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Conditions Under Scrutiny at Reno's Homeless Shelter

Why would people who can’t afford homes, apartments or motel rooms in the Reno-Sparks area prefer sleeping in tents along the river, on abandoned properties, or near freeways under bridges rather than going to the homeless shelter on Record street even when conditions are harsh? As January is "Poverty in America Awareness Month", Our Town Reno wanted to look into why so many in our area are "aid-resistant", a term sometimes used in the media, by looking closer at the area's government paid-for shelter.

These pictures were provided anonymously to show conditions at the main shelter's day room, as well as uneaten food being left out for hours (second row) and how belongings are handled (third row). 

 The pictures above, provided anonymously, offer a glimpse into the realities of life at the main shelter.  We previously published photos from harsh conditions at the overflow shelter in this article:  http://www.ourtownreno.com/our-citizens-forum/2017/1/3/harsh-nights-inside-renos-overflow-homeless-shelter

Access to the main shelter require sign-ups and check-ins early in the day to secure a bed and meal.  When the main shelter on Record street is full, people have to wait hours to be bused to a "secret", nearby location, with dirty sheets and mattresses on gravel-filled ground, only to be woken up before five a.m., deposited back on freezing streets. 

Here are more photos above from conditions at the overflow shelter, where people sleeping there have also complained of bed bugs. 

Dumped Belongings, No Couples, No Pets , Black Markets and Stale Food

At the main shelter, belongings are dumped unceremoniously.  Retrieving them means trampling over everyone else’s belongings. Sometimes, belongings go missing. Left behind property is in a pin outside, snowed in. Couples are separated.  Pets are not allowed.  The food is cold and stale, usually spaghetti plates, which end up mostly uneaten. Some who eat complain of being sick to their stomachs. Meanwhile, a black market goes on with people selling each other’s Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) cards they receive for so-called SNAP benefits, an acronym for the current name of food stamps, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. 

Food is left out for hours at the main shelter, barely eaten.

TV crews come for special events when special guests do feedings, and then the food is better, everything is cleaned up, but on a day to day basis, the complaints pile up. It’s too militaristic inside the shelter, people who sleep there sometimes say.  There are cliques which make them feel uncomfortable. Younger people feel threatened by the older population. Those in tents, under bridges, in condemned properties, say they prefer to stay with their pets, friends, significant others, whatever the elements and the threats of arrest.  To deal with these realities, amid a trend of criminalizing homelessness on the West Coast, amid rising inequalities and housing costs, local activists are trying to get a so-called SafeGround instituted, with this petition.    

Text from the petition below:

ACTIONN and The Reno Initiative for Shelter and Equality (RISE) call on our local leaders in Reno, Sparks, and Washoe County to dedicate land to the development of a SafeGround, where houseless residents within our community can live without fear of criminalization, harassment, or eviction and where they could benefit from the protection of our local law enforcement agencies and local services. Ideally, there should be several locations throughout the area that are dedicated SafeGrounds.

This would allow local non-profits and caseworkers easy access to people in need and would serve as a first step towards solving houselessness in Northern Nevada. The less restrictive nature of a SafeGround allows our community to immediately respond to people newly on the street and decrease the resources required by the community. The faster someone is served, the less time they spend without housing. Individuals can be more quickly served if they can be easily found. The current situation makes that difficult because houseless people often hide to avoid eviction and harassment.

Saturday 01.14.17
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Catherine Clark, Moving Back to the Banks of the Raging River

As the Truckee River threatened to overflow in recent days, many who usually live along its banks inside tents decided to take advantage of improved relief sleeping options being offered by the city of Reno at Wooster High. But when these options were no longer offered, the homeless made their way back to their old encampment sites, only to find some of their belongings ruined or under water.  This is a photo series by our newest Our Town Reno contributor Holly Hutchings.

For those who make their home here, coming back to their belongings has been disheartening. If their camp sites are still somewhat intact, everything is soaked. "It was all wet," Catherine Clark said. "Everything that I had there that was dry, even the tent, is wet. Inside and out."

The Truckee River rages across from the Grand Sierra Resort earlier this week. Many tents can be found nestled in this area. Most of the residents of this small tent city left their belongings and found shelter elsewhere as the river rose earlier this month. 

This tent which once stood as a shelter is now in shambles with its previous inhabitants nowhere in sight.

Some of those returning to live along the river found a wet, muddy mess, when they returned to their camps.

Clark takes a break from cleaning out her tent. She has spent the morning removing all she owns and airing it out to dry. "I've been here nonstop, up until the other night, for a year. I've got nowhere to go," she said. 

Photo Series and Reporting by Holly Hutchings

 

 

Wednesday 01.11.17
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

A People's Potluck for the Displaced from the River

Julie Rhoades, a waitress by occupation and a spirited activist by soul, decides to take the midnight to 2 a.m. shift.

"We are bearing witness and making sure police don't come and arrest people here as they've been threatening on and off," she explains under a cold nighttime drizzle.

Julie Rhoades (in the pink polka dot hat) and other activists gather around at a park where homeless who were displaced from the river because of possible floods are now being helped.

From the River to a High School to a Park

Here at a park in Sparks, NV, Rhoades and other activists are helping homeless previously living in tents along the Truckee river who were told to move because of the possible floods. 

After some spent one night for relief at Wooster High, which included healthy food, clean beds and even crates for their pets, they were told that was a one-night deal only. So some have reassembled here, some under pagodas, some in tents in different parts of the park. Some want to go back to their river encampments, while others are still nervous about raging waters.

Warm drinks were offered to people who have been under threat of the rising Truckee river from their encampments, and then continuously moved around in recent days.

Remade Homeless

"Homeless people have been re-made homeless," Rhoades said.  "It's super traumatizing. The more you're involved, the more you have to have empathy. I don't want to have dinner with fancy people. I'm interested in this."

Volunteers brought healthy food and warm drinks. Even a casino chipped in with sandwiches. Rhoades coordinated the potluck event, called People's Potluck, which then stretched into Tuesday. 

Those being helped were very grateful, as they fought for survival while living outside amid unpredictable, wet, cold weather.

Not Them, Us

"I am a waitress," Rhoades said.  "I serve people. That's what I do. I was thinking of that while cooking soup. I've been moving people to and from the river for the last couple of days."

She explains the people she is helping shouldn't be referred to as "them", but as "us."

"There's one woman who is living here with her son and they have family problems too."

A stuffed tiger also stood guard, among the belongings those being helped were able to keep with them.

Solidarity, Not Charity

"We're building a community," Rhoades explained, as more and more people arrived bringing food, and being updated on plans to stay the night and organize in shifts.

"This is solidarity, not charity. It's us helping us."

If someone has a feeling they should help, Rhoades encourages them to do so.  "It can change you in a good way," she said. "Every friend I've had I have met through the helping community."

"It's just food," Rhoades said of the potluck. "It's just a band-aid. But if every day is a series of present moments, then at least you can make someone's present moment happy with a warm belly. I really believe that."

Monday 01.09.17
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Speaking Out and Seeking Change for Homeless Out in the Cold

Photos and Story by Jose Olivares

A recent vigil was organized by local activist and University of Nevada, Reno student Alese McMurtry (in foreground), activists from Acting in Community Together in Organizing Northern Nevada (ACTIONN), the Reno Initiative of Shelter and Equality (RISE) and the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada (PLAN).

A Poem for the Homeless

One of the participants, Shayden Ward, recited a  poem titled “Meet Mr. Everyman”. The poem was recently recited at a Reno City Council meeting and it captures the struggles of various characters inspired by interactions Ward has had.

The climax of Ward's poem is when the homeless character in the poem dies “under the Keystone Bridge.”

Artificial Candles and a New Petition

Numerous people at the vigil spoke up and shared their stories, proposed solutions and offered insight to the homeless situation. At the end, faith leaders led a prayer and attendees held artificial candles during a moment of silence.

A new initiative now being put forward by activists in Reno is a petition to create a so-called SafeGround in Washoe County. Read about it and sign it if you agree here.

According to the petition .... "A SafeGround provides an alternate and temporary location to increase our service capacity for houseless community residents to live in a safe area where they have access to services and training that will provide them entry into community-building, outreach, employment, and permanent housing."

The community's willingness to help the homeless community seems to be growing, as evidenced by the well attended vigil at the Potentialist Workshop.

Photos and Story by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

 

Wednesday 01.04.17
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Ricky, a 'Street Soldier' in Reno

Photos and Reporting by Jose Olivares

Ricky Perez, who calls himself the 'Street Soldier', has been through a lot in his 41 years, from gang life to prison life to life on the streets.

“The streets” is a loaded term, with its many meanings always circling back to urban life. The term is anything but bourgeois.

“Growing up on the streets” can imply involvement in gang activity. A “street” is a slang term for a hallway in prison. “Living on the streets” can mean being homeless. And taking to “the streets” refers to raising hell against systemic injustice.

41-year-old Ricky Perez, a self-proclaimed 'Street Soldier', embodies all of the above. To Perez, the streets represent his home. He first grew up on the streets, spent years in prison, is currently homeless and has been an ardent fighter against systemic injustice.

What Perez has seen during his time on the streets has been humanity at its rawest.

Our Town Reno first met Perez in early November. We wrote a story on people’s outlook for the U.S. election. We met him on Fourth Street in downtown Reno. He was wearing a hospital gown and was slowly shuffling down the sidewalk with assistance from a walker.

Making Contact

When we spoke, he told us of his injuries, some sustained when he was allegedly jumped a few days prior.

Ever since, he’s been in contact with Our Town Reno, wanting to share his story.

