Homeless kids: Young, invisible and largely forgotten, By Jeannette Rivera-Lyles, January 10, 2010, Orlando Sentinel: “Dymond Walker’s eyes sparkle when she talks about her future. Plan A, the 15-year-old says, is to be a veterinarian. Plan B is to work as an animal rescuer. Keeping those dreams alive is a daily struggle. Dymond and her two younger sisters, T’ara Pollins, 13, and Krystal Pollins, 11, and their mother, Shaneek Livingston, have been homeless for nine months. In that time, they have lived doubled up with a family of five, slept in a car for days and stayed in a walk-in closet with a twin bed. ‘My mom didn’t really sleep in the bed,’ Dymond said. ‘Sometimes there are three of us on the floor. We can’t curl up because the space is so tight. And it [was] hot, like 110 degrees,’ she said. The little family is the real, yet invisible face of homelessness in Osceola. According to a survey by the Homeless Services Network of Central Florida, the county has 1,885 homeless people. Nearly half of those, counts show, are school-age children. In Central Florida, Osceola has the highest percentage of school-age children in its homeless population, followed by Seminole County and then Orange County, according to Homeless Services Network. Missing from these tallies are homeless children too young to be in school. In Osceola, the only county where such estimates are available, including those youngsters raises the percentage of children to nearly two-thirds of the homeless population…”
Boost in homelessness strains families, taxpayers, By Stacie N. Galang, January 11, 2010, Salem News: “It was as if an entire neighborhood showed up on Danvers’ doorstep. Shortly before Labor Day, school administrators and town officials began to fret. Student numbers were dramatically higher than spring estimates, at one point reaching 84. ‘Sort of within a two-week time frame, we saw enrollment increase,’ school Superintendent Lisa Dana said. What town leaders didn’t realize was that the state’s burgeoning homeless population had overwhelmed family shelters. With no space left, the state had started putting families up in motels. More than 100 homeless families had been sent to live temporarily in three Danvers motels: the Days Inn, Knights Inn and Motel 6. The families came from as close as Beverly and as far as Roxbury, but primarily from the region north of Boston. As the start of school neared, the motel parents considered their options: Enroll their children in Danvers schools or ask to have them bused to their home districts, an option provided to homeless families under federal law. Soon, town officials would estimate the costs at nearly a half-million dollars. Danvers was at the center of a perfect storm. The sour economy had forced up unemployment, adding to the number of evictions and foreclosures and helping to produce the largest increase in homeless families the state has seen in generations…”