HE WAS READY; HELP WAS THERE
Las Vegas Sun | 2009-10-20 16:02:23
At the time, this meant nothing to Charles Jones. Several months later, he woke up near a fence on A Street downtown and decided he wanted out of smoking four or five $20 bags of crack a day and drinking a case of beer and a half-gallon of Jack Daniels a week. After seven years of living on the streets, Jones, then 55, had lifted his head a bit.</p><p>Enter Linda Lera-Randle El. Director of the nonprofit organization Straight from the Streets, she had reached her own turning point of sorts.</p><p>After years of helping homeless people like Jones off the streets without government money, she agreed to participate in the state-funded pilot project in which six organizations would target the problem of chronic homelessness. A minority in number, the chronically homeless are the men and women who stay on the streets the longest, often costing the system more than the rest combined as they cycle through jails, emergency rooms and shelters.</p><p>I thought I would have to sell out, Lera-Randle El said about taking the state money. A decade earlier, she had served as interim director for MASH Village, a homeless shelter that received public money and eventually folded amid controversy in 2003. But then I thought I also would have a lot more people at my back, she said.</p><p>The funding would go to a larger nonprofit organization, HELP of Southern Nevada, which in turn would distribute money to agencies treating mental illness and addiction, as well as Lera-Randle Els group.</p><p>Saying yes was also easier for Lera Randle-El because the money came with few strings attached, basically allowing her to formalize what was an unconventional way of working with a group many see as intransigent.</p><p>These are people who dont fit in other programs, Lera-Randle El said.</p><p>Four years later, the pilot project has become permanent, now relying on funding from Clark County. And Straight from the Streets approach has become almost standard for the other organizations: Get out of the office and go where the chronically homeless live in tunnels, alleys and washes. Build relationships with patience and care. Offer housing straight from the streets, without putting up hurdles such as going straight or sober first. Make round-the-clock services available to the formerly homeless in their new apartments. Be flexible.</p><p>The success of this approach, called housing first by experts in social services, has been documented elsewhere, most notably in New York Citys Pathways to Housing. Since 2005, the Las Vegas Valley project has helped at least 650 people. About 45 percent have stayed in housing at least 12 months, setting straight chaotic lives, said Myrna Pili, director of social services for HELP.</p><p>Along the way, dozens of social workers and others who work with the homeless have been trained to apply the approach, stepping out of the</p><p> confines of most government and private programs.</p><p>Its been a transforming effort as far as social services for the homeless, said Nancy McLane, director of Clark County Social Service. The county provides about $1.5 million annually to the program but doesnt dictate how the money is spent. People who are the experts come up with the model, she said.</p><p>McLane and Pili both pointed to another measure of the programs success: fewer people dying on the valleys streets. In 2005, when the program started, 75 homeless people died in the valley; by 2008, that number had dropped to 48.</p><p>When Jones said he was ready to get off the streets, Lera-Randle El had been saying hello to him most days for years. She would tell him, You dont have to live like this, he recalled.</p><p>I told her, When I get ready, Ill holler. Till then, lets just be friends, he drawled, his voice still dripping with the sound of his hometown, Monroe, La. He found odd jobs while living on the streets, but that was workin for the dope man, he said.</p><p>Work became harder when he suffered a hernia. Lera-Randle El said she could take him to the doctor, help him apply for social services, get a roof over his head.</p><p>The doctor also diagnosed him with bad arthritis in the shoulders and knees. Lera-Randle El told him, Your knees and shoulders arent getting any better. If you dont stop (smoking crack and drinking) your hearts also gonna give up, Jones recalled.</p><p>Lera-Randle El got HELPs drug counselor, Ed Vega, to talk to Jones. One day, she brought him some keys to an apartment. Unfortunately, the apartment wasnt far enough away from old friends. Jones failed to pass several consecutive drug tests, Lera-Randle El said.</p><p>I didnt kick him out. That would just put him on someone elses doorstep, she said.</p><p>So she stuck with Jones, connecting him with Harris Springs Ranch, an addiction treatment program near Mount Charleston run by WestCare, another partner in the project.</p><p>Within a year, he was clean. He moved to his current apartment near Eastern and Washington avenues and hasnt turned back. He lives on $892 monthly Social Security disability checks and is back in touch with his family.</p><p>Jones said it was Lera-Randle Els approach that brought him to get off A Street four years ago.</p><p>She would give you a way out, an option. It gives you somethin to think about, he said. And she would say it like your big sister: I care about you. But, you got to care more about yourself.</p><p>Timothy Pratt can be reached at 259-8828 or at timothy@lasvegassun.com.</p><img src="http://admatch-syndication.mochila.com/images/ad.gif?aid=61543105&bid=informcom" /></div><div id="copyright"><div>
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