We had been communicating through random, sporadic phone calls. As a homeless man, access to a consistent phone is difficult, so Our Town Reno was unable to speak with Perez unless he called. A couple of times he called from a cellphone he borrowed. A few times from a pay phone. And once from a phone on the fifth floor of a local hospital as he waited to hear results of a blood test.

We finally were able to schedule a meeting this past weekend. Our Town Reno spent approximately five hours with Perez, listening to his stories, jokes and philosophical thoughts.

There is no way to know if the stories he told Our Town Reno were exaggerated for theatrical effect, so we advise the reader to take them for what they are.

After weeks of contacting him, Our Town Reno was able to meet with Perez again and found out about his lifelong ordeals.

Happy and Painful Memories

Our Town Reno picked Perez up next to the RTC bus station. Because of his injuries, he uses a walker, which we stowed in the back of the car as we drove to find food. The walker has a black bag attached to it with a gaping hole. Every time we would take the walker out of the car for him to walk, he would check, ask and clarify that none of his possessions had fallen out of the hole.

Perez is from the Silver State. “I’m from Las Vegas. Born and raised,” he said. Growing up, his mother would take him and his brother to Mexico to visit family. He fondly remembers the food and culture. “Cow tongue is a delicacy in Mexico,” he said with a slight grin.

Perez dropped out of high school in the 11th grade and went on to receive his GED some time later. According to Perez, he and his younger brother were worlds apart. “The only thing we had in common was our mother,” he said. “My brother was full-blown homosexual.”

Perez told us how his younger brother died of AIDS in 2012. However, this was not the only family tragedy in his life. He remembers how his younger cousin died of a meth overdose. He still thinks her death was suspicious because of the astronomically high amount of meth, he says, which was found in her system.

Perez was a member of a gang in Las Vegas. His activities, as a member of the gang, he says, were intense. Perez requested we not publish the name of the gang nor his actions within it. Perez has left the gang life he led during his early adulthood and does not like to speak much about it.

Gang Life leads to Prison Life

The only thing he allowed to publish about his gang life is that his actions as a young man – at approximately 19 or 20 years old – landed him behind bars. Perez says he spent approximately 20 years in a Nevada prison. He was recently released.

His experiences in prison were expectedly unpleasant. He remembers a time when he and his cellmate were jumped. Perez was stabbed seven times but as he says, he was able to put up a good fight.

In prison, he was able to read books spanning a variety of topics. One of his favorite books was a biography of Argentine revolutionary Ernesto “Che” Guevara.

“I really identify with Che,” he said. “He’s a fighter. He’s headstrong. He never gave up. That’s how I am.”

Life is a River

We sat together at a local Mexican restaurant. I sipped on a soda and Perez devoured a carne asada torta and rice tacos. As we chatted about each other’s lives, he would drop golden nuggets of philosophical and life advice.

“You never want to go backward,” he told me. “You always want to go forward. Life is a river. We must live it while we can.”

During his time in prison, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) represented many prisoners in Ely State Prison in Riker v. Gibbons (https://www.aclu.org/legal-document/riker-v-gibbons-order).  Prisoners sued Nevada regarding their medical conditions in Ely State Prison. For this, Perez now holds the ACLU in high regard and sees it as one of the best organizations in the country that “really fights for the people.”

Perez was released from prison and decided to move to Reno earlier this year.

Moving to 'Weird' Reno

“I came up to Reno on a Greyhound on August 12,” Perez said. “Reno’s kind of weird. People are weird. They’ll openly stare at you.”

His time in Reno has been anything but uneventful. Perez is currently homeless and is struggling with a busted knee after allegedly being jumped one day. Throughout our time together, he would frequently grasp his knee, clench his teeth and double over in pain. Although he would try to dismiss the pain and pass it off as if it truly did not phase him, it was obvious the pain was truly affecting his concentration as we spoke.

The story of his injuries and of his struggles on Reno’s streets is to be continued...

In Part 2 of this series, we’ll learn more of Ricky Perez’s experience of getting injured as a homeless man in Reno as well as get more of his insights gathered from his turbulent life.

Series Reporting and Photos by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

 

Thursday 12.08.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Lisa Lee: Starting a Writing Workshop for the Homeless

Story and Photos by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

Lisa Lee previously spent eight years living on the streets in various cities across the United States. She now works at Northern Nevada HOPES as a community-based case manager. She is also a graduate student at the University of Nevada, Reno. …

Lisa Lee previously spent eight years living on the streets in various cities across the United States. She now works at Northern Nevada HOPES as a community-based case manager. She is also a graduate student at the University of Nevada, Reno. Photo by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno.

Negative Reactions on the Streets

“You’re really invisible when you’re on the streets,” Lee said during a recent interview with Our Town Reno. “You’re either really visible to everyone and people have pity or are repulsed by you – they have some sort of really negative reaction to you. Or you’re completely invisible and they’ll walk right past you. You could be bleeding on the street and they would walk right past you.”

Lee tells me this as we sit at her desk at Northern Nevada HOPES, a nonprofit community health center where she works.

“So being this identity of a repellant and being invisible at the same time, at least I had paper that was completely unbiased and nonjudgmental. I could pour my little heart out. It was very therapeutic for me.”

Lisa Lee looks through the notebooks she created when she was homeless. Photo by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno.

Writing and Collecting Memories to Keep Sane

Lee is referring to a series of notebooks on her desk. Worn out and beat up, the notebooks contain memories spanning the years from when Lee was living on the streets. As she flips through the pages and looks at the poetry, prose and drawings, a sense of nostalgia overwhelms her. Her facial expressions change as she remembers specific instances when she placed pen on paper.

“I was homeless from 18 to 26,” she explained. “Writing is my passion, it’s what’s kept me sane over the years so I wanted to share that with others.”

A screengrab of a promotion for the upcoming V.O.I.C.E. writing group.

A screengrab of a promotion for the upcoming V.O.I.C.E. writing group.

The Voice Project

Lee is starting a project called V.O.I.C.E., an acronym that stands for Voices of Inspiration, Courage and Empowerment. V.O.I.C.E is a writing group for people who are currently experiencing – or who have experienced – homelessness.

The first meeting of V.O.I.C.E. will be this Saturday, December 3 at noon. Previously and currently homeless individuals interested in taking part can go the first Saturday of each month on the third floor of HOPES. Although the V.O.I.C.E. project is for people who have been or are currently homeless, Lee says future open mic nights will be open to the public. She is funding the project entirely on her own.

The VOICE project originally started as a writing workshop for women who have experienced violence. But Lee then decided to expand it for people who live without a home. These are more of her notebooks. Photo by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno.

Personal and Political Dynamics

“It’s a way for individuals who are experiencing homelessness or have experienced homelessness to bring their voices to the table,” Lee said of her VOICE initiative. “Creating a space for people who are having these experiences is super powerful on a personal level but also on a political level.”

“Most of the time it’s people in suits who are making really important decisions about [homelessness] with no knowledge or comprehension of what it’s like to actually live without a home.”

Lee remembers the therapeutic comfort she felt when writing in her journals. A lot of her possessions were taken from her while she was living on the streets, including jackets, sleeping bags and hygiene products, but she eventually made sure that didn't happen to her journals.

“The thing that hurt most was when a piece of my soul was taken in my notebooks,” Lee said. “So I learned to strategically carry my belongings. I always kept my journal on my person, I never ever left it anywhere because I could always sit down and write. It was always just an avenue I had that let me get my thoughts out.” Photo by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

Publication Possibilities

Lee is hoping to publish work that is produced with VOICE. She said there is value in having homeless individuals tell their own story.

“In a way, writing or art provides immortality. It lets you tell your story long after you’re gone,” Lee said. “Get to work, people. Get to writing – do whatever you can to make things right for people”

If you would like to donate writing materials (pencils, notebooks, pencil sharpeners, paper, pen) or food to the V.O.I.C.E. project, you can email Lisa Lee at LLee@nnhopes.org or call her on 775-737-3175.

WHAT: V.O.I.C.E. writing group

WHO: Anyone who has experienced or is currently experiencing homelessness

WHEN: The first Saturday every month, starting with this Saturday, December 3 at noon. Will eventually become a twice-per-month meeting.

WHERE: Third floor of Northern Nevada HOPES

Reporting and Photos by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

 

Wednesday 11.30.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Larry: "We're not all scumbags and dope fiends."

Story and Photos by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

Larry (right), who lives in a weekly motel, took part in a panel on homelessness last week in Reno. Photo by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

Talking About Living in a Motel

Larry’s determination propelled his quick paces as he moved to stand in front of the audience. The crowd sitting in the classroom watched him intently, admiring the tattoos on his arms and his blonde moustache. They leaned in to hear what he would say.

As fluorescent classroom lights shone down, Larry described how he currently works almost 80 hours per week, struggling to care for his wife and son. The family of three are homeless in Reno and are currently staying in a weekly motel.

“We’re not all scumbags and dope fiends,” Larry said, referring to the commonly-held stereotype of homeless individuals.

Larry got emotional as he spoke as one of the five panelists for What about us? A panel on homelessness in Washoe County, organized by ACTIONN, on Thursday, Nov. 17, in a University of Nevada, Reno classroom. Photo by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno.

A Learning Experience

Over 120 community members and social work students occupied the classroom to learn of the homeless situation in northern Nevada.

The panel was made up of Reno City Council member Jenny Brekhus, ACTIONN’s Aria Overli, the Reno Initiative for Shelter and Equality’s Ben Castro, Volunteers of America’s Pat Cashell and Larry. Each panelist took a few minutes to introduce themselves, explain their approach to homelessness and later answered any questions from the audience.

