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Olivia Piccirilli, Hoping the Momentum for Help Keeps Going after Resisting Vigilantes

Piccirilli, a UNR grad, who now works with Girl Scouts, the Nevada Sage Waldorf School, and volunteers with Washoe Food not Bombs, was one of many who quickly responded to a grassroots community effort to counter vigilante threats against those with…

Piccirilli, a UNR grad, who now works with Girl Scouts, the Nevada Sage Waldorf School, and volunteers with Washoe Food not Bombs, was one of many who quickly responded to a grassroots community effort to counter vigilante threats against those without shelter. She proudly wore a resistance themed shirt at Pickett Park, where a citizens arrest action had initially been planned, and got to do outreach for existing community meals and donation drives.

Outreach to Join Forces

Piccirilli went out to Pickett Park this past Saturday, reaching out to other volunteers, inviting them to join Washoe Food not Bombs, which serves healthy vegetarian and vegan community meals at Wingfield Park on Saturdays from ten to noon.

Sadly, she wasn’t surprised others in Reno are seeking to force people out of parks. “I think that it's definitely reflective of a larger attitude in the Reno area where people don't understand the root causes of homelessness and housing insecurity and think that the simple solution is to displace them even further,” she said.

While some in Reno believe there’s always room at the main downtown shelter, that’s not always the case. Piccirilli also knows many without the means to afford stable shelter try to avoid the shelter like the plague, due to a myriad of reasons, most notably insecurity.

“Like it's terrifying. And I would rather sleep on the streets and stay there,” she said. “So like it's really clearly by people who don't understand what's happening.”

This original threat sparked outrage from many online, and led to the #BringSomeLove counter action. The Reno Initiative for Shelter and Equality, meanwhile, is recirculating a petition to establish an officially sanctioned Safe Ground for those wit…

This original threat sparked outrage from many online, and led to the #BringSomeLove counter action. The Reno Initiative for Shelter and Equality, meanwhile, is recirculating a petition to establish an officially sanctioned Safe Ground for those without shelter.

Humans Helping Other Humans

Piccirilli stresses the need for more affordable housing, and more variety and quantity in terms of shelter space. More people should see people struggling as humans, as well, she says. She used to work at the Eddy House, helping youth living on the streets, and gaining perspective on the need for compassion.

“As a community, people need to think of homeless people as human beings. If there is somebody panhandling … give them two dollars. Like, that's a really good way to help somebody … Like just see people as human beings I think is the biggest first step,” she said.

She said the Saturday at Pickett Park was like a big rally, with “everybody all fired up”, but she hoped the momentum would continue.

“[It shows] there’s people out there who care and want an outlet to help. And this was a very good way for them to get this outlet, which is really cool and I'm very excited about it,” she said. “But what are you going to do tomorrow? And what are you going to do the day after that? I think that it's important for organizations like us to come here and be like, here's an outlet for this feeling that you're having. You're feeling things are wrong and you're feeling you want to do something to help. Like here's an outlet for that so that tomorrow and the day after that and the day after that, you're still continuing to do this work.”

Reporting and Photography by Lucia Starbuck for Our Town Reno

Monday 10.14.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Bram Buckley, Helping with Local Affordable Housing, One Meaningful Project at a Time

“I think this is a very good example of how affordable housing doesn't have to look like egg crates,” Bram Buckley said of the Northern Nevada Community Housing 44-unit Hillside Meadows near Virginia Lake, where residents have annual income of less …

“I think this is a very good example of how affordable housing doesn't have to look like egg crates,” Bram Buckley said of the Northern Nevada Community Housing 44-unit Hillside Meadows near Virginia Lake, where residents have annual income of less than 40% of Area Median Income. “It's got a lot of big nice windows and the setting is fantastic. We like these little infill spots,” he said. “It was our project two years ago and it’s a Veterans First project. So, no matter how long our waiting list is, if you're a veteran, you go right to the front of the line and we partner with several veterans housing organizations to help us keep it full as well.”

A Commercial Real Estate Broker Gives Back Through Affordable Housing

“I had just gotten into real estate and my degree was in geological engineering and I was attracted to it because I got to build stuff and commercial real estate was starting to slow down in 2005 and or 2006,” Bram Buckley, a commercial real estate broker with Avison Young, says about why he got into affordable housing. “I was approached by some friends of mine to join the board of Northern Nevada Community Housing, and contribute a little bit. As soon as I got on the board, I really sort of fell in love with the work and being able to give back. I was on a couple of other boards but nothing really sort of tickled me like this one. In that time we've built, I want to say about five or 600 units of affordable housing in the Northern Nevada area, most of it in the Reno-Sparks area.”

As part of our interview, Buckley also wanted to define the words “affordable housing”. “There's two definitions for affordable housing,” he explained. “There is housing that people can afford and there's housing that the government has stipulated, that's a certain percentage of the Area Median Income and has a legal definition as affordable. And people mix these two things up all the time, but they have two separate meanings. So when I'm building affordable housing, I'm talking about building by the government standard for people who are 60% of Area Median Income or less, but in Reno, in the newspapers and you know, people sitting around a coffee shop, they will talk about affordable housing, and say ‘what can I afford to actually live in? You know, I make $70,000 a year and I can't afford to live here.’ And so those are two separate things,” he said.

“We do at least one project a year,” Buckley explained of the oncoming project to save and upgrade Joseph’s Inn, where 26 previously chronically homeless people are reported to be currently housed, with one tenant having lived there since its openin…

“We do at least one project a year,” Buckley explained of the oncoming project to save and upgrade Joseph’s Inn, where 26 previously chronically homeless people are reported to be currently housed, with one tenant having lived there since its opening in 1993. “Sometimes it's a rehab, sometimes it's new construction. Joseph’s Inn is just an older building and it is one of the only projects in the area that is for people who are literally homeless the night before. You literally had to be homeless the night before to qualify and Reno doesn't have anything else like that,” Buckley said of the importance of this project.

A 12-Month Race to Remake the Joseph’s Inn into a Better El Centro

The current project Buckley is helping with concerns saving and rehabilitating Joseph’s Inn, which provides permanent housing for individuals without any shelter. Units are subsidized by the Reno Housing Authority with rent set at 30% of their gross annual income.

It’s proving to be a big challenge. “The problem is the building, the bones of it are from the 50s,” he said of the old building which will get back its original El Centro name. “And even with the rehab we did in the 1990s, it's still starting to really struggle and fall behind.”

New regulations often mean more expensive construction which is part of the overall problem. “All our buildings are constantly reviewed every year to make sure they're meeting energy efficiency standards and basic living standards. And Joseph's Inn is really slipping behind the times.”

Northern Nevada Community Housing says it is going to rent housing for current tenants, and then add kitchenettes, redo the entire interior and exterior, and then bring everyone who wants to come back in, back in.

“The system will pretty much be the same as it was before,” Buckley said. “Once it's rehabbed, it'll be the same system, same people, same vouchers. If we can do it within 12 months, we won't lose anything. So we're under the gun a little bit on that one.”

But he says it’s gratifying to see the community understand the importance of this particular project.
”A lot of people were excited that we weren't going to lose it because we were getting a little close to losing it,” he said. “The government was not going to recertify it because it wasn't meeting the standards and we would have lost all that and those people would have been back on the streets.”

Buckley unsuccessfully tried to get the at-large Reno City Council seat which was up for grabs through an application process earlier this year when the previous councilman in that seat started another job. Buckley said he won’t try again. “I wanted…

Buckley unsuccessfully tried to get the at-large Reno City Council seat which was up for grabs through an application process earlier this year when the previous councilman in that seat started another job. Buckley said he won’t try again. “I wanted the open council seat because I didn't have to run, because I wouldn't owe anyone anything and I could tell them exactly what I thought,” he said

Views on City Council Fees and Nevada’s Misguided Tax Structures

Buckley says he believes a newly released plan by Reno Mayor Hillary Schieve to incentivize 1,000 new homes in 120 days by pushing back city fees such as sewer fees, road infrastructure, impact fees, to the end of the process instead of the beginning is “an okay step.”

“I'm not sure it's going to drive more projects, but it sure won't hurt any projects,” he said. “Some of the things that slow developers down, especially in a booming market like this, would be blighted properties that have been owned by say a family for a long time and they have no incentive to fix it up because our tax structure is a little backwards. Our tax structure taxes you based on the age of the property, not based on the value of the property. So if you've got a building in downtown Reno that's paid off and it's an old warehouse or something like that, and it's been there for 70, 80 years, your tax bill is so low that there's no incentive to go out and fix it up and try and find a tenant and get good rent for it or sell it off … So that's one of the downsides of our kind of backwards tax system in Nevada.”

He says the sewer fees and impact fees also should be lowered for projects offering lower rents. “That would be a little bit of a seesaw. You give something, you get something,” he said.

“This map is where all of our current projects are,” Buckley said of a large mural inside a Northern Nevada Community Housing meeting room. “It is updatable. So as we add projects, we will be updating our map here. Our project that's currently under…

“This map is where all of our current projects are,” Buckley said of a large mural inside a Northern Nevada Community Housing meeting room. “It is updatable. So as we add projects, we will be updating our map here. Our project that's currently under construction, is in Valley Springs in Carson city where we're adding 70 units. We have land under contract in Fernley, Carson City and Sparks right now. As the real estate guy, my job is land. By the time we build it, I'm usually kind of out of the project. So I'm thinking three or four projects ahead,” Buckley said of his specific role.

Liking Ideas of Upzoning, but Criticizing Granny Pods

Buckley thinks Reno and other cities looking at denser zoning possibilities is a trend in the right direction. He says local authorities have been open to going beyond current zoning.

“As long as you can prove that the infrastructure can handle it,” he said, building can happen. “So if you're building an area where the schools can take it and the sewer system can take it and there's water, you can go denser, you'll most likely get that upzoned.”

The proposal for allowing granny pods that came and failed, though, he views as an “absolute joke” and waste of time. “How many units do you think they would have produced? 500. I mean, what do we have? 17,000 people moving here a month. I mean it's absolutely just the wrong scale and it's a total waste of time. I'll continue on that granny pod thing because it drove me nuts with the amount of people we have moving here and the number of single family homes they're building. Single family homes is the answer and … new apartments and density. “

Buckley says he’s also doubtful about rent control. “I know that there's obviously upsides and downsides and they haven't worked super well in a lot of the places they've been in,” he said. “I'm a pretty liberal guy, but I feel like that kind of thumb on the scale can have pretty serious consequences.”

“The federal dollars are not going to solve our housing crisis. There's just not enough. It's not even close,” Buckley said of using federal money to start more affordable housing projects such as Joseph’s Inn. “We need to encourage a regular develo…

“The federal dollars are not going to solve our housing crisis. There's just not enough. It's not even close,” Buckley said of using federal money to start more affordable housing projects such as Joseph’s Inn. “We need to encourage a regular developer to build more affordable housing projects.”

Getting a Dwindling Amount of Federal Money

Buckley says there just isn’t enough federal money to solve the affordable housing crisis. He says the funding that does make it to Nevada is attributed by population size, giving the Las Vegas area the biggest share.

