrieveloans.com
Over a Decade of Buying & Selling
IN INTOWN ATLANTA
The Brockway Group has been navigating real estate in Atlanta ' s Intown neighborhoods like Old Fourth Ward and Virginia-Highland for over 14 years.
Our proven marketing strategies and local market expertise allow our team to create winning offers and get top dollar for sellers in today ' s market.
LIST WITH THE BROCKWAY GROUP!
D: 404.787.2253 | O: 404.541.3500 WWW.BROCKWAYREALESTATE.NET
W e ' r e L o o k i n g
FOR A TALENTED BUYER'S AGENT!
SCAN TO APPLY & FOR DETAILS
This is not intended as a solicitation. All information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Equal Opportunity Housing Provider. Each office is independently owned and operated.
The city has received a federal grant to develop a Historic Context
Statement for LGBTQ historic
resources and preservation. The $25,000 award represents the efforts of Historic Atlanta, Inc., Midtown Neighbors Association, National Trust for Historic Preservation, Mailchimp, Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation and individual donors. The Atlanta City Council approved legislation in July for the city’s purchase of a dozen new fire engines
and ladder trucks
for the Atlanta Fire Department over the next two years. A ribbon cutting ceremony was held in July for Rodney Cook Sr. Park in Vine City. Filled with fountains, walkways, playgrounds, and basketball courts, the park will also feature statues and plaques dedicated to peacemakers like the late John Lewis. The Atlanta-Region Transit Link Authority was awarded $5.47 million in federal funding for 10 battery-
electric commuter
coaches and 11 chargers for the region’s Xpress Commuter Service.
Continued from page 7
Atlanta police made arrests and cleared protesters camping at city hall, angering activists. (Photo courtesy ACC) according to Tammy Hughes, ADID’s social impact director. On Monday, she said, ADID’s homeless outreach team ASIST and Atlanta police officers “spent three hours offering to help the individuals with shelter placement.” “Of the 16 people on the sidewalk that day, 12 accepted assistance and were relocated to nearby shelters,” Hughes added. Then, “ADID’s Clean Team cleared the remaining tents and belongings from the sidewalk.”
In addition to being upset that their effects were confiscated, many Atlanta Homeless Union activists are adamant about avoiding shelter placement – something they consider dehumanizing.
Fleetwood Robinson, an activist who is experiencing homelessness, said, “We don’t like going through that.” He likened urging people to crowd into shelters to “a hate crime, if you look at it more from our shoes.”
In response, location managers with Blacklight Studios, the production company that had plans to film in the area where people were camped out, helped book six nights in a hotel for 40 of the people who activists said were “displaced,” provided MARTA cards for those people “so they can still get from the hotel to work or tend to their business,” replaced the seized tents and arranged to have food delivered to the hotel “on the three nights they are filming,” according to an Atlanta Homeless Union press release.
These events follow a recent spate of clashes between the group’s activists and officials with the Atlanta Police Department (APD), ADID and Partners for HOME, the City of Atlanta’s homeless outreach partner.
A week before the studio got involved, police arrested nine Atlanta Homeless Union activists who had pitched tents outside city hall as part of a protest of the city’s treatment of its homeless population. That demonstration and the ensuing actions accompany a demand for “housing, healthcare and a seat at the table,” the group has said. Partners for HOME executive director Cathryn Marchman, however, said that officials have provided ample opportunities for activists to have their voices heard. “We held a [Continuum of Care] meeting yesterday with over 120 attendees,” she said on July 14. “I invited [Atlanta Homeless Union members] to attend and offered them agenda time, and I do not believe anyone showed.”
Additionally, Marchman said, the Atlanta Homeless Union’s list of demands can’t be fulfilled overnight. “Getting people into housing – while it is our number one goal – is not done immediately or the same day ... which is why we use shelters as a temporary option, only for those who want it,” she said. “There were several folks there that day who eagerly accepted shelter.”
Still, Alfred “Shivy” Brooks, an activist and Atlanta City Council candidate, said the fact that Blacklight Studios felt inclined to step in and help out is indicative of problematic city systems that don’t do enough to help the homeless. “I think the city of Atlanta has an obligation to make sure that all of our citizens have a safe place to sleep and food on the table,” he said in an interview with Atlanta Civic Circle.
Atlanta Homeless Union organizers said that their fight is far from over, and that they’ll continue protesting what they consider unfair treatment of the city’s most marginalized people.
“We hope this is an inspiration to unhoused people across the country to show the power we have when we organize and work together,” a group said in a statement, later adding, “We will continue building political power among the unhoused residents of our city until our ultimate demands are met and homelessness is eradicated in Atlanta.”