From left to right, Jenny Brekhus, Aria OVerli, Ben Castro, Pat Cashell and Larry. Photo by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno.

Day to Day Struggles

Larry was the last panelist to speak about homelessness and the day-to-day struggle he encounters to help his wife caring for their young son. He recounted to the audience stories when the three of them were living in the streets.

Larry would hardly ever sleep, he said, staying awake to care for his family. During the day, Larry would leave his wife and son with a fellow, trustworthy homeless friend when looking for a job. Finding a job was a challenge, since there was no way for him to prepare for any prospective job interviews.

“How do you stay clean for a job interview?” he asked the audience.

The crowd listened intently as Larry detailed his precarious life on the streets and inside motel rooms. Photo by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno.

Camaraderie on the Streets

As his story progressed, he told the audience of the camaraderie he experienced while living on the streets. He also expressed frustration at his current situation living in a weekly motel room. Emotions betrayed him at one point when speaking of people’s perceptions of homeless individuals.

“We’re human beings, stop looking at us like we’re not,” Larry said. Tears began to swell in his eyes and his voice wavered and dropped slightly. “I am a human being. My wife is a human being. My son is a human being.”

Audience members remained quiet as Larry’s words crashed over them. Although the weekly does not serve as a proper home, Larry smiled at his wife and said, “My wife makes it home.” Photo by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

Help Each Other

The other panelists spoke passionately of their work in regards to homelessness, and were very critical of those not willing to help the situation.

Ben Castro spoke of Living Room, a new project RISE is taking on to provide housing for homeless individuals. Aria Overli spoke of Reno’s criminalization of homelessness and the need for discrimination to end. Pat Cashell shared his own, personal story, and spoke of his work as the regional director of Volunteers of America, the organization running the homeless shelters in town. Re-elected councilwoman Jenny Brekhus spoke of governmental approaches to fight homelessness and proposed public-private partnerships to help approach improvements.

Some of the most memorable remarks came from the audience as well. Photo by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno.

Audience Participation

Paul Lenart and Escenthio Marigny both raised their hands at differing times during the discussion and pointed to the culprit causing homelessness.

“We spent most of the history in our species taking care of each other,” Lenart said, alluding to the idea that humans have not always let their fellow person fall by the wayside. Later on in the evening, he muttered to me under his breath: “The whole commodity model is the problem.”

Marigny echoed some of these sentiments pointing to the “elephant in the room” that is “neoliberalism.”

At the end of the event, audience members approached the panelists, asking them for more information regarding their specific work or how to get involved with their organizations. Many people also approached Larry, his wife and their son, looking to shake their hands, and thanking Larry for his words.

There was rousing appreciation for Larry's courage to speak. Photo by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno.

The Next Generation

“I’m glad that a lot of young people were here,” Larry told me, referring to the large number of social work students who attended.

He and his wife, although struggling to live in the weekly, are incredibly proud of their young son.

“My son is on the honor roll,” Larry proudly boasted. “He gets straight As regardless.”

Photos and Story by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

Wednesday 11.23.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

A Teach-In with Rebekah Stetson, Our “Philanthropic Farmer”

Eight years ago, Rebekah Stetson, was a corporate banker, but then her life flipped.

Stetson on her no regrets life transformation: “I was going through training to become a licensed banker to sell securities. I had been in management at the branch level. My house also burned down and I also got pregnant with my second daughter.  I had multiple things going on but I just saw a really evil system. We had already started raising meat for our family and so I saw this niche market for organic meats and so I thought staying home playing with animals sounded much better.”

Helping Others Realize Healthy Choices

Today, in mid-November with the first snowflakes of the season falling on Reno, she gives a tour of the demonstration gardens she is helping with at the High Desert Montessori School off of Oravada St.  She also helps with their lunch program, and trying to develop more outdoor growing spaces and classrooms in an already lush and colorful environment.

The High Desert Montessori School is one of many healthy food and community programs Stetson helps with.

A Long List of Endeavors

“Whatever project I am asked to do if I am able to be a part of that’s what I do. Whatever people are ready to learn is what I am willing to teach,” she says.

In her post banking life, Stetson has been an organic farmer, specializing in organic pork and organic goat dairy, as well as a manager for school gardens in Lyon County.  She has been a health policy advocate at the state level, and has helped start or is currently helping with several youth community gardens in Reno.  

Tips for composting in the high desert country? “We live in the desert so make sure you water your compost pile or else it will never rot. It’s debatable whether it should be turned or not but it does seem like it breaks down a lot faster if you turn it every few days in the summer. You should not put dairy or meat into your compost pile. You also don’t want to put anything that’s very big in there, because it’s not going to break down fast."

Consulting, Speaking Out and Raising Money

Stetson's list of current activities is varied.  She consults with farmers and ranchers, who raise native grasses to let cows feed themselves, rather than cutting hay for them. Stetson is also currently fundraising for the Reno Initiative Living Room communal housing effort, which will also have a garden component.  

She speaks out against the use of pesticides in local parks and national food supplies and also helps people who want to raise animals at home whether it’s legal or in a grey area. “There’s always the idea of do I ask for permission or forgiveness?” she explains.   “Talk to your neighbors,” she suggests if you have any big plans to raise food in your backyard. “Take the power back,” she advises.

"Raised beds are awesome because you can control the dirt inside as long as you aren’t planting deeper than what your box goes. You can put whatever input into your box that is good clean dirt, that has never had pesticide exposure and is a good mix to grow veggies well. The dirt is usually a lot less compact so you can grow root vegetables like carrots really well. "

Why is it so important to go local when making and consuming food?

“What is coming to the market in the grocery store for the most part is not nutritionally dense food. It’s not done as well as it could be.  When you know your local farmer and you are getting your food locally, you’re not using a lot of fuel consumption, because everything is happening in proximity, also you are getting a product that is so much more nutritious than what you could get from the grocery store.  I’m all about personal wellness and community wellness.  I see a lot of unwell people and I see bad food being a root cause of a lot of issues.”

Stetson is helping the High Desert Montessori School expand its garden.  She has also helped the Eddy House and Urban Roots among other local groups with their own healthy growing initiatives. 

What if you feel you only have the time and money for a regular grocery store?

“If you can only shop at a grocery store, shop the perimeter of the grocery store, don’t shop the inner aisles, because that’s where all your processed and packaged foods are. We really have to start voting with our dollars too. If we don’t put our dollars into markets that we don’t believe in, those markets will cease to exist, because our entire economy revolves around supply and demand.  If we look at how much we spend in health care costs and if we flipped that and if we spent that on high quality food we would have so many more ‘well people’. It’s just making that conscious decision that I am willing to do something proactive that’s different. Change is uncomfortable, but I’m trying to make it so that it invades our local culture and becomes common practice.”

Stetson warns it's hard work to grow healthy food.  “All good things come with hard work.  People often go into it thinking it’s going to be easy. Although it’s extremely wholesome and fulfilling, it is really hard work. But it will get you connected to land and start making you question the way you eat and the way things work. It could be the greatest ride you ever take but it will also be hard work.” 

For those already on this journey, any tips as winter approaches?

“The ground has not frozen yet, so it’s still not too late to bring your garlic and onions in.  Don’t limit your beliefs of what can grow. You can grow carrots, turnips, beets, chard, spinach, kale, there’s tons of winter crops which can grow here. You can do yourself a huge favor by building some hoops over your row of whatever you plant and putting some plastic or something that you can see through, over it, to keep some of that warmth in during the day.”

Photos and Interview for Our Town Reno

Wednesday 11.16.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Election Day Views from Reno's Streets -- by Jose Olivares

Raymond Hayes was on a bench in downtown Reno. Photo by Jose Olivares.

Profits and People

Raymond Hayes is originally from Tennessee and moved to Reno three years ago. He has three children and says he is incredibly passionate regarding labor issues and the economy.

“It doesn’t matter who votes for who,” Hayes said. “The government has so many secrets, why do they think voting will make a difference?”

Hayes find more importance in congressional voting than in the presidential vote, and encourages people to pay attention to those elections rather than the others. However, he still had strong opinions concerning the presidential election.

“My pick was more the person as the person. I am more interested in the morals and ethics,” Hayes said. “Donald Trump is a businessman. Businessmen don’t have any morals of ethics, they only care about making profit. Hillary [Clinton] seems more with the people.”

Hayes says his opinion on Nevada’s current political and social situation is not too great. He brought up a topic that has garnered little media attention.

“They need to get rid of Right to Work. They can discriminate and fire people at will with it.”

Mostly Ignored Labor Issues

Right to Work is the law in Nevada (and other states) that allows workers the “right to work” without the support of a union or with collective bargaining rights. This leads to union busting and the degeneration of collective bargaining rights. Nevada is also an At-Will state, which means employers can fire workers “at-will,” which means they do not have to provide a reasoning for the layoff.


“Give us a real minimum wage. Not eight or nine dollars. We’re not in high school, we’re adults,” he said.

“I have three kids. I can’t survive with $9.50 an hour. I can’t survive without government help. But I don’t want government help with food stamps, healthcare and housing. I want to get it myself.”

According to Hayes, the country is divided, but he hopes that will change. “Once we start getting along, it’ll be better. Rome wasn’t built in one week. It’s going to be a struggle to change it,” he said.

“We need unity, no Right to Work, a livable wage and we need to bring jobs back.”

Ryan and Shelby G. pose for Our Town Reno. Photo by Jose Olivares.