“Washoe County gets the next largest bucket and the rurals get the rest,” Buckley explained. “And all of that money that Washoe County gets, that we usually win, translates to a 44-unit complex that we build every year or purchase something. Last year we built a 50-unit complex and added 22 more units to it on 4th street. But that's all of the dollars that come into the state. Right?”

Buckley explains federally-funded projects are also more expensive. “We have to be absolute top of the market energy efficiency. Every single one of my units has to be Americans with Disabilities Act adaptable or accessible in a normal apartment complex … There's a million little rules like that, that make my projects 20 to 30% more expensive than a normal developer, in my opinion.”

Has there been a Tesla effect to our affordable housing crisis? “Obviously there's a correlation to the companies that are coming in,” Buckley said. “And for every Tesla engineer, we need two bartenders and a dry cleaner, right? I mean, there's prim…

Has there been a Tesla effect to our affordable housing crisis? “Obviously there's a correlation to the companies that are coming in,” Buckley said. “And for every Tesla engineer, we need two bartenders and a dry cleaner, right? I mean, there's primary jobs, then there are secondary jobs that come along with them and then people move here and they bring their families. And there's a reason why so many people are moving here, because there's jobs to do. There's lots of work. I mean, our unemployment is basically nil.”

Understanding the Anger

While low income residents see motels getting torn down, apartment buildings raising their rents, and other new developments catering to a more affluent clientele, Buckley says he understands the anger around affordability.

“If an apartment complex gets purchased and the rents were $600 and the new developer wants to,
they come in and rehab everything and then the new rents are going to be $1,400. And the little lady who lived there doesn't have a home anymore. She literally can't afford the new rents anymore. That is a problem. Reno has an affordable housing crisis …The only solution is more units that people can actually afford. If someone comes in and buys an apartment complex and puts millions of dollars into it, they're doing it for one reason, and that's to have more money fall out of the bottom of it at the end of the day.”


”I think that there are solutions,” Buckley said, wanting to finish our interview on a positive note. “I think there are little local solutions that will help. I liked [the mayor’s recent] idea. It's a step in the right direction. I think there are things we could do to make this better, but when we get tied down with the granny pods thing, which is just ridiculous, I mean it just doesn't meet the scale of the problem. There has to be some incentive to build more affordable housing because otherwise, with all the risks the developer takes, all the problems you have to go through, no one's going to not get top of the market rents unless there's some incentive. It's just not going to happen.”

Interview with Our Town Reno at the Avison Young Offices


Monday 10.07.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Laika Press, Keeping Printmaking Alive for All in Reno

Nathaniel Benjamin, a graduate of UNR, co-founded Laika Press when he felt a need for publicly-accessible printmaking equipment in Reno. The Wells Ave. location which has been operating for several years now provides printmaking services, workshops,…

Nathaniel Benjamin, a graduate of UNR, co-founded Laika Press when he felt a need for publicly-accessible printmaking equipment in Reno. The Wells Ave. location which has been operating for several years now provides printmaking services, workshops, different membership options and occasional zine printing parties.

Creating Access to Printmaking

“Once I graduated, there wasn’t any access to the tools and equipment that are required to do [printmaking],” Nathaniel Benjamin recalls of what spurred him to start Laika Press. “So we got together to start a community press and make all of those resources publicly available to everybody so that not only can we practice ourselves, but also get other people involved in this thing that we love so much.”

Laika Press offers services in screen-printing, an art form commonly associated with t-shirts but also used to create print products themselves. Laika Press has two traditional-style printing presses that can produce work using a wide range of techniques from copper-plate illustrations, etchings, woodcut, relief printing, and lithographs to name a few. The presses provide members of the community an opportunity for a hands-on experience in the work that they create. 

“It’s been really fun to get people into the space, we do workshops to teach people how to do these techniques from beginning to end and we have all the supplies to be able to do that,” Benjamin said, showing examples of produced work.

“It’s been really fun to get people into the space, we do workshops to teach people how to do these techniques from beginning to end and we have all the supplies to be able to do that,” Benjamin said, showing examples of produced work.

From the Community and for the Community

Much of Laika Press’s equipment has come as community donations. Consequently, Benjamin feels that Laika Press already has a strong connection with the Reno community that enables him to give back through its services.   

“The intention all along was to have [Laika Press] be a resource center for people to do this specific type of art practice which isn’t accessible to everybody,” Benjamin said. “We wanted to make [printmaking] available because not everyone can afford to go to UNR or purchase this kind of equipment. We were in that subset of people that were able to get educated in this and we wanted to disseminate that information to the community.”

Benjamin values the role art plays in a community. But in Reno, he says, it’s a role that is becoming more complex.

“We’re in a really unique place because there is a lot of emphasis put on the arts in Reno,” Benjamin said. “But we also have a lot of tech companies coming in and changing the social dynamics of the city. There’s this interaction between these tech companies with big money and the art community which doesn’t have a lot of funding. The presence of those companies kind of changes the landscape here.” 

Benjamin remains confident in keeping printmaking relevant, as he says it’s an art form unlike any of the others. “[Printmaking] is an interesting thing because it’s in between having an original item that you produce and having multiples,” Benjamin…

Benjamin remains confident in keeping printmaking relevant, as he says it’s an art form unlike any of the others. “[Printmaking] is an interesting thing because it’s in between having an original item that you produce and having multiples,” Benjamin said. “You’re in it with your hands from beginning to end creating a multiple that is still unique because your hand was still involved in it. So it plays to a lot of our expectations in our culture where multiples are expected, but is also still grounded in that aspect of originality that I think is so important to art.”

Reporting and Photography by Scott King for Our Town Reno
















Wednesday 10.02.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

David Layfield, On Creating a Database for Affordable Housing, Upzoning, Government Action and Higher Wages

David Layfield, an affordable housing developer, is also CEO and Founder of the Affordable Housing Online website: https://affordablehousingonline.com/“Twenty years ago, I realized that there were not very many places online that low income American…

David Layfield, an affordable housing developer, is also CEO and Founder of the Affordable Housing Online website: https://affordablehousingonline.com/

“Twenty years ago, I realized that there were not very many places online that low income Americans could go to find affordable housing, and affordable rental options,” he told Our Town Reno, explaining why he developed his national, up to date, database on low income housing, affordable housing, affordable apartments, subsidized housing, Public Housing and Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) waiting list information. The website provides data on nearly seven million apartment homes as well as instructions on how to apply for waiting lists and complete housing applications.

Search for Reno here: https://affordablehousingonline.com/housing-search/Nevada/Reno

Q: Why is there a need for the vast affordable housing information your website makes available?

David Layfield: (Because the system we have) is unnecessarily complex. The way the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher system has been constructed, it's created this complex system where every single housing authority that manages the Section 8 Voucher Program has its own timetable, its own process, its own set of software. So you have, I don't know, approximately, I think there's 2,300 housing authorities in the country … 2,300 different waiting lists and 2,300 different times those waiting lists open or close. And if I'm working 50 hours a week trying to make ends meet, I don't always have the time to pick up the newspaper every day and check for public notices or check every community bulletin board or go online and search for my local Housing Authority waiting list opening up… We have about 400,000 Americans who get an email from us a couple of times a week with a rundown on all of lists that are open right now. We're the only one that's doing it other than copycat website that just uses our data and republishes it.

A popular term and idea currently being tried as a solution is called upzoning, to allow more density in residential areas.

A popular term and idea currently being tried as a solution is called upzoning, to allow more density in residential areas.

Q: What about upzoning as a possible structural solution?

David Layfield: In New England, in Silicon Valley, where there is an extreme shortage of affordable housing, and there are very expensive land costs, it becomes nearly impossible to build affordable housing just because of the land costs alone. And so if when a developer decides to buy these lots and build housing, if there isn't [anything] that requires that developer to include affordable housing, they're not going to go to affordable housing. They're going to build whatever development model generates the most profit. If you have a density bonus awarded to that developer where they can build more units if they include affordable housing, that's a viable way to get housing resources in some markets that wouldn't have otherwise had it. There's other parts of the country where those metrics don't apply, where land costs aren’t exorbitant.

There have been repeated protests in Reno over rising rents, blaming both landlords and also politicians for not doing enough.

There have been repeated protests in Reno over rising rents, blaming both landlords and also politicians for not doing enough.

Q: Are there any particularities to the affordable housing crisis in West Coast cities, such as Reno, where tech companies are expanding and long term renters are being priced out?

David Layfield: I think the biggest player in all of this is the local economy. When it comes to housing opportunities, it's you know, how hot is the local economy? Let’s take Seattle for example. There is a serious affordable housing crisis in Seattle and it was almost, most of the locals will tell you that it was almost, totally created by Amazon. Some would say it's a good problem for a city to have, but if you create so many jobs, so many high paying jobs, then all of the housing resources that are currently there get absorbed by high paying individuals. And that's where gentrification comes in… If it's a place where you see high tech industry relocating or other high paying jobs coming into town, if you're not keeping pace with building your affordable housing stock, you're eventually going to have some of the same problems.

Q: Our local politicians here in Reno will often say their hands are tied in terms of their potential impact and there is only so much they can do to help with rising rents? Is that a cop out?

David Layfield: I guess I'd have to understand what they mean when they say they can't do anything. Do they mean they don't have the money? ... It would seem that there's always something that someone can do at a local level to manage the prices. If in Reno, one of the problems with creating affordable housing is the cost of land, then upzoning might actually help a little bit. I hate the idea that any municipality or any local official would just say, ‘we have no control over what's happening in our backyard… We need Big Brother to solve the problem for us.’ I hate to think that we've come to that.

Some residents find subsidized housing such as here at the Hawk View Apartments, but others say they are being pushed out of Reno.

Some residents find subsidized housing such as here at the Hawk View Apartments, but others say they are being pushed out of Reno.

Q: In Reno, the affordable housing crisis seems like a very difficult spiral, or a mountain to climb that seems to be getting harder and harder. Is there any room for optimism?

David Layfield: [Know that] it takes years to address some of these issues, once the problems present themselves. I'm a positive person that would never encourage someone to give up on their town or give up on progress. But you know patience will be required. Action will be required on the part of the local officials and others involved.

Our country has been in the midst of an affordable housing crisis for 25 years. And we have as a people, we've never really given enough attention to it. We have not invested enough in it. There are lots and lots of programs out there, but all of the programs are underfunded, underfunded every single year, whether it be at the state or at the national level.

It’s nice to see [current] presidential candidates talking about it more. Those conversations need to be happening… They also need to be happening in city halls to bring more attention to the lack of affordable housing that we have. The other part of that too is just something to think about is, if we had a living wage where a worker wouldn't need to be subsidized to afford an apartment, the problems that we're facing would be significantly less than what we are facing now. There are very few places in this country where a minimum wage worker can come close to affording a decent apartment. If we saw a higher national number, a higher minimum wage, we'd start to see some of the softening of this crisis.



Interview in September 2019 with Our Town Reno

Monday 09.30.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Meghan Simons, Individualizing Help for Substance Users at The Life Change Center

Simons is in recovery herself and now helping others. “I can come from an empathetic level because I have a personal experience of it, in addition to my education,” Simons said.

Simons is in recovery herself and now helping others. “I can come from an empathetic level because I have a personal experience of it, in addition to my education,” Simons said.

