ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 1月10日 09時56分


Living on the streets throws a million problems your way, but finding a place to sleep tops the list. About 32% of homeless people in the United States have no shelter. Growing numbers of homeless encampments have led to civic soul-searching in cities from Philadelphia to Chicago to Seattle. In July, Philadelphia lifted a 4-year-old ban on serving meals in public parks after homeless advocates and faith groups sued the city. In Denver, videos of the police seizing blankets and tents created a public outcry and demands to soften the city’s approach. And Portland, Oregon, was so roiled by the blowback to a “safe sleep policy” announced in February that the mayor rescinded it 6 months later. The question for cities: Should they open up public spaces to their poorest residents, or sweep away camps? For those on the streets, crackdowns on homeless camps are seen as tantamount to punishing people for being poor. Last week, @markmakela photographed Judy Wurster with her cat, Sweetpea, at a homeless encampment in Philadelphia. Judy, 56, has been homeless for 3 months.


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