Calling B.S. and for a Cleanup

“We’re screwed either way we go!” Ryan said after we asked his opinion on the presidential election.

Shelby interjected. Although she agrees with Ryan, she prefers Hillary Clinton to Donald Trump.

“Hillary is better," she said. "Trump wants to run the country like a business. He wants people who have abortions to go to prison. With everything going on in my life, Hillary could be better. I think politics is bullshit.”

“I just want to see this city cleaned up,” Ryan said about the local elections. “It’s filthy. There’s unkept needles where children play. There’s a nasty drug problem.”

Reporting and Photos by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

Tuesday 11.08.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

'Our Day Never Ends', Safe Embrace Saves Survivors of Abuse

Story and Reporting by Alissa Bremner

A screengrab from the website of Safe Embrace, a Sparks-based nonprofit which educates the community and provides services to survivors of domestic and sexual violence.  

Rankings Which Need to Change

In recent years, Nevada has ranked first nationally in the rate of women murdered by a male intimate partner, according to organizations which track these grim statistics. Activists say domestic violence and sexual assault are prevalent in Nevada, but that not much is being done to stop it. 

A screengrab from the Safe Embrace Instagram page.

Safe Embrace and Its Waiting List

Safe Embrace, located in Sparks, Nevada, is a non-profit organization that offers advocacy, emergency shelter, a 24-hour crisis hotline, and so much more to people in the Reno-Sparks area. The problem, activists say, is that so many people need help, and they don’t have enough room to house all of these women and their children.

Executive Director John Etchemendy said they currently have around three dozen women and children on their waiting list right now.

“Our shelter has been 100 percent occupied for the last two and a half years,” Etchemendy said.

The Safe Embrace Faceebook page is promoting an upcoming fundraiser on Nov. 19, in Reno.

Life or Death Situations

Last year, while on Safe Embrace’s waiting list for their emergency shelter, staff say a woman was murdered by her significant other. The women on this waiting list are in dire need of help. 

The Safe Embrace shelter, in a confidential location, currently has 15 beds.

Etchemendy made it clear that they are currently raising money to build a new wing on the property that will hold 16 additional beds.

The longest families can stay is 90 days, but they can apply for transitional housing for when those 90 days are up, typically government assisted temporary housing for those in dire need.

Recent promotional material for the Safe Embrace website.

Housing Help and Daily Calls

Amparo Iglesias, a staff member at Safe Embrace who helps with housing opportunities, said that all of the women are eligible for transitional housing. All they need it to just  fill out an application that gives information on the situation they are in.

“We table it to see who is in the most need for transitional stability,” Iglesias said.

Along with transitional housing, Safe Embrace has a 24-hour crisis hotline. They receive seven to nine calls a day from women who are in crisis. If they get a call about a sexual assault that just occurred, someone from Safe Embrace can go with the client to the hospital to give support while they get tests done.

Safe Embrace also has a Twitter account.

Long Distance Emergency Evacuations and Education

Staff also offer emergency evacuation help. So if the client is only in the Reno-Sparks area for school or a short period of time, Safe Embrace can help get them back to wherever home may be.

Along with that, Safe Embrace sends advocates out to local youth groups to educate the young on important matters such as consent. Etchemendy said they want to, “initiate thought,” on issues like pressuring for consent, and locker room talk.

Etchemendy raised questions like, “if the girl wants to say no, but is pressured into saying yes, does that count as consent if she doesn’t actually want to have sex?” And, “if a boy pressures a girl into saying yes, should he take that as consent when she originally said no?” These are the types of questions Safe Embrace is asking teens, and trying to educate them on what pressure can do when it comes to consent. Etchemendy says he thinks the real problem behind domestic violence and sexual assault is our culture.

“The problem is a culture where we continually blame the victim,” Etchemendy said.

Story and Reporting by Alissa Bremner for Our Town Reno

Thursday 11.03.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Activists Confront Chainsaws Buzzing Through Truckee River Homeless Camps

Activist Jennifer Cassady (left) is shown areas where chainsaws recently cut down tree parts which were providing shelter for homeless camp sites along the Truckee River. 

Reporting and Photography by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

Last month, activists filmed as workers chainsawed brush and trees in close proximity to homeless encampments. A couple of the activists led Our Town Reno to the area where the chainsawing took place.

Remnants of brush and small trees are left in a pile after workers sawed them down, near where homeless people used to shelter.

Remnants of brush and small trees are left in a pile after workers sawed them down, near where homeless people used to shelter.

It is a rainy day in Sparks. Jennifer Cassady and Katie Colling walk alongside the Truckee River as the cloudy skies paint the world in a gray and cold light.

Katie Colling (left) and Jennifer Cassady (right), both with the local Reno group known by its acronym RISE, discuss the homeless encampment area previously protected by brush.

Jumping In

Colling and Cassady walk along the pathway towards a nearby bridge to take refuge from the rain. Cassady spots a bicycle in the river next to more property belonging to one of her homeless friends. Regardless of the cold water, the cold wind and the rushing current, she jumps into the river to fish out the bike and places it at the side of the river under the bridge. 

Screengrab of a video Cassady posted on Facebook last month. Click link below to watch.

LINK TO VIDEO:

https://www.facebook.com/jennifer.cassady.73/videos/10210729709109328/?permPage=1

Cassady is a local activist who also volunteers for the Reno Initiative for Shelter and Equality (RISE). She is involved in local community activism and organizing, especially with homeless individuals in Northern Nevada. Last month, alongside Colling and Jay Kolbet-Clausell, she filmed as workers used chainsaws to clear brush and trees near homeless encampments in Sparks.

A homeless person’s tent remains behind trees which escaped the recent chainsawing.

The Homeless Camp Site

There is an area in Sparks by the Truckee River, where homeless folks have gathered near brush and trees to help protect them from precipitation and other factors. There are a few tents established and hidden in the brush where a large group of homeless people have clustered together.

According to Cassady, the trees and brush help keep the homeless camp from being exposed to the elements. Last month, however, homeless people felt their protection was threatened and placed in jeopardy by chainsaws, a dump truck, and a front loader.

Above an Our Town Reno compilation by Jose Olivares with activist videos by Jay Kolbet-Clausell.

The Chainsaws

On Tuesday, Oct. 25, the Truckee River Flood Project sent workers to remove brush and some trees near the homeless camp.

According to Jay Aldean, executive director of the Truckee River Flood Project, they were asked by the City of Sparks to remove this brush because they said it was a fire hazard.

“We attempted to do that,” Aldean said. “We put up signs that we didn’t want any trespassing. We notified the people there that they needed to move so we can clean the brush.”

The videos show the logo of Keeler Tree Service on a machine. Keeler Tree Service is a private company.

Colling and Cassady walk through the area where they confronted the chainsaw workers.

Activist and Homeless Observers

Cassady, Colling and Kolbet-Clausell were all observing the situation and helping their homeless friends gather their property. The three of them filmed the workers using chainsaws as they got close to the homeless people's property.

Our Town Reno spoke with a couple of homeless individuals living at the camp. We spoke with Bonnie Pace, who we interviewed earlier this year (www.ourtownreno.com/our-stories-1/2016/4/8/bonnie-and-her-cat-displaced-but-together).

"You think a tourist wants to see this?" she asks. 

Pace also mentioned the Sparks Police Department has politely approached the camp and offered the homeless people services. Unfortunately, some of the homeless folks living in this area have pets that cannot be taken to shelters with their owner.

"I'm not giving up my cat," Bonnie said. "My cats are like my children!"

A homeless person’s property can be seen in the background while remnants of chainsawed brush sits in the foreground,

Brush Removal

The area still has a lot of brush and trees left protecting the camp. According to Aldean, the workers removed between 60 and 80 percent of the brush required by the City of Sparks.

“We negotiated [with the activists and homeless] that we would only cut as much as we cut, and see what the City of Sparks was going to make us do after that brush was cut,” Aldean said. “From that, we can just rest a little bit and see how the negotiations go with the City of Sparks.”

“Like I say, these guys when I spoke with them, they’re very good people, the activists,” Aldean added. “They’re trying to do a job as well.”

Cassady who works with RISE does not hide her anger regarding what she says is the injustice homeless individuals in Reno and Sparks face on a day-to-day basis. "I'm heartbroken," she says.

Dedicated to Activism

Cassady says she has dedicated her life to community organizing and striving for social change. She is currently in her last semester and is on the road to receive a Master of Arts for Social Change at the California-based Starr King School for the Ministry. As she told Our Town Reno, "The school is bad ass and prepared me to be out there."

"I feel like it's important to give the world back its humanity and the only way to do that is by confronting oppression in every form," she said.

"If I have a dream, it's that the voices that are here are amplified and heard. That their stories are seen as sacred and their humanity is amplified. If I'm amplifying their voice, that's important," she said.

Photos, Video Editing and Reporting by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

Special thanks to Jay Kolbet-Clausell for the videos clips.

 

 

 

Wednesday 11.02.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Election 2016, the View from the Streets of Reno

Text, Interviews and Photos by Jose Olivares

With the last presidential debate coming up, Our Town Reno interviewed a few people living day to day on the streets, asking them what their political opinions are.

Damon and Tyelor were walking hand in hand in downtown Reno. They seemed disillusioned with the November 8 presidential vote.


“I think both parties are pieces of sh*t,” Damon told us. “If Hillary gets elected we’ll go to war. If Trump gets elected… well I don’t know what will happen. Probably total anarchy.”

“He’s racist,” Tyelor chimed in. “He’ll really harm the LGBT  community. I’m part of that community. I don’t like that.”