Really Listening to Help Those Seeking Help Make Progress

A simple black sign hangs on a white office door, stating: “Meet people where they are.”  The message is the personal mantra of Meghan Simons, a substance use disorder counselor at the Life Change Center in Sparks.  It’s a message that also embodies the organization’s mission in helping those struggling with substance abuse to take their life back. 

People come to LCC, which specializes in opiate use, for a variety of reasons. Some arrive for external reasons, such as encouragement from a family member, friend, or a place of employment; while others come for internal reasons out of their own initiative.  

“First and foremost, what we do is set individualized treatment plans [for our clients],” Simons said of her work . “A counselor sits down with the patient and sets a collaborative treatment plan.”  This collaborative plan serves to find out what the client’s goals and expectations are going forward, what they want to get out of treatment, and what’s been tried before and didn’t work. 

The ultimate goal, Simons explained, is to find a long-term solution for recovery.

The ultimate goal, Simons explained, is to find a long-term solution for recovery.

A Variety of Strategies including Medication and Harm Reduction

The Life Change Center offers a variety of strategies to aid in recovery, including medication assisted treatment using Methadone, Subutex, and Suboxone.  

“Our goal, especially with the medication assisted treatment, is to treat the actual physical symptoms of withdrawal and addiction while we build those relapse prevention and coping skills on a collaborative level with the patients,” Simons said. 

A large focus in their treatment strategies is building their client’s internal motivations to stay clean while they begin the recovery process. There can be a misconception in the public, however, behind the role medications like Methadone play in the recovery process.  

“We titrate them off [Methadone] safely and when they’re ready,” Simons explained. “After they’ve had the opportunity to build those relapse prevention skills, those coping skills, [they] get treatment for the chronic underlying condition that might be causing them pain.” 

The primary goal LCC has for its clients, of course, is abstinence from opioid and other substance use. But The Center is also realistic about the struggle of overcoming addiction. 

“We do employ the principles of harm reduction here,” Simons said. “If people are going to engage in risky behavior and if we cannot get them to abstain or they are not ready to abstain, the least we can do is give them the tools to reduce the harm.” 

These strategies are in place to ensure clients understand what they’re getting and where they’re getting it from, as well as always keeping Narcan on them.  

Lots of help is given once you walk through the doors of this modest building in Sparks at 1755 Sullivan Lane.

Lots of help is given once you walk through the doors of this modest building in Sparks at 1755 Sullivan Lane.

Narcan Kits for Free and Showing You Care

The importance of harm reduction strategies and understanding the inherent risk of opiates has played a prominent role in the recent news cycle, as the mixing of opiates and alcohol is what was determined to have killed Los Angeles Angels pitcher Tyler Skaggs in July. Skaggs had been an integral part of the Reno Aces’ 2012 championship team.

The Center says it wants the public to understand not only the dangers of opiate use, but also the role a bystander can play in saving a life. It gives out Narcan kits for free, no questions asked. It’s a measure taken to fight the stigma against substance use. 

“I think the most overarching, challenging part of our jobs is combating the stigma associated with drug use, specifically with opioid use and getting people to understand that bystanders can save a life,” Simons said. 

Opioids provide a challenge for users that non-users often struggle to understand, because it changes your brain chemistry. Many who have used long-term are no longer using to get high, but use to take the withdrawal away and feel normal. 

More people are affected by opioid use than people realize, too. Many don’t realize the role they can play in getting those struggling the help they need. 

“I can just about guarantee that anybody reading this knows somebody who is in treatment or somebody who is using and they have no idea,” Simons said. “But you can’t force them to come [to us], the least you can do is encourage them.” 

Even if the response is hostile or dismissive, the important thing is that the person struggling with opioid use would know that somebody cares.

Every day is a busy day at work, and crucial to helping someone turn their life around. “You’re going to at least validate them that, ‘Hey, I care about you.’ Because a lot of folks come in here and they feel like nobody gives a damn about them,” Si…

Every day is a busy day at work, and crucial to helping someone turn their life around. “You’re going to at least validate them that, ‘Hey, I care about you.’ Because a lot of folks come in here and they feel like nobody gives a damn about them,” Simons said of when she gets new clients.

A Holistic Approach

There is also a holistic approach LCC takes toward caring for their clients, including providing transportation, housing referrals, and even finding childcare. 

Simons believes this approach in connecting with patients personally is what makes the organization so effective in its mission. It’s a mission she has a personal stake in, given that she has been in recovery herself for nearly 13 years. 

“It’s very gratifying to me to be able to save people from that same struggle I went through, because it’s not just being off the drugs, it’s about recovering your life and who you are without the drugs.”

It all starts, like the sign on the door says, by simply meeting people where they are. 


Reporting and Photography by Scott King for Our Town Reno


Wednesday 09.25.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Jaren Hutchings, Leading Reno's Youth Climate Strikers

Jaren Hutchings (center in button up shirt) is a local high school student who helped bring today’s Youth Climate Strike to Nevada. “I'm not perfect. I do consider myself a climate activist, but I also recognize that I'm not doing everything I could…

Jaren Hutchings (center in button up shirt) is a local high school student who helped bring today’s Youth Climate Strike to Nevada. “I'm not perfect. I do consider myself a climate activist, but I also recognize that I'm not doing everything I could be doing. I think it's unreasonable to expect individuals to go totally carbon negative when in reality the vast majority of carbon emissions are from corporations and governments. That's really what we need to be protesting.” Walkouts are being planned at UNR and Damonte Ranch, while a big march will be held at City Plaza in the evening.

A Youth Organized Fight

Youth around the world are coordinating a strike action today to convince more politicians and companies to create policy to save our environment before problems worsen further. In Reno, the Nevada Youth Climate Strike will be held at City Plaza in front of the BELIEVE sign at 5:30 pm. One of the local organizers is 17 year-old Jaren Hutchings, a senior at Davidson Academy.

“We really want our politicians to know that we care about climate change and that this is the most important issue for us and not to take our future for granted. We hope that people go away [from the strike] with renewed motivation to help mitigate the effects of climate change and to join climate activism groups. We really hope we can start a movement here in Nevada, which is one of the most vulnerable states to climate change,” Hutchings said. 

Hutchings is president of the Green Earth Community Knowledge Organization, an environmental club at his school. He said that he would like to major in some type of environmental studies and continue to be a climate activist his entire life.

“I've noticed my generation, in general, feels kind of a grim resolve towards climate change. I don't want to say it's unfair for us to have to like protest for our own futures at the expense of going to school, but I do think there is a broader mot…

“I've noticed my generation, in general, feels kind of a grim resolve towards climate change. I don't want to say it's unfair for us to have to like protest for our own futures at the expense of going to school, but I do think there is a broader motivation to end climate change because we recognize that this is our future as well,” Hutchings said, as high school students prepared posters for the event.

Ideas for Nevada to Be a Sustainable Model

Hutchings doesn’t want the conversation regarding climate change to end after the strike. He said that Nevada can be a leader in the fight.

“Nevada and Reno and even down in Las Vegas specifically could be the poster child for clean energy and for a carbon neutral future,” he said. “If you think about the resources we have available: we have 300 plus days of sunshine per year, we have endlessly windy valleys out in central Nevada. We really have no excuse to still be extracting energy from fossil fuels here. So I think Nevada could become the model, not only nationally, but globally, for how to have a sustainable carbon free energy system and still have a successful economy.”

Hutchings said that it’s important to act, especially in Nevada. In 2016, Reno was named the fastest warming city according to Central Climate. In 2019, Las Vegas got that title and Reno was excluded from the ranking due to inconsistencies in the data from the city’s weather station.

“I think in general with climate change, and this has been changing for the better over time, but people especially in privileged scenarios like those in Nevada who don't necessarily have to face direct effects of climate change yet feel really distant from it. They see other issues as potentially more important and more pressing,” Hutchings said.

“While I don't want to deny the importance of any other political or social issues, at the end of the day, if we don't fix climate change, none of those issues will have meant anything because our society will grind to a halt,” Jaren Hutchings said,…

“While I don't want to deny the importance of any other political or social issues, at the end of the day, if we don't fix climate change, none of those issues will have meant anything because our society will grind to a halt,” Jaren Hutchings said, taking a break from helping organize today’s protest.

Gen Z Ready to Soon Vote for Change and Taking Responsibility

As students get ready to participate in the march they say they feel a heavy responsibility on their young shoulders.

“The youth are really passionate about this issue and that to those politicians who discount the importance of climate change or to those politicians who say it's an issue, but that we have more pressing matters to deal with first: We're going to be voting soon,” Hutchings warned.

“I'm voting next year and I know everyone at my high school is going to be voting before 2024. So if you really want to stay in power and if you really want to be reelected, you have to begin to treat this issue seriously because I know the youth care because this is our future,” Hutchings said.

Hutchings has taken his own steps to lower his carbon footprint. He has switched to a plant-based diet since the beginning of high school.

“Barack Obama said that we're the first generation to feel the effects of climate change and we're the last generation who can do anything about it. And so more people need to wake up to the fact that if we want a secure world for our children and o…

“Barack Obama said that we're the first generation to feel the effects of climate change and we're the last generation who can do anything about it. And so more people need to wake up to the fact that if we want a secure world for our children and our grandchildren and our great grandchildren's generations, we really need to act now for our sake and for theirs,” Hutchings said.

Photos and Reporting by Lucia Starbuck for Our Town Reno









Friday 09.20.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Darcy, Holding a Light of Hope in Our Community's Battle Against Addiction

Darcy Patterson, who recently lost her daughter Kirsten to substance addiction, leads a local Addict’s Mom group and helped organized this month’s Lights of Hope event at the Rail City Garden Center in Sparks.“I want to bring awareness that [substan…

Darcy Patterson, who recently lost her daughter Kirsten to substance addiction, leads a local Addict’s Mom group and helped organized this month’s Lights of Hope event at the Rail City Garden Center in Sparks.

“I want to bring awareness that [substance use] is going on around us,” Patterson said. “We are losing 192 kids every day in the US to drugs, specifically. I don’t want another one to die, I don’t want another family member to feel shame. I don’t want another mom to grieve like I’ve had to grieve.”

Addiction Can Affect Us All

The night featured several community speakers, some of whom are several years in recovery and others who have lost a loved one to substance abuse. Each one had an intimate story to share, often times bringing the audience to tears. Although their stories varied, there was an underlying theme that resonated with each one: it doesn’t matter who you are or where you come from, addiction can affect us all.  

“It was said on the podium [tonight] that the face of addiction is different for everybody,” said David Rutherford, who attended the event with his wife Susan. “There are people with very successful careers, family people, everybody battles with it.” 

“I was very blessed to be here,” Susan Rutherford said. “It is comforting in a situation where you are feeling isolated and alone to be surrounded by other family members who have either lost someone, or who are still in the battle for someone else’s life due to addiction.” 

At the event, handcrafted tributes for members of the community killed due to addiction were prominently displayed.

At the event, handcrafted tributes for members of the community killed due to addiction were prominently displayed.

