Homeless: Inside a Sweep

“It’s sad,” said the cop while he watched a John Deere bulldozer scoop up the trash and discarded belongings at a homeless camp just south of Modesto.

Nearby, a Caltrans worker remarked that someone had bagged up, “A lot of trash. There’s a lot of trash bagged up at this camp. Some of the homeless people clean up and some don’t. They’re not all the same.”

“There was a guy here who tried to make people clean up,” said an onlooker. “He was always bagging stuff up.”

“Yeah, a shot caller,” said the man with Caltrans.  “A lot of these camps have one. He’s the guy that keeps people in line.”

“When you learn about their lives, it’s amazing they’re not worse,” said another worker.

“Yeah, a lot had awful childhoods,” said the onlooker.

“Watch out for needles,” said the cop. “They’ve been burying needles in the dirt.”

CHP at 9th Street camp Bystrum

“Needles in the dirt,” said the onlooker, “pointed up?”

“Yeah, said the cop. “Watch your step. When I get stuck with a needle I’m out three weeks and lose thirty pounds.”

“Geez,” said the onlooker, lifting both feet alternately and looking down.

Outside the fence on the rocks along the tracks, people were sorting through what they had lugged out of the camp ahead of the dozers. They could only keep what they could carry. Some people were having trouble sorting things out. They stared at their stuff for a long time before packing things into backpacks and plastic bags.

Railroad tracks at Bystrum near 7th Street

At another camp across the street, twenty-year old Viola was sitting with a friend on a narrow car seat, likely scavenged from one of the nearby wrecking yards.

“I was homeless since I was fifteen,” she said. “I didn’t get along with my mom.”

Fidgety and animated, she showed little concern when more cops showed up and told everyone to get their things and go.

“I stayed at the Budget [motel] for a while…got tired of being beat by my kid’s father. He beat on me like almost every day, so I came out here. When we’re together like this, it’s like a family, we got each other’s back. But a couple nights ago he still tried to set my tent on fire. It was better at MOES [Modesto Outdoor Emergency Shelter]. They should open that up again. Whenever he came into MOES he was put into check.”

“They had guys there who took care of things,” said her friend. “Most of the time they didn’t even need the cops.”

Viola at camp near 7th Street Bystrum
Viola

“Yeah,” said Viola. “That’s where I felt really safe. Everyone liked me ‘cause I was always laughing and making jokes.”

Back across the street, the cop was telling the onlooker that he had seen enough of homeless people.

“I’ve been doing this thirteen years,” he said, “and it’s always the same ones. There’s help if they want it.”

“Not that much help for the mentally ill,” said the onlooker. “There’s a young woman out here who’s got at least four different personalities. Anyone can tell she’s schizophrenic. The cops, the sheriff, the outreach people…no one’s ever done anything for her. She’s been out here for years; she’ll get put on a three-day hold, then they bounce her out here again. Anyway, most of these people will be back here in two months.”

“Two months,” said the cop, “they’ll be back in two days. Some of them have their tents out in the parking lot. They’re just waiting.”

“They’re all different,” said the worker from Caltrans. “When you do this a long time, you see all kinds of different people.”

“There was a tent one time where the guy’s wife was dead two weeks,” said the other worker. “Two weeks,” he said, shaking his head. “She was dead for two weeks.”

Eric Caine
Eric Caine
Eric Caine formerly taught in the Humanities Department at Merced College. He was an original Community Columnist at the Modesto Bee, and wrote for The Bee for over twelve years.
Comments should be no more than 350 words. Comments may be edited for correctness, clarity, and civility.

5 COMMENTS

  1. As Mr. Caine notes; In the 1960s, laws were changed to limit the ability of state and local officials to admit people into mental health hospitals. This lead to budget cuts in both state and federal funding for mental health programs. As a result, states across the country began closing and downsizing their psychiatric hospitals.
    The reasons for this were that three societal and scientific changes occurred that caused deinstitutionalization.
    First, the development of psychiatric drugs treated many of the symptoms of mental illness. These included chlorpromazine and later clozapine. Second, society accepted that the mentally ill needed to be treated instead of locked away. and, Third, it obviously allowed government to cut budgets,

    The answer then could be to change the way we treat the ‘homeless’.

    It should not be that we continue to ignore their presence among us. We used to have laws that allowed the issuance of citations for sleeping on public property or trespass on private; The Ninth Circuit says those citations are legal so far as we have shelter space available for them.

    So, we first build shelters where we can most conveniently triage these people to allow for further processing. and then rehabilitate as many as possible to a lifestyle in which they can become productive to a point that they can care for themselves. For those qualify we then can find more permanent housing at subsidized rents.

    For the majority we must mandate treatment for either the substance or the mental conditions which practically have disabled them. Some will require an institutional setting while these problems are addressed. These need not be ‘permanent structures’ but places where qualified professionals can work with them to a goal of self-sufficiency in a more permanent setting.

    All of this will be best addressed by qualified non-profit NGOs rather than any government agency/bureaucracy as we know too that a government bureau works first to propagate itself; Not to solve a problem or to accomplish anything.

    R. Terrence Losh

  2. I just have to say I have never been homeless and thank goodness, but, I do have a very close family member who is. Not so much like oh hey I think I’ll be homeless rather it was due to friends, and drugs . I want this person well and healthy, their willing to get help, but where’s the help, for drugs, mental health and a way to learn to be happily sufficient. Most are homeless for job loss, death in family abuse etc. I have searched the county and made calls but where???

    • Gina: There is a severe shortage of real help. First step is try to get into the new shelter. Get registered at the facility outside the shelter and try to get an assessment and case manager. 9th and D Streets, Modesto.

      • We don;t have enough shelters. To house all the homeless. Tent city worked. I wish. It was still a option.

  3. I have never been homeless. Couldn’t imagine not having a restroom , shower, clean clothes, refrigerator, stove, lights, a bed to sleep in. I could keep going endlessly. No one wants to live like this. When the tents were available. It was a home. Homeless had a place to be. Now their all over. Along with the waste every human makes. Untill forced to move. From a make shift shelter. To walk the streets looking for a place to rest. We pay enough taxes. I pray some of it goes to help.

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