“I think [Clinton is] just doing it for the money, honestly,” Tyelor added about the Democratic presidential candidate.

Damon and Tyelor say they receive political information from what is posted online.

Could Obama Stay On?

We then spoke with Emalee G. and Chris W., who were not photographed for this piece.

Chris is a homeless veteran who served in the Marine Corps for 13 years.

“They’re both pieces of sh*t,” Chris told us. “I can’t support a liar and I can’t support a racist.”

“I served 13 years in the Marine Corps," he said. "I don’t vote and I see this country going to hell. For all the people we have in this country, these two [Clinton and Trump] are the only people they could find?”

Emalee mentioned she is a fan of President Obama, and jokingly proposed having him on a month-to-month contract. Chris said he likes a previous Republican presidential nominee, John McCain, for having served in the military and for being a prisoner of war.

A get out the vote volunteer supporting Hillary tries to sign people up in downtown Reno. Photo by Nico Colombant

Still Feeling the Bern

“I really liked that other guy,” Chris said.

“Oh Bernie!” Emalee said with a smile. “Yeah, he was awesome. Man, everybody’s pissed at him for dropping out. He would have won, too!”

Homelessness is the couple’s main sociopolitical issue they care about. For Chris, it’s homelessness and veterans.

“There are beds sometimes [in the shelter], but when it’s too full, we have to sleep outside,” Chris said. “I love my [veteran] benefits but it’s f*cked up [to sleep outside] because I still served my country best I can.”

“Either way, it’s going to be Trump or Clinton," Ricky Perez said. "I think whoever gets it, it’s going to be a f*cked up White House.”

“Either way, it’s going to be Trump or Clinton," Ricky Perez said. "I think whoever gets it, it’s going to be a f*cked up White House.”

Where do Homeless People Vote?

Lastly, we spoke with Ricky Perez, a 40-year-old man who has a walker to help him walk with his injured knee and hip.

Perez is registered to vote, bus since he is homeless and lives at the shelter, he does not know where his voting location will be on November 8.

“It’s a toss-up. I might just throw Hillary’s name in,” he said. “Her past with her husband Bill Clinton having been president, and her experience will make her better as a president.”

Social Security administration in the U.S. is the main issue he cares about for personal reasons. Perez has spine injuries and has received surgery on his knee and hip. He said he can use all the money he can get.


Perez on homelessness and the 2016 presidential election: “[Clinton and Trump are] not going to make it any better. They’ll just be adding to it.”

Perez does not have an optimistic outlook regarding homelessness, and how the election will affect homeless people. Although it is an important issue for him, he does not have hope for either candidate to help the situation.
 

Photos, Interviews and Reporting by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

Wednesday 10.19.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Doug, From Abandoned Porch to Heated Room

Story and Photos by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

At the beginning of September, Our Town Reno published the story of Doug, a 72-year-old man who was living on a porch in downtown Reno.

Doug watches trippy TV in his new room, found and furnished by volunteers.

After the Our Town Reno story was published, Bob and Michelle Mello, the two founders of the Reno Sparks Homeless Veterans group, were able to secure a room for Doug in a three-bedroom apartment in Reno.

As we reported earlier this year, Doug’s living conditions were perilous, especially for a man his age. The 72-year-old suffers from emphysema and was previously living on a porch. On this porch, he was exposed to the elements and police, with only a few jackets and some blankets for protection.

Doug’s close neighbor and friend, Scott, would routinely visit him at the porch.

Doug gets to use a shared kitchen with housemates in downtown Reno, after being homeless on a porch.

A New Life Inside

Since Doug moved into the apartment one week ago, his life has changed. This is an opportune time as the colder weather begins to creep through Reno.

“[Living in the apartment] beats living outside,” Doug said. “Better being indoor than outdoors.”

When you walk into the apartment, the white walls and cleanliness of the home feels charming. Doug has his own room with a television, bed and plenty of blankets. He shares the apartment with Steve, a veteran who was previously homeless.

Michelle Mello, who helps homeless veterans find homes, said a woman would soon be occupying the third bedroom in the apartment.

Michelle Mello and Steve, a veteran, share a laugh in the apartment where Doug now lives.

Although Doug himself is not a veteran, Michelle helped him find and secure this room in the apartment.

“For the past five years, we started helping homeless in general,” Michelle said.

Her husband, Bob, is a veteran from the Vietnam War. With the work they were doing to help homeless people, they noticed a high number of homeless veterans.

“We didn’t understand why there were so many [homeless veterans] since the government is supposed to help them,” Michelle said.

Currently, their group is helping seven veterans and one senior citizen, Doug.

“Some people stay in the apartments, then leave on their own when they’re back up on their feet,” Michelle told us. “We’ve already known homeless need help but it’s more apparent now.”

The apartment has beautiful light and working appliances.

Reno Sparks Homeless Veterans provides food, clothes and hygiene products to people in the community experiencing homelessness. They use their own money and donations, to pay rent and to get furniture to turn the apartments into a home.

According to Michelle, once they house a person in one of the apartments, they will help them secure a job, Social Security or other income to help pay for the low-priced rent. Michelle says the people they help are free to stay in the apartments for however long they want.

The group is also currently accepting blankets, clothing and food for a donation drive on October 16th.

Doug gets a ride to go buy some cigarettes.

Although the organization’s work has been helping a great amount of people, Michelle also hopes the City of Reno would help more with homelessness in Reno.

“The City of Reno needs to start restructuring buildings and have low income housing,” Michelle said. “By pushing homeless from one corner to the next corner, they’re just sweeping [homelessness] aside. It’s not right.”

Steve, Doug’s roommate was listening to our conversation. He chimed in:

“If it weren’t for Bob and Michelle, I probably wouldn’t be here right now,” Steve said. It is clear he is appreciative of the Mellos for all their work.

Doug returns to his new apartment on his own after going shopping. Photo by Nico Colombant


Adjustments

Doug, however, still needs to adjust to his new living situation. It has only been a week since he moved into the apartment, but you can tell the transition is still ongoing. Doug misses his faithful friend Scott. When Scott previously visited the apartment, Doug was out, so they had not seen each other since his move.

Although he is appreciative of the roof over his head, you can tell he misses interacting with people out on the streets. Doug told Our Town Reno he usually spends most of the day inside the apartment. He wants to stay active.

“I want to do something to keep busy,” Doug said. “Sometimes I don’t know what to do because being in here, I have no one to talk to.”

Doug has access to a phone if he needs help.

Doug has access to a phone if he needs help.

Looking for Tasks and Helping

While living on the streets, Doug would clean windows to make some money. It is obvious he is looking for any small task where he can be productive. He told us he had previously vacuumed the apartment and has plans to clean the dust off the living room light structure. During our interview, he took the opportunity to take the trash out before leaving with Michelle to buy cigarettes.

Michelle is incredibly humble in regards to the incredible work she is doing for local homeless individuals in the Reno and Sparks area. You can tell she truly enjoys spending time and helping take care of the people whose lives she has touched.

“One day we crave there won’t be any homeless ever,” Michelle told us.

Story and Photos by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

Tuesday 10.11.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

There Go the Downtown Benches in Reno

Story and Photos by Jose Olivares for Our Town Reno

When asked by a Reno citizen why the benches were taken out, this is what the city's Parks Manager was quoted as saying through the Reno Direct program: "The benches at City Center have been temporarily removed due to high level of homeless staying there all day and pan handing people passing by. City Hall had received complaints from the downtown casino's (sic) and the bowling stadium. City Manager, R.P.D. and Code Enforcement made the directive to remove them. They are being stored at the Corporation Yard." photo by Jose Olivares

Spikes in Place of Benches

If you have ever seen buildings with spikes to prevent birds from landing, you may shudder at the cruelty of the situation.

The great thing is that humans are not animals, and in our city we would never treat one another the same way we treat birds. Right?

Well, if you have recently walked around downtown Reno, you may have passed by the old RTC bus station. The station used to have benches circling it, where people would sit, sleep and rest.

This is not the case anymore.

Where people used to sit and congregate is now empty with police on bikes rolling through.  Photo by Jose Olivares.

It's Illegal to Do This and That in Reno

Recently, the City of Reno removed many of the benches and placed sharp, vertical, metal plates where the benches used to stand. They have also placed these metal plates all over cement blocks where trees grow.

This is done in order to prevent anyone from sleeping, sitting or even resting in the old bus station.

The City of Reno has an ordinance that makes it illegal to sit or lie on a public sidewalk in the downtown area. The city also makes it illegal for anyone to sleep in a park. Sleeping in a park is considered “camping” and it is illegal to do so without a permit.

A few minutes later, and the busy spot is still totally empty. Who has a right to be downtown? Photo by Jose Olivares

Samurai Jack Speaks Out

As evening settled in a few nights ago, we spoke with Samurai Jack, a man who used to rely on these benches to sleep and relax. He told us of his thoughts on the removal of benches and addition of the metal plates:

Why do you think these spikes were put in to replace the benches?

“They probably put them in because they don’t want all the homeless hanging out here and having fun. I don’t know. They’re just trying to narrow down to less and less places where the homeless can sit.”

“They want to just push (people) in the shelter, which is basically overfilled. So they push us and force us to leave town and find other places. They’re trying to run everyone out slowly. But it’s not going to work out like that...Not everyone out here is dumb or lazy as people may think.”

What purpose did the benches serve?

“This is a really nice shady spot to relax. A lot of people rely on it out here. A lot of times people come here in the morning to finish sleeping because the overflow [shelter], they make you get up at three-thirty or four in the morning and they just drop you off so people come over here and sleep. I’ve slept here a bunch.” He later added, “I have a lot of friends and family who relied on [the benches] and slept on them.”