Coming Together to Break the Stigma and Empty Loneliness

“It was amazing to see so many people come together to fight for people addicted, whether it’s to alcohol or drugs’” said Cindy Gollahon, whose son is currently battling addiction. “To have a community of people come together for something like this and to hear everybody’s stories was heart-breaking and heartwarming at the same time. It gave me hope that maybe before it’s too late for my son, that there may be some hope for him.” 

A member of AL-ANON who attended the event but wished not to be named, believes events like these are an important stepping stone toward breaking the stigma about substance use and addiction. 

“The stigma is that addicts should stop what they are doing or shouldn’t get started, and all they have to do is stop. Truth is, they can’t,” she said. “It’s a snake that lives inside everybody that’s affected and never goes away. The only thing an addict or alcoholic can do is to get it into remission and keep it there. It is a struggle beyond anything anybody can even imagine. It is so terrible to even try to get out of it and so many never can.” 

“Addicts should be treated much different than they are; they should be treated with compassion and with love,” she said. “If the only thing you can do is send out that kind of feeling to someone you know that is an addict: we need that, they need that.” 

Attendees could also take home a memento. Patterson, the organizer, was pleased with the turn-out and the bond the audience seemed to form with each speaker.“I think the event was well-attended. People were very connected with those who were sharing…

Attendees could also take home a memento. Patterson, the organizer, was pleased with the turn-out and the bond the audience seemed to form with each speaker.

“I think the event was well-attended. People were very connected with those who were sharing their stories. We’re getting the word out to more people and reducing that stigma and shame. We’re letting our addicts know that we love them and that we have compassion for them as they fight this disease,” she said.

Candles and Hugs


As the sun set and night fell, the event proceeded with a candlelight ceremony in which members of the audience had the opportunity to share their story or the name of their loved one affected by addiction. 

Afterwards, attendees sang Amazing Grace in memory of lives already lost.  Narcan kits and training on how to use them were provided. A reception concluded with new and old acquaintances embracing each other in support before going their separate ways.  

Patterson hopes to see Lights of Hope continue to grow. “I hope [people] know that addiction is a disease and it’s okay to talk about it,” she said. “We need to be strong for our community because we’re losing kids every day and I want them to be aware and remember the kids that we have lost, those that are in jail, and the kids that are out there suffering and in recovery.” 

“Just don’t think you’re going through it alone,” David Rutherford said. “There’s a lot of people going through it. Even if you’re not going through it and you know someone who has, just be there to support them. You don’t need to have the answers, …

“Just don’t think you’re going through it alone,” David Rutherford said. “There’s a lot of people going through it. Even if you’re not going through it and you know someone who has, just be there to support them. You don’t need to have the answers, you just need to be a shoulder to cry on sometimes.”

Reporting by Scott King for Our Town Reno





Wednesday 09.18.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

New Location Identified For Future Volunteer Community Meals but Questions Remain

“As the costs of housing have gone up dramatically in Reno in the last year, we've seen the number of people accessing dinner going up dramatically as well. There's simply too many people who don't have the resources that they need,” Kim Barghouti f…

“As the costs of housing have gone up dramatically in Reno in the last year, we've seen the number of people accessing dinner going up dramatically as well. There's simply too many people who don't have the resources that they need,” Kim Barghouti from the non-profit Reno Initiative for Shelter and Equality said of the importance of volunteer meals.

A New Location Further East

A new location on East 4th street next to Threlke street across from Hooten Tire Co. has been picked for future volunteer meal services in Reno, moving these activist services away from the main shelter, but creating a whole new set of concerns and confusion.

The land is owned by the Truckee Meadows Water Authority and is being leased to the City of Reno for three years, with an option to renew every year.

A meeting to discuss these changes was held on September 9, at the Regional Public Safety Training Center on Spectrum Blvd.

Reno Deputy Police Chief Mac Venzon, Washoe County Sheriff Darin Balaam and Amber Howell, the Washoe County Human Services Agency Director, and volunteers who provide meal services also discussed the new mandatory “contract” that was recently sent out making volunteers responsible for security, safety, cleaning bathrooms, and trash before, during and after the meals. 

The new location won’t have help from shelter staff, as it’s a 25 minute walk away from there. Details remain hazy as to when and how the location will be used. It’s on a bus line, but buses in Reno are notoriously infrequent. Beyond accessibility, …

The new location won’t have help from shelter staff, as it’s a 25 minute walk away from there. Details remain hazy as to when and how the location will be used. It’s on a bus line, but buses in Reno are notoriously infrequent. Beyond accessibility, volunteers are also concerned there isn’t any lighting there. They would also want chairs and tables to be permanently available for all of the different volunteer groups to use.

More Anger About New Contract

As Our Town Reno reported previously, volunteers are angry and confused about a new form the City of Reno is asking them to sign before being able to serve community meals.

At the meeting, law enforcement officials told them they will be able to prepare food at the new site just not cook it there. They also said volunteers will not have to clean the bathrooms, as seemed to be indicated in the form that was emailed earlier, but just make sure that there is no one left at the site after 8 p.m., when the gates will be closed.

While the site is being prepared, groups are continuing to serve food at the Record St shelter.

According to its website, RISE and Dine happens every Saturday (except the second Saturday of each month) from 5:00pm to 6:00pm. Pictured is Benjamin Castro, the RISE Board of Directors President, in an archive Our Town Reno photo at one of the meal…

According to its website, RISE and Dine happens every Saturday (except the second Saturday of each month) from 5:00pm to 6:00pm. Pictured is Benjamin Castro, the RISE Board of Directors President, in an archive Our Town Reno photo at one of the meals.

Much Needed Meals

“At the end of the month we'll serve 400 people dinner,” Barghouti another member on the RISE Board of Directors for RISE said. “A lot of these people are working, they have jobs, they have a place to live, they simply don't have enough food. And so, you know, people don't want these kinds of programs in their neighborhood. But the reality is that food insecurity is in every neighborhood in town. If you're concerned about your neighbors who are unsheltered, you should be more concerned if they haven't eaten.”

Before its Saturday evening meals, RISE also distributes clothes and toiletries.

“None of us know how many days we have and all we know is that we have one day less today than we did yesterday,” Barghouti said of her now three-year commitment to RISE. “If this is something I can do to help someone else, then it's time well spent. I'm not a religious person. I always said if there is a God, they expect us to take care of one another. And if there isn't, we're all we've got,” she said.

Many questions were asked at the meeting. “I want to be sure that the people who are in wheelchairs or walkers have access to it,” Barghouti told Our Town Reno. “I understand that we may not get everything we want right away but we have to have acce…

Many questions were asked at the meeting. “I want to be sure that the people who are in wheelchairs or walkers have access to it,” Barghouti told Our Town Reno. “I understand that we may not get everything we want right away but we have to have access for people who have mobility issues and a place to sit while you eat dinner rather than sitting on the ground, you know, adequate lighting. I’m not as hung up on the aesthetics of the place. I do understand [if] it’s pretty, people like it's an uplifting thing. I think that's very secondary to: does it serve the need and does it treat you as a human being?”

No Timeline Yet

Another meeting is expected to be held in a month for more information, about when the move will be made, and whether some of the volunteer concerns will be addressed.

Barghouti for one would like to see more volunteer meals at more locations, finding people where they are, neighborhood to neighborhood.

“I would love to see multiple dinner sites around the city,” she said. “I think because there are people who don't have access, who wouldn't necessarily come down to 4th St, who could probably use the meals. I would like to see the town, the whole area, working together to meet the needs of our neighbors.”

Reporting and Photography by Lucia Starbuck for Our Town Reno







Monday 09.16.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Residents Bringing a Community's Diverse Culture to a Bridge Underpass

Kyle Chandler-Isacksen (left) and local artist Asa Kennedy are helping the Two Hands Collective complete a giant Day of the Dead mural inside the 395/Wedekind Road underpass. The project started later than expected, and now the aim is to finish by t…

Kyle Chandler-Isacksen (left) and local artist Asa Kennedy are helping the Two Hands Collective complete a giant Day of the Dead mural inside the 395/Wedekind Road underpass. The project started later than expected, and now the aim is to finish by the end of October.

A Work in Progress

Changes are happening under the highway overpass of US-395 and Wedekind Road and people are starting to notice. 

What used to be an underpass caught in a cycle of being tagged with graffiti painted over by abatement teams is now turning into a large new canvas.

After coordinating five new public murals in the Reno area over the past couple of years, Kyle Chandler-Isacksen, the executive director of “Be the Change Project,” an urban homestead and learning space, is teaming up with local mural painter Asa Kennedy for this latest project.

“We’ve had our eyes on this one for years,” Chandler-Isacksen said. “Asa and I met about a year and a half ago and talked about the possibility of doing [a mural here] and raising some money. We heard about the “Art Belongs Here” grant project that’s run through the city by their Arts and Culture Commission.”

After receiving a grant, they started work on the project in late August, while also starting a GoFundMe fundraiser page.

The mural, in its early stages at the time of this picture, will be depicting vivid imagery and vibrant colors fitting to the theme of Día de los Muertos, otherwise known as “Day of the Dead.”

The mural, in its early stages at the time of this picture, will be depicting vivid imagery and vibrant colors fitting to the theme of Día de los Muertos, otherwise known as “Day of the Dead.”

A Metaphorical and Literal Gateway

“It is an underpass, so we saw that as a kind of underworld-a physical gateway between Reno and Sparks, people’s homes, businesses, and schools,” Chandler-Isacksen said, explaining the theme. “It’s also in a diverse neighborhood with a lot of Latinos that live here, so we thought the idea of a Día de los Muertos theme would be very appropriate. It can serve as both a metaphorical gateway that the ‘Day of the Dead’ is, but then can also serve as a literal gateway because of what the physical structure is, itself.”

He says the community has had a lot of input in what will be depicted on the mural.

“We worked with the students for a couple of days and got their ideas [for the mural],” he said of visiting the nearby Rita Cannan Elementary School to hear from its students there. “Coincidentally, they had ‘Day of the Dead’ themed artwork up that day, so Asa has been incorporating what he’s been hearing from the community onto the walls.”

The community involvement has gone beyond just the ideas, however.

“We had a bunch of kids from Hug High School out here yesterday, impromptu, just helping paint the mural,” Chandler-Isacksen said. “Asa just showed them what to do and they were out here for about 45 minutes. We look forward to seeing more of that. The location is a perfect place to get a lot of people involved and I think we’re going to have a really good time with it,” he said.

On the GoFundMe page, Chandler-Isacken proudly announced Kelly-Moore paints on Market Street is donating all of the paint. He is seeking help from other businesses as well. If contributions are made at the $500 or $1000 levels, the donors name will …

On the GoFundMe page, Chandler-Isacken proudly announced Kelly-Moore paints on Market Street is donating all of the paint. He is seeking help from other businesses as well. If contributions are made at the $500 or $1000 levels, the donors name will be painted on a side panel displaying the mural’s supporters.

Hoping to Include More Intimate Elements

The mural, which aims to be completed by November first during Día de los Muertos, will have panels consisting of dance, music, celebration, and iconic graphic imagery representing the holiday. It will be filled with bright and lively colors, such as the prevalence of marigold, as a way of bringing the culture of the neighborhood to life.

Additionally, Asa is inviting community members to incorporate a more personal element to the mural. 