“People are going to do what they have to do. I mean, [the City of Reno] did what they had to do. So they did what they felt they had to do. It’s already done, now we just have to work around it. I just try to be there for all my family on the streets.”

Samurai Jack had one last message to the people of Reno:

“I love Reno and I love everyone. Don’t worry, it’s all under control. Samurai Jack’s got it.”

Photos, Interview and Story for Our Town Reno by Jose Olivares

Thursday 09.29.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Teaching How to Grow Healthy Food in Reno's Food Desert

By Ashley Andrews with archive photos by Shelley DeDaw and Bill Kositzky

Northern Nevadans live in the high desert and a food desert. In many parts of Reno and Sparks, it's much easier to find drugs and alcohol than healthy fruits and vegetables. As Ashley Andrews reports for Our Town Reno with archive photos by gardeners Shelley DeDauw and Bill Kositzky, one way to have access to fresh, healthy food is to try and grow some yourself. In this report Andrews showcases the Grow Your Own, Nevada! initiative which has classes and experiments about sustainable, local ways to grow and preserve healthy food. The University of Nevada Cooperative Extension program works with the Mariposa Academy in Reno to teach students and volunteers growing, harvesting and preservation techniques.

Garden-grown produce is essential to healthy meals. Photo by Shelley DeDauw. 

Stats and Facts about Reno's Food Deserts

According to the United States Department of Agriculture, food deserts are communities that are both low-income and low-access. Low-access urban areas are those where more than one third of residents live more than one mile from a supermarket.

Eight census tracts in the Reno-Sparks area are food deserts. More than 36,000 people live there, where fresh, healthy food is difficult to find.

One mile can be a long walk home if groceries must be carried on the journey. When low-access is narrowed from one mile to one half of a mile to the nearest supermarket, nearly 30 area census tracts can be considered food deserts. Over 120,000 people live in this type perimeter in the area, where good food may be hard to come by.

Fresh, healthy foods like these Mariposa Academy-grown carrots may be hard to find for many Reno residents. Photo by "Master Gardener" Shelley DeDauw.

A School's Garden and a Learning Opportunity

In a low-income, low-access community near the Reno-Tahoe airport,  the grant-supported food garden is thriving at Mariposa Academy.

“People care about growing their own food here,"  horticulture specialist Heidi Kratsch explains.  "The Cooperative Extension is all based on the needs of the community– and the community has said loud and clear, ‘we need to know how to grow our own food here in Nevada,’ so that’s why we’re doing it."

“I gain a lot of information on how to do a wide variety of things," participant John Davenport says. "Fruit tree pruning, roses, raised flower beds, it never ends.”

File photo of the garden at the Mariposa Academy, by Bill Kositzky.

 Do it Yourself

A class instructor Wendy Hanson Mazet explains everyone can start growing their own food, in pots, raised beds or even inside their homes. “Strawberries can be grown in the home," she says. "And you can pollinate them very easily by just shaking the flowers by your fingertips. But the thing is, see what you can do in your home. Do something that you like to eat. Not something that someone tells you to do. Do what you enjoy. Experiment. Failure is just an opportunity to learn new things.”

Do it yourself, and you could one day even start selling your healthy fruits and vegetables at a local farmer's market. Photo by Shelley DeDauw.

 

 

Tuesday 09.27.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Escenthio Marigny Jr., "The Elephant in the Room We Have to Speak About"

Escenthio Marigny, Jr., from the Reno Justice Coalition was one of the speakers at a Stop Gentrification noontime rally on the UNR campus on September 13, 2016.

"This is tied to the system we call capitalism. It's the elephant in the room we have to speak about."

"Our economic system created a situation where certain people get shafted while others get more money. We should recognize that .... There are people right now who are homeless because housing prices have gone up at ridiculous rates, higher than they have ever been in the history of this city. That's not right. Do you all think that's right? You better act like it then."

Dozens of students, faculty and activists took part in the rally, with a new UNR gym still in construction as backdrop.

"This system is not equitable for everyone and never has been. We need to explore that. The way to face it now is that we face this housing crisis in Reno head on and we draw attention to the root cause, we draw attention to who gets impacted here. Also, we need to be careful of the narrative being created about the people who are impoverished. "

"We get told this is an individual issue. If you're poor, you don't have health care, you can't find a job, it's your fault. But we know it's not the fault of the individual, it's structural, it's designed."

"If anybody ever tells you that you need to be afraid of the poor, of people who are low income, of people hanging out down by the bus stop, they're bullshitting.  You need to be more afraid of people making these policies, more afraid about the backdoor deals happening with local government and national government, and these developers that are going to do more harm for our community than they will good."

 

Tuesday 09.13.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Barrie Lynn, Trying to Save the Hillside Cemetery and Reno's History

Barrie Lynn, a board member on the Hillside Cemetery Preservation Foundation, has a full agenda this coming week as part of her efforts to save this heritage site in Reno, with a new looming date of September 30th, when the current owners, Sierra Memorial Gardens, now threaten to start disinterring buried bodies.

“Who we have buried here are the founding fathers of Reno. We have the first county commissioners, original settlers of the mid 19th century, everyone you would recognize by our streets, a former member of the House of Representatives, five former mayors, including E.E. Roberts who was famous for saying he wanted a whiskey barrel on every corner downtown. We have veterans of four wars including the Civil War, the Spanish-American War, the Mexican-American War and the Seminole Wars. There’s a lot of other people who are buried here.  This isn’t just any graveyard. This is a heritage site.”

A Busy Schedule

There’s a County Commission meeting on Tuesday, a Reno city council meeting on Wednesday, a blessing ceremony at the cemetery on Saturday, and a community meeting at the Washoe County Library on Sunday at 2:00 p.m. Lynn is also using social media to help circulate two petitions, as she feels a heavy responsibility.

This notice posted outside the cemetery in late August has added new urgency to saving the Hillside cemetery.

'A Poor Reflection on Reno'

“The financial gain of just a few people has been placed at a higher level of importance than the dignity and respect of the very people who founded the city we have,” she explains.

“I think it’s really a poor reflection on our community nobody in office has stepped up to say ‘even though we don’t technically have control over this, maybe this is wrong, maybe we should slow this down’. I think it really reflects poorly on us as a community. If this disinterment does happen, future generations will look back on this and say ‘these people had no soul. They destroyed an important historical site, and for what? Some apartments?’”

"These are people who have come to tie ribbons on the fence to show their support for preserving the cemetery."

What Restoration Project?

Sierra Memorial Gardens say their plan is a restoration project.  A notice posted outside the cemetery in late August says the plan is to take bodies from the wide expanse overlooking downtown Reno into a tiny, already packed, area on one of its current extremities.  Lynn isn’t buying the terminology used. 

“They are calling this a restoration project,” she says. “This is anything but a restoration project. This is an attempt to gain control over a piece of prime real estate for profit. This is a lucrative real estate deal. It’s very distasteful.”

Then, she points to the area where the whole cemetery is supposed to go into.  “It’s already full. That’s where they want to put everyone. There simply is not room. They want to consolidate everyone over there. And then they claim ‘oh well, then we are going to maintain that.'”

An area where seemingly Sierra Memorial Gardens wants to push the entire cemetery into.

Potentially Hazardous

If the plan were to go ahead, Lynn says it would be devastating, and also potentially hazardous.  One of the prominent grave monuments inside is for Warren Gould, who his family has said was documented to have died of anthrax after working on a diseased cow. 

“Those spores live for hundreds of years. These people were buried in wooden coffins.  When they’re dug up it’s going to be dust. The anthrax spores could still be in the dirt, but no one seems to be concerned about that at the county level. I don’t think the neighborhood has been informed about the potential risk.”

"Warren Gould had a big ranch on Mill Street.  He is documented to have died from anthrax by cutting up a diseased cow.  His descendants are very opposed to this. They are very active in the fight against development of the site."

Permissions Needed?

Lynn says she is still confident many legal boxes remain unchecked for the disinterment to start at the end of this month.

“They do have to get permission from the local Paiute tribe as there are Paiutes buried here including Chief Johnson Sides. Paiute Nation needs to approve, even if it’s on private land, and they will not give their consent. "

Per state law, Lynn says, owners are also supposed to give a one-year notice before starting disinterment, but signs posted at the cemetery are only giving a one-month notice.

There’s also the strange situation that even though Sierra Memorial Gardens may own the common areas of the cemetery, they don’t actually own the individual burial plots, and the families of those buried there, at least those known to Lynn, have not been personally notified.

Lynn says Sierra Memorial Gardens owns the common areas but not the burial plots themselves, creating a complicated situation.

Who is Being Notified Exactly?

“I think the county needs to work with the assessor’s office to come up with some sort of an ancestry affidavit to help the people say ‘this is my ancestor, here’s how I’m related to them, here’s an address for noticing,’" Lynn says.

"Right now, the mailing address listed with the county assessor for many of these plots is actually Sierra Memorial Gardens’ address. So if they were notifying the families via mailings, they would be sending mail to their own office. So there are a lot of issues.”

Lynn wants county officials to start overseeing a process she says needs to be transparent and to offer public discussions, especially for health concerns. “They need to require Sierra Memorial Gardens to inform the community of what they intend to do, and they need to let the community know before they begin digging up bodies that there is documented anthrax and other communicable diseases among those buried here.  If people would like to protect themselves, they should be able to.”

If there has been any restoration recently, including a new fence, Lynn says this seems more to counter volunteers trying to save the cemetery.