“The centerpiece is going to be an ofrenda, which is an offering altar. This is going to be an open space where anyone willing to participate can contribute something to the altar piece.”

This added element, Asa believes, will bring a more personal connection between the community and the mural; one where it can really tell the community’s story.

“It is asking people to be vulnerable in a way, to put their losses in the public. But it’s also inviting them to be a part of a greater meaning of the project. It’s their altar, so if anyone wants to come down and paint they can, or I can help them paint their personal passing on the altar.”

Due to its location in a heavily-trafficked area, word has been getting around about this new project. The response they’ve been receiving has been nothing but positive, according to Chandler-Isacksen .

Due to its location in a heavily-trafficked area, word has been getting around about this new project. The response they’ve been receiving has been nothing but positive, according to Chandler-Isacksen .

Positivity Vibes and Opening Dialogue

Many pedestrians, bikers, and drivers have been signaling their approval as they pass by.

“I feel like it brings an image that no matter how ugly a thing is, in the future you can always make it pretty or change a person’s life. It used to be a dirty underbridge, and now it’s a mural that we can actually be proud of going to school,” Hugo Lucatro, a student at Hug High said.

Daniel Barnes, another student at Hug High, thinks the mural can be the start of something even greater. “It can motivate people to do what they like, because I guarantee a lot of people like to paint,” he said. “It’d be awesome for people to do that and see a lot more murals in Reno.”

“Given the current climate around anti-immigration, we see this mural as a celebratory effort of diverse peoples who all contribute to the mosaic of what it means to be an American,” Chandler-Isacken said. “So if we can shift that conversation and that thinking in our city and our neighborhood, then that feels really good.”

“Art opens dialogue,” Asa Kennedy said. “It’s something people can start talking about and it doesn’t just stop here at this location. People at the grocery story, a restaurant, their kid’s sports games, anywhere within the community [the mural] can be a source of dialogue. It is something that can open communication between people that might not have communicated before.”

Reporting and Photography by Scott King for Our Town Reno

Wednesday 09.11.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Uncertain Future of Heated Nighttime Tent at Downtown Shelter Worries Volunteers

“We're losing people every winter,” Wendy Wiglesworth said of Reno’s homeless population and cold months coming soon. “Last year there was not a single day that there was an open bed [in the tent] or at least one to three people on the floor when I …

“We're losing people every winter,” Wendy Wiglesworth said of Reno’s homeless population and cold months coming soon. “Last year there was not a single day that there was an open bed [in the tent] or at least one to three people on the floor when I worked because I'm not going to turn someone away.” Last winter, Wiglesworth volunteered cold night after cold night at the overflow tent, which was located in the parking lot of Reno’s downtown shelter compound.

Different Interpretations of a Recent Meeting and an Indirect Answer

Volunteers recently attended a meeting on Friday, September 6, at City Hall to discuss the uncertain future of maintaining the heated tent at the Record St. shelter’s parking lot next winter for those living on the streets.

Members from RISE (Reno Initiative for Shelter and Equality) and Monica Cochran the Management Analyst for the City’s Community Development were among those attending.

City staff said there will still be a place for people to sleep inside the shelter at Record St. and that the overflow shelter on Washington street will also remain operational.  But following the meeting, volunteers told Our Town Reno they were under the impression the overflow tent, which had 45 filled beds throughout last winter, will no longer be an available option. 

After we reached out to Cochran, Jayna Litz, who signed her email Management Assistant / Housing and Neighborhood Development wrote back saying: “The City of Reno fully intends for our winter shelter plans to be as robust as ever. We are finalizing funding for the tent operations, and we have no doubt that our residents will be safe and protected during our coldest time of the year.”

Last winter, the heated and well organized tent became available in November 2018 and was an option for those seeking nighttime shelter through the end of March.

Last winter, the heated and well organized tent became available in November 2018 and was an option for those seeking nighttime shelter through the end of March.

Is There Enough Money for the Tent this Upcoming Winter?

According to several volunteers and homeless advocates, they said their impression is that the City of Reno does not yet have the available funding for the tent this upcoming winter.

Volunteers said they could fundraise but that it might be too late now to get enough money before temperatures start dipping.  They said they’ve been told last year’s cost of having the tent, blankets, other supplies and doing the laundry cost in excess of $100,000. Our Town Reno did not confirm this amount independently.

These new worries come amid other uncertainty over the future of the Record street campus, including plans to no longer have volunteer meals served there and also new usage of the parking lot for a health care community triage center to be run by the Well Care Foundation. 

Bob Jones was also a volunteer last winter. “I look at it like maybe if I don't show up, 50 people won't have a place to sleep tonight. I can't do that,” he told Our Town Reno at the time.

Bob Jones was also a volunteer last winter. “I look at it like maybe if I don't show up, 50 people won't have a place to sleep tonight. I can't do that,” he told Our Town Reno at the time.

Should Downtown Ambassadors Help Out?

Volunteers said if the tent does resume its operations as they hope, they would want the person who watches over to get paid or to maybe have Reno downtown ambassadors in charge. Wiglesworth said she would still volunteer for free every night if it comes down to it.

“[It’s] like I'm making 50 more people smile. I got 50 more new friends, I made a point in the meeting to say I would staff it every night because it needs to be done,” she said. 

Wiglesworth knows from experience. She says she played a similar role while being homeless herself along the Truckee River.

“When I lived outside, I was like the overnight person. I would go and make sure the old cats had their blankets, the youngsters were hidden so the cops didn’t see them, everybody woke up before the cops woke them up. Cause that's a ticket and then that sucks. Possibly jail, if you have a warrant that you can't afford to go and get because you're homeless,” she said. 

Volunteers said they are hoping another meeting will be scheduled soon to ensure the tent overflow shelter is indeed revived. 


Reporting by Lucia Starbuck for Our Town Reno






Monday 09.09.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Morgan Green, Helping Break the Stigma of Substance Abuse

Morgan Green from the Center for the Application of Substance Abuse Technologies at UNR took part in a recent event marking International Overdose Awareness Day. She passed out naloxone kits, which are used to counter effects of an opioid overdose. …

Morgan Green from the Center for the Application of Substance Abuse Technologies at UNR took part in a recent event marking International Overdose Awareness Day. She passed out naloxone kits, which are used to counter effects of an opioid overdose. “I think we're breaking a lot of barriers in terms of people who are overcoming addiction, but there's still a long way to go,” she said. “A lot of times we tend to pretend that they don't exist, they hide in corners. People themselves don't even recognize when they have a problem because we don't talk about it. We want to make sure that the education's out there, that the compassion is there.”

Remembering Those Lost and Celebrating Those Here

Last week, before the start of the Labor Day weekend, a crowd of people marched from the BELIEVE sign in downtown Reno to Wingfield Park to mark International Overdose Awareness Day. During the event, organized by Join Together Northern Nevada, people drew messages on craft flowers dedicated to loved ones lost and inspiring notes for those still here. Many, including Morgan Green, who was one of the speakers, wore a purple shirt with #EndOverdose written on it.

“I come from a family of addiction, so this is my way of being able to kind of give back and bring that light to other people, that you can overcome a lot of this,” Green said. She said she stays positive despite losing a loved one to overdose. “I've also been lucky enough to see a lot of my family members make it through and really be able to step up and come together.”

The loving flowers were planted around a tree. People held hands, cried and stood together. Photo by Lucia Starbuck for Our Town Reno.

The loving flowers were planted around a tree. People held hands, cried and stood together. Photo by Lucia Starbuck for Our Town Reno.

Using Grant Money and Naloxone Kits

Green is currently a project coordinator for the Opioid Crisis (STR) and State Opioid Response (SOR) grant programs. The government grants aim to increase access to treatment, and reduce opioid overdose related deaths through prevention, treatment and recovery. Green also works on trying to change the way that law enforcement see individuals struggling with substance abuse.

During the event, Green urged everyone to grab a free naloxone kit, which can save someone’s life. She talked about how to use it, what to use it for and how to notice signs of an overdose. She says that everyone should carry a kit with them.


“I'm really excited to see just the wide breadth of people who are here,” she said. “We have treatment providers, we have law enforcement, and we have people in recovery themselves, and people who are currently using. Just seeing everyone come together under one house and for one purpose really gets that conversation starting and it breaks those barriers in our society.”

“Community is only as strong as its weakest link and so I think really just having that compassion and awareness that these are still people. [...] We exist as a community and we are not going to be able to survive as a community if we just keep lea…

“Community is only as strong as its weakest link and so I think really just having that compassion and awareness that these are still people. [...] We exist as a community and we are not going to be able to survive as a community if we just keep leaving all of our people isolated,” Green said.

Getting People into Treatment Sooner and Building Compassion

Green kept stressing how important it is for those suffering from substance abuse not to feel isolated. She said these types of events make everyone feel closer.

“This really breaks the stigma around substance use,” she said. “It brings recognition that people are willing to step up and help if they see someone struggling. And when you know that there's people out there who are willing to help you, it makes you a lot more comfortable being able to admit when you're struggling and ask for that help. So, it encourages people to get into treatment sooner. It also just brings the community together so they're not shunning someone who may really just need that comfort.”

Finally, Green said she hoped people’s biggest takeaway from taking part in the march or finding out about it is to not see individuals as their addiction or disability but as people.


Reporting and Photography by Lucia Starbuck for Our Town Reno






Tuesday 09.03.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Volunteers Dismayed at City's New Liability Plan for Community Meal Services

“Disheartened”, “appalled”, “completely dumbfounded” and “outraged” were how some volunteers reacted to a City of Reno Meal Delivery Program form it wants them to sign before serving food to those in need at a yet to be disclosed location. A new mee…

“Disheartened”, “appalled”, “completely dumbfounded” and “outraged” were how some volunteers reacted to a City of Reno Meal Delivery Program form it wants them to sign before serving food to those in need at a yet to be disclosed location. A new meeting to discuss the situation is expected September 9th. In April, local officials indicated volunteer meals would soon no longer be allowed at the downtown Reno shelter, and after delays, the form was the first of the new plan to officially emerge.

Protracted Negotiations Suddenly Gone Wrong

This past Spring, local officials announced volunteer organized meal services for those living on the streets would be moving away from the downtown Reno homeless compound, alleging overcrowding and security issues. At first, a date of May first was given for all the meals to change location, but then that deadline was pushed back giving more time for negotiations.

But now after weeks of discussions, and the sudden release of a new Reno protocol for these meals, the impasse between the city and volunteers has widened. Friday, immediately after receiving the new form, the Reno Initiative for Shelter and Equality board of directors issued a statement saying in part, “we cannot sign at this time and await a collaborative solution while we and the other volunteers who serve this community continue to provide lifesaving resources to our neighbors.”

The new protocol would have volunteers be responsible for cleaning the new meal space, including the restrooms, by 8 p.m. nightly, maintaining “order and safety”, ensuring no one is lined up before 5 p.m. and that everyone is gone by 8 p.m., and being responsible for calling law enforcement if needed, among other stipulations.

The We Care Volunteers followed up with their own statement on Saturday, which was very clear in its opposition in the first paragraph: “We are appalled that while for nearly 10 years we have provided over 2500 meals per month, without any City of Reno support—that at this time you would burden our volunteers with the “program roles and responsibilities” of cleaning bathrooms, disposing of our guests trash, being present hours before we serve to ensure guests don't gather earlier than 5 pm, and have the sole responsibility to "maintain order and safety" by acting as first-responders to contacting medical and police services.”

Part of the new liability protocol the city of Reno recently put forward for volunteer meal services.

Part of the new liability protocol the city of Reno recently put forward for volunteer meal services.

New Scheduled Meeting but Still No Exact Site Identified

An email sent to volunteers, signed by the Washoe County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy of Operations, Greg Herrera, indicates a new lease has been signed with the Truckee Meadows Water Authority, for a site on 4th street, to serve as a new location for the volunteer meals.

“I’m happy to report that the City of Reno has identified and signed a lease with TMWA for an alternative site on 4th Street where your groups will be able to safely provide meals to the homeless population in our area,” he wrote in the email dated August 27th. “I don’t have all the details right now, but we will be coordinating a meeting with you in the next week or two to get you all of the information. “

The “Meal Delivery Release” was sent by Hettie Ploeger, Management Analyst for the City of Reno, on August 30th. “Please keep in mind that each volunteer will need to sign the release,” the email read. “We will be happy to discuss this further at the meeting on September 9th.”

Lacking Proper Spirit

As part of the We Care Volunteers statement, it said the new protocol “would cause undo concern and instead of starting our meal service with a positive spirit of cooperation, it would instead create a menacing atmosphere and further demonize and purport our guests as dangerous, disease ridden, hazardous individuals who may not deserve our service.”

Other volunteers pointed to inconsistencies in how the city is framing the issue. They said the reason the meals were being moved was allegedly for security, but if the volunteers were now responsible for security, they thought it seemed to indicate city officials had no interest in the security of those being helped, since volunteers did not have any of the security resources which are currently used at the Community Assistance Center in downtown Reno.

Angela Handler, who coordinates the 80 or so volunteers with Loka Cares, said she would soon forward them the new protocol, but was initially stopped in her tracks expressing “utter disappointment.”

She said her group served its community meal as it normally does this past Friday at the downtown compound and vowed “to continue to create meals for those in need as food and compassion is an absolute right.”

Saturday, Lisa Lee, a recovery specialist and advocate for those living on the streets, wrote an email to “the compassionate army of volunteers,” stating: “I am appalled at the direction the City of Reno is moving and hope that meal service volunteers will stand in solidarity with RISE and We Care in refusing to sign on to these harmful, denigrating, and outrageous terms. I also hope that each volunteer group will continue to serve our amazing community members, friends, and neighbors facing poverty and homelessness in the radically inclusive spirit you all exhibit.”

Reporting by Our Town Reno in August 2019




Sunday 09.01.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Marilou, Holding on to Her Dog after Being Assaulted and Robbed

Marilou Gallegos cuddles her dog, Nikita, who she’s had for six years. She doesn’t go far from her belongings in fear of them getting stolen again or thrown away.

Marilou Gallegos cuddles her dog, Nikita, who she’s had for six years. She doesn’t go far from her belongings in fear of them getting stolen again or thrown away.

Fending for Herself

Marilou Gallegos has been living on the streets and relying on food stamps since March of this year. When we met her, she was staying along the railroad tracks with her dog Nikita. Originally from the Philippines, she grew up in California and moved to Reno in 2014 after a bad divorce. She has friends in the Biggest Little City but for the most part, she says, it’s just her and her dog.

“I love Reno. I love some of the people that got a heart. Really, it makes me feel welcome because my dad died 17 years ago,” she said. “My mom has a heart problem back home. So pretty much it’s just me and my dog because my kid is in the Navy,” she said.


Gallegos spends her days walking with her dog, checking in with people in other homeless encampments and smoking marijuana to relieve her back pain.

Gallegos says she doesn’t want the memories attached with her old wedding ring, which she says was recently run over by a stroller. She says she plans on selling it to a pawn shop as soon as she can.

Gallegos says she doesn’t want the memories attached with her old wedding ring, which she says was recently run over by a stroller. She says she plans on selling it to a pawn shop as soon as she can.

Dealing With Police and Attacks While Living on the Streets


Gallegos says she has been dealing with police in more ways than one. She recently got a ticket for camping near a different part of the railroad tracks. She says homeless people are treated unfairly and discriminated against.

“I'm not saying that I'm making excuses for me, but in my situation, we need help,” she said of the repeated sweeps and early morning warnings. “You should not push them away. You should ask them what's wrong or anything.”

Gallegos has also filed police reports of her own. She says a man sexually assaulted her while she was camping with a friend. But she says her report went ignored. Additionally, she says she had some of her most important belongings stolen one night while she was going to the bathroom, including her cellphone, drivers license, jewelry, knife, baby photos, cash, and cards stolen.

After being robbed, Gallegos says she doesn’t leave her stuff unattended anymore.

After being robbed, Gallegos says she doesn’t leave her stuff unattended anymore.

Difficulties in Getting Her ID Back


Without a car, and storage for her belongings, it’s been a difficult task for Gallegos to replace her ID.

“How am I supposed to go to the DMV?,” she asks. “I don't have no place to put my stuff.” 

Gallegos says she especially cherishes the shirts and dresses she has from the Philippines and keeps them in her tent. Once Gallegos gets her ID she says she hopes to get a job. 

“Some of it I brought home, you know, like clothes from the Philippines, but other than that it can be replaced. But the memory, no.”

“Some of it I brought home, you know, like clothes from the Philippines, but other than that it can be replaced. But the memory, no.”

Photos and Reporting by Lucia Starbuck for Our Town Reno







Wednesday 08.28.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Kristine, In a Motel but Afraid to be Homeless Again

"I've had nightmares like that, you know, I don't want, I'm not going to be back on the streets again,” Kristine Lawson, 57, said outside of her tiny room at a city motel on Virginia street. When we met her, the motel provided her a roof over her he…

"I've had nightmares like that, you know, I don't want, I'm not going to be back on the streets again,” Kristine Lawson, 57, said outside of her tiny room at a city motel on Virginia street. When we met her, the motel provided her a roof over her head. But considering the ongoing demolition of motels, she said she was afraid her nightmares might come true. Photo and reporting by Sudhiti Naskar

One of Many Feeling the “Growth Pain”

Reno is going through a difficult transition from a simple, welcoming western town to perhaps a city of the future. "Growth pain" is a phrase often used by politicians and media to describe this current stage of economic development. Yet, what is the human experience of this "growth-pain"? Who feels it?

 I first met Kristine Lawson, in December 2017, while I was reporting on homelessness in Reno. On a chilly winter afternoon, she seemed to enjoy herself at a community dinner organized by the local group ACTIONN. Kristine appeared open and warm, but a little self-conscious. We kept meeting at her tiny room at the motel and eventually she let out a river of emotions and stories about her past: her comfortable middle-class upbringing, the subsequent separation of her parents, the emotional and practical chaos she felt because of it, her very personal struggle with dyslexia as a teenager, and later, in a grown-up world, her constant struggle to stay close to her six children from two failed marriages. She said she worked several jobs to support her family until a disability induced by acute asthma and sleep apnea made her unfit to work.

In happier times, Kristine on the left in with her mother.

In happier times, Kristine on the left in with her mother.

 The Beginning of Homelessness and a Derailed Family Reunion

Kristine became homeless in 2015 in Sacramento, CA. Her daughter and son-in-law, who were living in Hesperia, CA, took her and her young son in. But, she and her son-in-law did not get along. Kristine said she then drifted for a year and then found her way to Reno. When I first met her in 2017, she seemed hopeful for her future. She said she looked forward to reunite with her son on Christmas Day that year. She yearned to rebuild her life to get back the middle-class respectability of a home and family.

 How has her life been all this while? Did her wishes come true? What worked and what didn’t? I recently reconnected with Kristine to find out.

Her family reunion she looked forward to started off on a good note in December 2017.

“My ex husband paid for me and we stayed in the same hotel down there in southern California. I took Amtrak, which was awesome because I've never even been on [a] vacation. I saw my son. He wanted me there for Christmas.”

But she said the reunion turned out to be traumatic. It brought to surface a lot of resentment and anger within the family.

“My son blamed me for losing our place in Sacramento, which wasn't my fault. He blames me right when I was talking to a woman who was staying [at the hotel], for a minute. They say I’m crazy, I’m depressed, I’m on drugs. I do not like drugs … I do not like alcohol. I don’t like to gamble. I smoke cigarettes, that’s all I do. It’s not against the law to be depressed, you know. People are set up, they went through what I went through and they just can’t...” Kristine choked up.  

Kristine carries around several cards to get the help she needs.

Kristine carries around several cards to get the help she needs.

“I Don’t Know Where My Feet Are”

Kristine says she tries hard to stay positive by going to church and believing in God.

“I thought I would be on my feet by now,” she said. “But I don't know where my feet are. When money was coming in, you know, the child support was coming in with disability [checks], we would have made it back to California. The child support stopped coming in when I lost my phone [in March].” This year her son became an adult. He lives in Reno. He visited Kristine at the motel but they had a fight as he kept pushing her for money and support she couldn’t give. “My son doesn't want to move back in with me ’cause he has a girlfriend now. I understand. And I thought what I’m gonna do? I cannot stay in a hotel for the rest of my life!”

Kristine is aware of the many different programs to help out the homeless but said they are hard to understand and access

"Kathy [a friend who is also homeless] is the one that told me about a program for senior disabled citizens. Now the program just started like three years ago, I guess. And it was for disabled people too. And it's run by the federal government, I guess. Her place is a one-bedroom apartment. It's eight floors high, just got a balcony. You know what I mean, this is a real home! She loves it. I was there for two days. I didn't want to leave. And you get dinner every day, one dinner once a day and then you can cook in your own house in your own room. You have a full kitchen.  I have signed up for it but nothing has worked out so far,” she said.

Kristine has tried to get Section 8 housing or help from local churches as well.

“You have to go out for like a couple hours every day and put your name on all these forms,” she said of trying to get help. “But my problem was I couldn't keep walking. I barely could carry my backpack.”

“You have to go out for like a couple hours every day and put your name on all these forms,” she said of trying to get help. “But my problem was I couldn't keep walking. I barely could carry my backpack.”

Grateful for her Motel Room

Her motel room, she says, doesn’t feel like a home, but neither do the streets of Reno.   She used to take rests by the central bus station but says that has changed.

 “You can't just hang out at the bus station, you can't just hang out in the casino,” she said. “So, people have to walk constantly. Before, when I first came here, you know, like three years ago, you could at least sit at the bus station and then they changed their contract and the new people [are] like, no way [you can be here]. So they kicked people out. So, you gotta keep walking.”  

 Kristine feels that regardless of her health conditions and changing rules for outdoor spaces, she has to keep trying to find a way to get better housing. She has been requesting bus passes from different charities to move around more, but has found that more difficult as well.

Kristine says she gets $771 a month for her disability but then spends $650 on rent, leaving her with very little for day to day expenses. 

“All my money goes to the room,” she said. She said she collects food stamps and sometimes gets food with Christian charities.