New Fencing

“This whole road was open up until last week. They could have fenced it to protect it from vandals, but now they’ve fenced it to protect it from the people who want to protect the cemetery. It’s really unfortunate. All of this fence was torn open, up until recently. They had twenty years to fix it to keep the vandals out. Now, they fixed it to keep the people who are trying to protect the cemetery out. It’s disgusting.”

The cemetery has had many owners, but for years, it's volunteers and descendants of those buried who have worked on its maintenance.

Multiple Owners, Volunteer Caretakers

In past decades, the city of Reno owned the cemetery, and at another point it was UNR in control, but both times there was community opposition and descendant outrage against any attempt to convert it into housing. 

"James Chambers died in 1882. His headstone is Vermont marble.  It’s absolutely beautiful with the scrolls on it. Somehow it has miraculously survived after being stolen. It was returned to the Comstock Cemetery Foundation. Someone probably had it in their frat house, felt guilty, and wanted to return it."

Fraternities Returning Markers

It was also once a rite of passage for fraternities and rowdy college students who would steal gravestones, party inside and drive through. Some markers and stones have since been returned. 

Diligent volunteers and families of the buried have also maintained the site throughout the years, and even though the grass is dry, due to a lack of water, many parts of the cemetery are clean and tranquil.

Where poor people were once buried, students now park, amid a crunch for parking spaces in the UNR area.

Where poor people were once buried, students now park, amid a crunch for parking spaces in the UNR area.

Parking Over Bodies

Parts of what was once a larger cemetery have already been converted into a parking lot, including where the poor and some veterans were buried in what is called Potter’s Field. 

“These are the people who didn’t have the money for a proper burial, so the county buried them. Most of them had wooden grave markers which are all gone.  Through research and cemetery records, dedicated volunteers found their identities, and the approximate location of where they are buried and the original boundary of the cemetery. But it’s really just poor reflection on this community that we knowingly have a graveyard here that has veterans in it and we are parking on top of their graves.”

"There are babies underneath where these cars are parked. Their families buried them thinking this would be a final resting place and they would never be disturbed."

A Battle At the Legislative Level

Underpinning the new notice is a question over state laws and the definition of blight.  The owners had a law passed in the state legislature in 2001, NRS 451.070, which opened the way for the current plan, but Lynn says their failure to pass other laws relating to the ownership of the privately owned burial plots makes it incomplete. 

“Basically, they got this law passed that gives them a unilateral right to trespass on someone else’s property and steal a body. These individual burial plots don’t belong to them,” Lynn says.

“This law is unconstitutional. Once they’re done with this process, if they ever get to it, which I don’t think they will, they still have an issue in that they can’t develop this cemetery land until they gain ownership of each individual plot.  The process they are going to have to take to get each individual plot, there’s going to be some holdouts, there’s never going to be enough families saying yes I’ll sell my plot so they can develop this.  So we’ll have a site that can never be developed. If you think this is blight, that will be worse.”

"We wouldn’t have the Truckee Meadows without his work and the work of many other early settlers.  He was responsible for being involved in the irrigation ditches which allowed everyone to ranch. He was very active in government and in the community.  We have a street named after him.  We wouldn’t have a community to live in without these people."

Can the Law Be Amended?

Lynn would like some consideration at the state legislative level to amend this law, but not the way Sierra Memorial Gardens wants it.  

“There needs to be something added to it so that it is not so unilateral, maybe an oversight committee needs to be created. Blight needs to be proven. We need to see here is the definition of blight, here are the conditions under which something is considered blighted. This is not blighted. This is just a desert cemetery without water. It has clearly delineated paths. It has clearly delineated markers."

"Just because some markers are missing doesn’t mean it’s blighted. I really am challenging this notion of blight they are using to justify their actions.  Blight is curable. It’s not permanent. Earthquakes, structural damage, fires, those things can be the end of a structure or a site, but weeds, and a little maintenance, that’s not enough to deem it beyond repair.”

Another Vision

Lynn wants Reno to emulate other cities who have taken similar cemeteries and turned them into respectful celebrations of an important history.

"His relatives are very involved in this process. The volunteers have gone back through all the cemetery records, and have been able to find burial sites even though headstones are missing."

Turning the Cemetery Into a Public Site

It’s believed bodies were buried here from the 1860s to the 1950s. Lynn says it wouldn’t be difficult to turn the current privately-owned cemetery into a public site that would add to Reno’s foundation going forward.

“We can turn it into an interpretive space, like a public park, and that’s really the destiny of this site, that there is our non-profit group, the Hillside Cemetery Preservation Foundation that is prepared to purchase this cemetery and raise funds to maintain it, and return water to it, to improve the roads, and install markers to explain who these people are, buried here."

"He was a Trumpeter in the Spanish-American War. There’s a lot of interesting and incredible people buried here." 

Will Apartments Be Built On Top of Graves?

"This has the potential to be an educational site, a heritage site. It has the potential to be something that is going to contribute to the fabric of our community so much more than just some apartments. This is really something that cannot be replaced.  If they do go ahead with disinterment, not knowing where every single person is buried, it is impossible to get them all, so they will end up building on top of graves.”

Sunday 09.11.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Doug, 72, Living on a Porch in Downtown Reno

Story, Photos and Interview by Jose Olivares

It's a weekday evening. Doug sits on the porch of a condemned house in downtown Reno, with blankets, a couple of sweaters and a few pieces of cardboard for comfort.

Doug lives on the porch of a house that has been condemned, with no trespassing signs all around. Photo by Jose Olivares

Doug lives on the porch of a house that has been condemned, with no trespassing signs all around. Photo by Jose Olivares

Smoking a Cigarette and Feeding Birds

The 72-year-old homeless man smokes a cigarette as he watches birds on the sidewalk pick at bread he throws at them.

“I give them bread every day,” he says with an aged, gruff voice.

Doug gets friendly visits on his porch, including from his neighbor Scott. Photo by Jose Olivares

Doug gets friendly visits on his porch, including from his neighbor Scott. Photo by Jose Olivares

Homeless but on a Porch

Doug is homeless and has been living on this porch for an unknown amount of time. At one point he mentions five years, at another point, six. A close friend says ten. That doesn’t matter to Doug, though.

“It’s free rent,” he says with a grin.

He suffers from emphysema. Every few minutes he will have a coughing fit with a pained look in his face. He’ll spit on the floor to clear the phlegm from his throat and apologize.

“I’m sorry, I have emphysema,” Doug says. Photo by Jose Olivares

“I’m sorry, I have emphysema,” Doug says. Photo by Jose Olivares

Dealing With Emphysema

“I take Ventolin but I can’t afford it. Every tube costs 17 dollars. It only lasts for three days.”

“My Medicare doesn’t cover it,” Doug says. As a result, Doug has to fight through his illness while battling the elements.

“I’m old, I’m worn out, I don’t give a f***," Doug says. Photo by Jose Olivares

Memories of Other Places

Doug worked on a farm with his family in Minnesota when he was very young. He fondly remembers when his 8-year-old sister was bitten by a goose while she was trying to feed the winged animal. As she ran off crying, he recalls his grandmother pulling out her shotgun and killing the animal for the vicious act of biting the little girl.

“Let’s just say we had goose for dinner that night,” he smiles.

Doug cleans windows, and used to work on skyscrapers in Chicago. Photo by Jose Olivares

From Skyscrapers in Chicago to Windows in Reno

Doug lived in Oakland in 1989 during the Loma Prieta earthquake. He also cleaned skyscrapers’ windows in Chicago. He later came to Reno and worked at the Cal Neva as a top-deck porter. He says he lost his job after the Cal Neva hired low-wage workers and replaced him.

The old man defies a common misconception that homeless people do not work.

On his porch, he has a bucket with a window washer and squeegee. He often goes out to the streets, offering to clean people’s windows. He also visits restaurants to clean their windows and make a couple of bucks. He cleans “every day I want to eat.”

“Nobody gives a f***,” he says. “I want someone to make me clean windows. I’m out of work and 72 years old.”

Seeking More Work

“I used to go out to the streets with a cardboard sign that said ‘Hungry! Want to work! I’ll clean your windows! I’m 72! I’m homeless!’” Doug says. “But nobody gives a f***.”

The few dollars he makes for cleaning windows goes to buying a bowl of rice with two packets of sweet and sour sauce at a local Chinese diner.

Doug says police have attempted to kick him off the condemned property, but since he isn’t actually inside the building, he says they leave him alone after a few minutes of back-and-forth bickering. Photo by Jose Olivares

Dealing With Cops

It’s not uncommon for cops to bother Doug. When staying at the overflow shelter, he remembers being released at five in the morning. One morning he was released from the shelter and out into the cold.

“I go to the (casino) to get warm, and I get arrested because I wasn’t gambling!” he says. “True story.”

Scott spends time and jokes around with Doug. He says they have known each other for nine years, since Scott moved to the area. Photo by Jose Olivares

No Family But a Friendly Neighbor

Doug has no family in Reno – or anywhere. His parents and his sister are long gone. His sister was 35 when she died of cancer. However, he does have a very friendly neighbor who visits him every day. Scott lives in a house around the corner from Doug’s porch.

Every evening Scott will visit Doug, occasionally bringing food, but always bringing a conversation. As soon as Scott comes by, Doug perks up. The elderly man will smoke a cigarette while their conversation hits on a variety of topics.

“Doug’s a hard worker,” Scott says. “He cleans windows for a living. You’ll never see him out there panhandling, you know? He works hard.”

The years have very apparently worn Doug out. He is tired and it is hard for him to move around.