Kristine feels that motels are essential for her survival in a housing market such as Reno's. “They [her motel] have very good managers. They're in their seventies and eighties, real good about keeping riffraff out of here. They keep an eye, you know.  It's really neat because if there's any big cars parked here, unless it's people that are actually working for a cleaning or doing repairs, they'll make them park over on the other side. Because at nighttime, I worry about riffraff walking by. They keep this place clean. There's no bugs. That's why so many people want to be in this place.”

When told about other housing options, Kristine explained why renting an apartment via the market scares her. “I hear these horror stories where people pay all this money for credit checks and they never get to know. Or, like I've heard stories abou…

When told about other housing options, Kristine explained why renting an apartment via the market scares her. “I hear these horror stories where people pay all this money for credit checks and they never get to know. Or, like I've heard stories about the students who go to school [at UNR] and then all of a sudden you've got to go and move out for the summer for three months … whatever, and then find a new place.”

Fears for the Future

Kristine said that in the three years she has stayed at the motel the rent hasn’t gone up. “Right now I feel faith because God has got me stable right here. Nobody kicked me out as long as I pay.”

However, she will need to move after a year, she said, as the motel allows four years of stay, at the most. We didn’t get independent confirmation of this but could feel her worry.

“I'm going to die here or I'm going to find a place that's going to have me for the rest of my life,” she said of her options.

Photos and reporting by Sudhiti Naskar shared with Our Town Reno

 

Monday 08.26.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Judge Tammy Riggs, Restoring People's Dignity at the Community Court

“A lot of this population of people have anxiety about dealing with courts, dealing with the system. This makes it a little bit less formal so that people are more comfortable,” Judge Tammy Riggs said of the weekly community court at Reno’s downtown…

“A lot of this population of people have anxiety about dealing with courts, dealing with the system. This makes it a little bit less formal so that people are more comfortable,” Judge Tammy Riggs said of the weekly community court at Reno’s downtown library.

A Low Stress Court

On an early Wednesday morning, a little over ten people shuffle inside the Downtown Reno Library. They are greeted by an abundance of green plants, trees and bushes. It’s like entering a calm forest. And, they aren’t here to check out books. The Reno Municipal Court Community Court is about to begin.


Community court is for nonviolent crimes such as trespassing, open containers, lying on sidewalks, camping in a public area, littering, jaywalking or urinating in public in the downtown Reno area. A majority of these citations are given to those living on the streets. Instead of being ordered to pay off their tickets, at the community court people can instead get connected with services or given same-day community service for local cleanups.

Instead of on an elevated bench, Judge Tammy Riggs, is at a table sitting across from those who have been cited. 

“I'm not wearing a robe. We don't have a big bench,” Riggs said. “So (it’s a) less formal process to bring the stress down.” Judge Riggs says the welcoming, green library is her favorite building in the world.

“I'm not wearing a robe. We don't have a big bench,” Riggs said. “So (it’s a) less formal process to bring the stress down.” Judge Riggs says the welcoming, green library is her favorite building in the world.

Making Appointments Instead of Payments

Riggs says that the library is more of a low stress environment than the courthouse. The downtown Reno library is also accessible by bus.

At  white circular tables, different organization representatives help people make appointments to get connected to services for mental and physical healthcare, substance abuse care, help for veterans, GED preparation, job searches, resume writing, getting back their ID, getting access to affordable housing and welfare services.

“We try to provide people with a dignified experience here,” Riggs says. “Once you become homeless, people are very beaten down at that point. They feel like they’ve become invisible. They feel like people don't care about them. We've had people tell us, ‘This is the very first time somebody has offered to help me,’ or, ‘Thank you for being nice to me,’ because people don't experience that on the street.”

Individuals usually get sentenced to attend another hearing to ensure that they went to the appointments they signed up for to get help. 

Community court begins at 8 am on Wednesdays two hours before the rest of the library.

Community court begins at 8 am on Wednesdays two hours before the rest of the library.

Trying to Make a Difference in People’s Lives

Riggs says that she doesn’t consider punishment by imprisonment an effective remedy for the citations she is dealing with. 

“All of us want to make a difference in our fields,” she said. “We all want to feel like that what we do has meaning and is helping. Especially people in government, believe it or not, people in government want to feel like what they do means something,” she said.

“We get a lot of the same people over and over again. You get to know them and you don't want to hammer people you know, you want to help them, you want to assist them in whatever it is that is impeding their ability to live their life.”

Reno’s community court (described here in full detail: https://www.reno.gov/Home/Components/News/News/18867/576?seldept=9) is being funded for two years with a $200,000 grant from the Center for Court Innovation in conjunction with the U.S. Department of Justice's Bureau of Justice Assistance. More information on the Center for Court Innovation here: https://www.courtinnovation.org/

Reporting and Photos by Lucia Starbuck for Our Town Reno

Tuesday 08.20.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Joyce, Vouching for More Public Housing after Moving from a Motel

Joyce is dealing with several worrisome health issues and needs appliances, as well as easier ways to get around, but she and her dog Aurora, are finding their new apartment cozy, safe and quiet. Formerly homeless, and then a long term motel residen…

Joyce is dealing with several worrisome health issues and needs appliances, as well as easier ways to get around, but she and her dog Aurora, are finding their new apartment cozy, safe and quiet. Formerly homeless, and then a long term motel resident, she advises others who might be in difficult situations to network and to use social media to interact with their communities as a way to help themselves get back on track.

More Affordable and Relaxing

On a hot summer morning, Joyce is having coffee in her spacious room while she snuggles with Aurora, her rescue and service dog. Her roommate, a veteran, is preparing food in a shared, spotless kitchen of their subsidized apartment within the Hawk View Apartments complex, next to a couple of bus lines, by Hug High.

It’s a far cry from other situations she’s lived in, most recently the cramped, noisy, often drama-filled motels she called home for a while. There is a continuation though, such as the Native American dreamcatcher over her bed, which she found in a dumpster and which then adorned the door to her room at the El Tavern motel on W. 4th street.

Joyce has been here since May, after finding out housing lists were reopening and immediately applying in February. “It didn't take that long,” she said. “But my roommate's a veteran so it kind of bumped us up on the list and they offered us this one.”

They are paying less than $400 for the two bedroom apartment, with an extra $100 or so per month for electricity and cable bills, much less than the rising rent at the motel, which she said was going up to $1,250 for a much smaller space. Because she now pays utilities, her food stamps have gone up.

Gifts such as this one from Reno councilwoman Neoma Jardon are part of Joyce’s new living room decor. She is still trying to get a couch and a table with chairs so she can have guests over. The influential local lobbyist Jessica Sferrazza also helpe…

Gifts such as this one from Reno councilwoman Neoma Jardon are part of Joyce’s new living room decor. She is still trying to get a couch and a table with chairs so she can have guests over. The influential local lobbyist Jessica Sferrazza also helped her out with initial furniture. Joyce made these contacts after actively engaging with others through social media.

Challenges of Adapting to a New Neighborhood and a New Place


”We argued on Facebook with each other,” Joyce says of getting to know Jardon personally, while presenting her views on helping the homeless and easing the affordable housing crisis in Reno. “We had lunch, we talked. We were both really honest with each other and we've just stayed friends.”

Since Joyce doesn’t have a car, she does miss the ease of going to the motel’s convenience store, or living on the first floor, as she used to, to take her dog for walks. Her roommate was robbed while walking Aurora late at night on nearby Tripp Drive, which they now both avoid at night.

She has new neighbor friends, including an artist, and apartment community meetings she attends. She says maintenance is a bit backed up, as she’s still trying to get her shower fixed, but that all in all, it’s been a great move for her. “I like it now. I’m happy and calmer,” she said.

Joyce believes building and budgeting for more subsidized low income housing as well as tiny home villages with community gardens should be the way to go for Reno. She is trying to help get a plot at her apartments turned into a vegetable garden, bu…

Joyce believes building and budgeting for more subsidized low income housing as well as tiny home villages with community gardens should be the way to go for Reno. She is trying to help get a plot at her apartments turned into a vegetable garden, but says the bureaucracy to get that done seems endless.

The Importance of Networking and Local Solutions


”Network,” Joyce says when asked if she has tips for others trying to rebound from homelessness and addiction as she has. Getting free bus passes also helped.

“Make sure you access what resources you can, if you can,” she said. “It’s difficult. It's really hard to get places. I learned that lesson. If you don't have transportation, you're not going anywhere. If you don't have resources or know where to network, you're not going anywhere. Figuring out what your options are. If you can, don't be afraid to reach out to some groups and at least get an idea. If you're going to apply for housing, apply, you know?”

She said when Lisa Lee, a recovery specialist in Reno, told her the housing lists were reopening, she not only applied for herself and her roommate, but for four other neighbors at her motel as well.

Joyce believes in local and state solutions for affordability over federal ones, but believes Reno still has the wrong mindset.

“You know, they want this to be a university town. They want to have districts, which I hate, you know. It makes it sound exclusive. Hey, if you're not this, you can't be here.”

Now that she has a safe place to stay, Joyce’s cousins have been sending her family mementoes of her late parents and brother she keeps safely in a box under her bed.

Now that she has a safe place to stay, Joyce’s cousins have been sending her family mementoes of her late parents and brother she keeps safely in a box under her bed.

Helping the Homeless One by One

Joyce believes there should be a wider array of services for those living on the streets, and a wider range of options to help them out. She often points to Eugene, Oregon, as a city which has tried harder to help.

“Some people don't want to be inside or some people don't know how to interact with others enough to be inside,” she said. “That's why there should be more choices and more diversity for people who do want to come in… It's not just homeless people. There's addiction, there's mental health, there's veterans, there's PTSD, there's whatever. And they're all throwing it into one basket. Like a designate X. Nope. Sorry, I never fit into a basket.”

She says every little bit makes a difference, from the help she’s received from others, to herself helping out.

“The other day I was walking my dog, and there was a guy pushing a baby carriage with stuff in it, and when I came back, he happened to be in the dumpster and he said, ‘oh, thanks for following me’. I said, ‘I wasn't following you.’” 

She went back to meet him to give him a jug of cold water and a bag of toiletries. “You know, it wasn't a big deal. Been there, done that, made eye contact, talked to him. He said the way he lives is what he's chosen. I said, well, everybody's got to decide when it's time to change. If you do fine, but you're going to have to do it on your time and nobody's going to be able to make you.” 

Photos and Interview by Our Town Reno in July 2019





Sunday 08.18.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Philip, Honoring a Homeless Friend who was Stabbed to Death

Philip, 31, says that rather than helping police try to make people living on the streets disappear. He says the city keeps painting over the memorial of a friend who was stabbed to death on the nearby Wells Avenue bridge. He’s been homeless since h…

Philip, 31, says that rather than helping police try to make people living on the streets disappear. He says the city keeps painting over the memorial of a friend who was stabbed to death on the nearby Wells Avenue bridge. He’s been homeless since he was 13 when his mother passed away in Las Vegas, splitting apart his family, and derailing his life.

The Homeless Dead Often Get Ignored

“His name was Donny,” Philip tells us. “He was stabbed to death for some shit. It went too far and he got murdered… He was brutally stabbed to death and I've yet to hear anything else about the investigation. But yeah, there's been a lot of shit going on,” he says of the insecurity of living in a tent, which also comes with repeated early morning police sweeps.