“I just want a place and a job. Plain and simple,” Doug says. “I don’t think they have enough low-income housing for people over fifty years.”

The message he wanted to get out into the world is: “He who has no sin can cast the first stone.”

 

Friday 09.09.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Katie Morales, Removing Barriers for Transient School Children

The new school year recently started and Children in Transition program coordinator Katie Morales has two calendar and email filled computer screens going on in her new office inside the Sparks High School compound.  Other offices next to hers are filled with backpacks and school supplies, while emails are being answered, logistics figured out and phones answered.

“Our goal is to make sure every child has that opportunity to go to school so there are no barriers to the student’s education," Morales says of her work.

Morales, a UNR grad, coordinates other employees who help the thousands of students in homeless situations throughout the Washoe County K-12 school district. “Every day, we’re helping them with birth certificates, shot records, making sure they are getting free or reduced lunches, figuring out transportation, finding out if they need anything else to help with their schooling.”

Homeless youths can be a hidden population, especially for those living on the streets, but Children in Transition helps them get regular schooling like any other student.

A Child in Transition in Every Washoe County School

Last year, there was a “child in transition” in every school in the district, Morales says. “We are making sure there are no barriers to a student’s education,” she explains summarizing the 100-percent grant funded program.  Children in Transition also gets community help through backpack drives and people helping pay with school fees.  “We can always use more support.  Backpacks, hygiene supplies, shoes …. School can be expensive. If you want to take an AP class, or be on the soccer team, that can be difficult. People can help with some of those fees.”

The offices of Children in Transition are filled with school supplies to give to students in the program. “It gives the student the feeling they are like any other student," Morales says.

Nearly 90% Rise of Students Helped This Decade

Our Town Reno wanted to find out more about some of the current trends, challenges and successes of the Children in Transition program locally.

Q: How many students are you helping?

“Every July first, we re-identify our students and we have definitely seen an increase in students in the last couple of years. We’re continuing to see that right now as well. Last year, we served and identified around 3,500 students and that was an 89% increase in the last six years.  We’ll probably see the increase continuing this year as well.”

The program follows clearly defined federal mandates to help students in unstable housing situations.

Q: Within the different definitions of homeless, what are the trends locally?

“Our largest group are those doubled up with another family, due to some type of financial reason. They lost their house, they lost their job, and so now they go live with a family member, or a friend.  There are those who live in shelters. In Reno, we have just one family shelter, which has a four month waiting list. There are those who live in other shelters like Safe Embrace. Some families live in a motel. There are also unaccompanied youths.  Some might be couch surfing from one friend’s house to the next. There are those who are living in cars, in parks or abandoned buildings.  There are also those who are awaiting foster care.  But the majority are those who are doubled up with another family. We just don’t have affordable housing for our families to go into. Our shelters are full. Our weeklies are getting expensive. The weeklies are also being bought out and we just don’t have the space for those families to live in on their own. With rising prices, many families are facing difficult situations.”

Children in Transition also points students and their families toward other available resources, like the Family Shelter in Reno.

Q: What kind of Washoe County employees help these students in transition?

“Currently, we have five homeless liaisons.  They work with every single school in our district, so around 114 schools.  Each liaison has about 30 schools they are working closely with where they have to build relationships with counsellors, front office staff, to make sure we are identifying our students and also giving them the resources they need. Every single school has a school advocate. That person usually is a counselor. They’re working with our families and parents and children who are considered children in transition and they are able to get them the resources they need. Our liaisons work very closely with our advocates to make sure they get transportation, clothing, school supplies, anything that could be a barrier to the student’s education.  It takes a village to support our community.  Front office staff, they are the ones who are meeting and greeting our families right at the front door.  Our principals, our counselors, our teachers, our school nurses, whoever that family has that connection with is helping identify those students. We want to make sure our whole school system has that awareness about what our program is and how they can support our students and really work together to support our families.  We make sure they know about us.”

A backpack drive helps Children in Transition make sure all its students are equipped for school just like any other student.

Q: What are the logistics of pick up and drop off for the students you help?

“The students are very transient, living from one place to the next. Our goal is to make sure that they can stay at their school of origin for the time they are homeless or throughout the rest of the school year.  It’s important that they have that stability, not only for consistent academics but also having somewhere safe, where they know that they’ll have their friends, teachers they know. We use many ways of transporting our students. It might be through RTC. It might be through school buses.  We are always very sensitive of how our students are being transported.  Maybe they are the first ones to be picked up. We always want to make sure it’s safe and in their best interest. We have a homeless liaison who is dedicated to transportation only and she is working with our transportation department. She will arrange to transport our students until they get a bus.  Washoe County is really big. You never want to see a kindergartner on a bus for two hours, each way.  But for a high school student who is about to graduate, that might be in their best interest. We look at individual needs and work closely with each student.”

"I have a quote I like, it says ‘children lose many things when they become homeless, but education doesn’t have to be one of them,'" Morales says.

Q: What is your personal drive to do this type of work?

“We should all have the same opportunity to get an education. It’s a passion for me. I like what I do. We can really support our community. We’ve seen our graduation rates for our CIT students increase about 16 points in four years, that’s incredible. Our children are amazing. This gives them the opportunity to be like any other student. I think that’s what we really stand by. We want to make sure they have that same education like anyone else. We’re always there with a helping hand. If someone wants to help, they can contact us directly or also help a specific school.”

Interview and Photos by Our Town Reno. If you want to help the local Children in Transition program or find out more about their work please also visit http://www.washoeschools.net/Page/810

 

 

 

 

Thursday 09.08.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

ACTIONN, Leading the Fight Against Gentrification in Reno

As community organizers in Reno are prepping for a week of events against gentrification, Our Town Reno wanted to find out more about some of the undercurrents of this initiative and what to expect.

As more and more people are being displaced or made homeless by new developments and rising prices in Reno, which direction is the Biggest Little City headed?

A Week of Events

Events will kick off with a public conference Monday, September 12th, followed by a noon rally on Tuesday on the UNR campus. A morning potluck and protest will take place at City Council on Wednesday morning. Thursday, back at UNR, there will be an evening public assembly to discuss affordable housing, with displaced people and experts in socially equitable development among those taking part. Saturday the 17th, the action week will conclude with a “Leader Learning Circle” in Sparks to teach methods of community organizing to current and future activists.

Low-income, rehab program and elderly residents have been kicked out from this downtown block.  It will be demolished to give way to high-end student housing.

ACTIONN Coordinators

Coordinators Aria Overli and Mike Thornton from ACTIONN - Acting in Community Together in Organizing Northern Nevada, accepted to answer a few extra questions over the phone.

Q: Why was this upcoming action week organized, and why is now a good time for this stop gentrification movement to ramp up in Reno?

AO: This is a really pivotal issue in Reno right now. We have a chance to ensure the priorities of the city are in the right place but we need to do it early before things get out of hand, in terms of rental prices, people being displaced. While we are already seeing that happening, I think we still have an opportunity to get to it before it gets really out of control.  For a long time, these issues haven’t been a huge priority for the city council. This is a way to make it a priority for the people of the city and also for our city council.

From cheap rents to no trespassing in the blink of an eye.

MT: We have a real opportunity to raise these issues in the public awareness. So the public, including those who are not impacted can actually begin to call on our elected and community leaders and say ‘let’s do development right from the start rather than having to go back and try to fix things on the back end’. Many communities around the country are now using 21st century community development practices and policies so that development brings with it truly affordable housing for a broad range of people, also jobs and creates thriving, sustainable communities along the way. It’s really an opportunity to get in on the front end of development as compared to try to fix problems after they’ve already been put in concrete, so to speak.

City Council recently cancelled a planned meeting on affordable housing to the dismay of those who were hoping to have their voices heard on the issue.

Q: A special meeting on affordable housing was supposed to take place at City Council this summer, but was abruptly cancelled two days before it was scheduled.  Was that a disappointment?

AO: It was very disappointing. There are so many people in this city who need to have their voices heard.  This was an opportunity for them to have their voices heard by the city council and unfortunately that didn’t happen. We’re not likely to have the opportunity to organize people to go to another meeting like that if it ever happens, in the way we had originally planned.  

Keep walking .... no more cheap rents here.  These old homes are being torn down as new development comes to Reno.

MT: We had organized about 50 residents primarily from the weeklies. We had had a meeting and had talked about how we could get people to come. A lot of people were rearranging their schedules and then it was cancelled very abruptly. It was a disappointment not so much for us but for the people who are living at the tip of the spear who were working and struggling to rearrange their schedule in order to be at this meeting so they could have input into these issues that so directly affect them.

Members of RISE, holding a free market here at the homeless shelter, will be among those taking part in the week of actions against gentrification.

Q: How do you feel mainstream media is covering gentrification in Reno?

MT: I’ve been pleasantly surprised.  I recently did a program on Channel 2 (KTVN) with council member Jenny Brekhus and also there was another short piece (on the same channel).  This is a complicated issue which is sometimes difficult, particularly for television, to cover. But I think they are really starting to understand how important it is and making a good faith effort.  We’re really going to be promoting the week of actions starting (today) and I’m expecting decent coverage at least that’s our hope.  It really is an issuethat is important to everyone in Reno, whether they know it or not.

Casino workers and those needing to use the downtown bus station also used to live in this soon to be razed down block, which will also lose its public alley.

Links

For more information here is the Facebook page for the Week Against Gentrification https://www.facebook.com/events/168962960177852/

For more information from ACTIONN, check out their regular Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/actionnNV

Tuesday 09.06.16
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 
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