Criminalizing the homeless, he says, is wrongheaded.

“Figuring out what the problem is and then dealing with the problem instead of sitting here and taking it out on the homeless because these guys want to be assholes to us and it's not okay. Making homeless criminals, that's never going to work, right? Nope. It's just gonna piss them off more, make it worse and make a lot more problems for the future,” he said.

A memorial for Donny used to be here, painted by his niece but keeps getting painted over. “This is the third time they've painted over it, but she's not going to stop putting the memorial there,” Philip said.

A memorial for Donny used to be here, painted by his niece but keeps getting painted over. “This is the third time they've painted over it, but she's not going to stop putting the memorial there,” Philip said.

Loyalty to Those Living on the Streets

Philip says more and more people who are cited for camping illegally are now sent to the downtown library’s community court, which he says is an improvement.

“Usually they tell people to go to services when they go to the library court and when you go, they have all types of services. They have people from Hopes, they have people from social services …”

Philip says he’s been living on the streets of Reno since 2006. He’s thought of going back to Las Vegas, but he says his loyalty and protecting others in his predicament keeps him here.  

“I know too many people out here. I have too many people out here I consider family,” he said.

Philip uses a whip he made as protection, especially from himself. “It's a way of taking out frustrations without having to actually hate somebody else.I do this thing to get rid of the anger and frustrations that I have built up inside …”

Philip uses a whip he made as protection, especially from himself. “It's a way of taking out frustrations without having to actually hate somebody else.I do this thing to get rid of the anger and frustrations that I have built up inside …”

Surviving by the River

Philip sometimes helps people move or fixes cars to earn some money, as he doesn’t get any fixed income, or even food stamps. He says he finds peace sitting by the Truckee river, and also answers, when he feels lost.

He believes camping along the river should be legal, and that there should be public showers and more trash cans. He says people who look down on those like him should have more compassion.

“There's a good community amongst us. There's spots all along this river, where everything goes on. Just like everyday life goes on inside of houses. The only thing is we do it in a tent, but it’s still all the same. It's just we're in a tent. The winters are tough, but summers are tough too.”

For those who are just starting out on the river, finding a hidden shady spot and drinking clean water is the key, he says.

“Stay hydrated, that's all I can say. Stay hydrated. If not, you're going to die of a heat stroke.”

Photos and Interview by Our Town Reno in July 2019






Tuesday 08.13.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Josella, Holding on to the Family's Motel Torch and Feeling like a 'Black Sheep' in Reno

Josella Starbuck grew up in the back of the Virginia Motel, and now runs several family-owned motels including the Vacation Motor Lodge in Midtown, which barely survived the Great Recession. “It seems like if I was in any other business, you know, m…

Josella Starbuck grew up in the back of the Virginia Motel, and now runs several family-owned motels including the Vacation Motor Lodge in Midtown, which barely survived the Great Recession. “It seems like if I was in any other business, you know, maybe I'd be lauded like, ‘Oh wow, they're still in business, they're still running there.’ But, there's a lot of people around town who wish we wouldn't be here, but at the same time, where would people go?” Reno’s motels, while derided by politicians and others, have given people coming out of prison, black musicians victimized by racism, and senior citizens on fixed incomes an affordable and accessible place to stay.

From a Lineage of Sicilian-Americans Who Built and Bought Motels in Reno

Josella Starbuck’s family history is complicated and involves several of Reno’s downtown and Midtown motels. It also intertwines with much of Reno’s history, from quicky divorces, to racism against black musicians, to casinos lowering their room prices all the way to current rebranding efforts and gentrification.

At the root of it for her were her grandfather and great uncle, Sicilian-Americans who first came to Reno from Buffalo, for their own divorces in the 1940s. Her grandfather started a bar and then built the Swiss Motel. With that early success, he built the Virginia Motel, and then the family also bought the Vacation Motor Lodge and the former Ranch Motel.

Part of Josella’s childhood was spent in a house attached to the Virginia Motel and its office, and she remembers her brother, as young as 13, in charge of the front desk. “He would run the office because my parents stayed open all the time. We hardly ever went anywhere as a family … we had no family vacations,“ she told us during a recent interview in Midtown, with construction all around us, forcing her “to grit her teeth.”

In first grade, she said she realized for the first time the stigma attached not only to those who live in motels but also to those who run them. As part of an introductory assignment, she boasted about how proud she was to live and work with her family in the same place, but she says this confused her classmates.

Josella points to the former pool of the Vacation Motor Lodge, which has now been replaced by a small community garden and communal barbecue patio area.

Josella points to the former pool of the Vacation Motor Lodge, which has now been replaced by a small community garden and communal barbecue patio area.

From Working with Casinos to Competing Against Them

Initially, Josella says patrons were a “mix of people staying a few nights, traveling salesmen, musicians, and people in transition waiting for an apartment or a house.”

Casino employees would come by the motels with gambling coupons, as well as Christmas gifts, to attract more patrons.

During the 1960s, when Reno was a destination for big concerts, black musicians were prevented from staying at casinos where they played, so they would sleep at the motels. Josella’s mom once met Tina Turner, who she shared a birthday with, looking for musicians she knew.

But by the 1980s, when Circus Circus had started slashing its nightly room prices, Josella says motels became more of “a housing type situation for folks.”

“We don't do any nightlies now because there's too much risks with people trashing the room, leaving or not leaving when it's 11 o'clock,” she said of how it has remained that way since.

Motels seem frozen in time but many Reno residents still rely on them amid an affordable housing crisis. “We have a vets,” Josella said of her current tenants. “We even have an author who self publishes on Amazon. At the Virginia Motel, we have a re…

Motels seem frozen in time but many Reno residents still rely on them amid an affordable housing crisis. “We have a vets,” Josella said of her current tenants. “We even have an author who self publishes on Amazon. At the Virginia Motel, we have a retired judge.”

Surviving the Recession and A Changing Clientele, but Still Shunned by Midtown

Josella says her customers now are mostly elderly people on fixed income. Some she says have been at the motel for eight years.

During the Great Recession, she says, she was down to six tenants out of 35 rooms. She decided to lower prices to survive. While some say motel life isn’t affordable, Josella says at the Vacation Motor Lodge several tenants are paying just $450 a month, bills included.

“You don't have to pay a power bill. You don't have to pay for linens, you don't have to pay for basic cable and your heat. Every room has a mini fridge and a microwave and you do have that comfort of knowing if something breaks, it gets replaced. We have some people here who are surviving on maybe $700 or $800 in Social Security,” she said. “And one thing that we haven't done here is raise the rates extraordinarily high. And those people who have been here a long time, a lot of them are only paying $50 more than when they came in on that special rate that we were running nine years ago.”

While motels cater to a less affluent clientele, many new stores in Midtown now have extremely pricey items or menus, but Josella isn’t impressed. “I just feel like we've been here before Midtown. A lot of things that I've observed in ‘Midtown’ are a lot of empty storefronts. People who open and then are gone. We are kind of the black sheep of Midtown. We've never been asked to join a Midtown association…. I think we'll probably still be here when Midtown is another lost memory … We do tend to get ahead of ourselves in this town.”

Josella says Bette Midler once did a long scene in front of the Vacation Motor Lodge for the 1982 Hollywood film Jinxed. “People drive by and take pictures of the signs,” Josella said. “I will say it is sad when things get torn down,” she says of ot…

Josella says Bette Midler once did a long scene in front of the Vacation Motor Lodge for the 1982 Hollywood film Jinxed. “People drive by and take pictures of the signs,” Josella said. “I will say it is sad when things get torn down,” she says of other motels and their signs being torn down. “It is sad when things change, when people don't appreciate the past. That's probably something they do do better in Europe.”

Helping the Community?

Josella thinks motels have value for the community, even now. “If anything, it's just a safe, clean place for people who simply can't afford high rents,” she said. “A lot of times people can't get the money together for a deposit to live in an apartment, or they don't have the credit.”

She says when people complain motel rooms are dirty, sometimes they don’t understand there are limits to what motel owners can do to force tenants to clean them up. “The man in his castle law applies to motels, so we can't just go in there and clean it. We can't go in there and tell them what to do. If they want to sleep on the floor, we can't tell them you have to sleep in a bed.” The man in his castle is a legal doctrine designating a person's legally occupied place in which that person has protections and immunities.

Josella says previous suggestions to force motels to have kitchenettes in all rooms would put most motels out of business because of associated plumbing costs, but she says she hasn’t seen any movement in that direction in Reno lately.

Overall, she says, she resents politicians and media reports depicting motels as blight and unlivable. “It makes me angry because they're not speaking to the residents,” she said. “I mean, nobody here is forced to stay. It's a month to month lease, sometimes a week, or two week lease.”

“I would really like them to come and talk to the people who actually live here and choose to stay here,” she said of media and politicians. “I think we're providing a service for the community. There's not enough housing now as it is. There's not enough housing for families. Over at the Virginia Motel, we have working families who live there and that's all they can afford. And they're hardworking people. They're taxpayers. Everybody's gone crazy with the rents here in town and it's not sustainable.”

Josella says she lets tenants plant flowers and also tries to quickly respond to all complaints. She says she has no problems with police, or the fire and health departments, who occasionally drop by. With lots of speculation on Reno’s continued gro…

Josella says she lets tenants plant flowers and also tries to quickly respond to all complaints. She says she has no problems with police, or the fire and health departments, who occasionally drop by. With lots of speculation on Reno’s continued growth, Josella says there has been pressure to sell. “There's a lot of people who do come out of the woodwork,” she said. “I try to resist but I am getting older myself. There’s people who figure they could run the place better, make more money, which is fine, but I don't know what the future will hold….”

Defending the Wild Orchid and Motels

Across the street from the Vacation Motor Lodge is the Wild Orchid, and its ongoing drama with Reno’s City Council and certain residents over its central location and digital signs.

“I think the City singled out the Wild Orchid to say … this is what's wrong with downtown, but all you have to do is walk through downtown to see what's wrong with downtown. There are closed storefronts on the main strip, boarded up. There's garbage. You can't pick out one thing and say this is what's wrong with the whole area. And honestly we use it as a landmark on the phone when we tell people how to get here. So, I was on the side of the owners of the Wild Orchid the whole time. “

She says Reno has always had an identity crisis.  Lumping motels with a certain view of Reno, she finds that offensive.

“I think it's because of a perception that people have, that we're part of that seedy underbelly of society, which isn't true. I think that's a perception that people have, but we contribute to the local economy. We use local tradespeople for help. I think people wish we weren't here, but they don't know what to do with the people that are here. So it's kind of like a guilty relationship. It's not right. Honestly, I think that the word slumlord gets tossed around a lot. And I find that personally offensive because it's so derogatory. I wish they would just come and see and spend maybe 30, 45 minutes, just seeing what's going on here.”

Where would current tenants go if motel rooms were no longer available?

“You know, people say, everybody who lives there, is on drugs. They're all crack heads. And that's just not true. I mean a lot of people get beat up by society. Not everyone can make it. And you end up with $700, $800 a month on Social Security. I mean, what are you supposed to do? And a lot of people here have had rich full lives.”

 Reporting and Photos by Our Town Reno in July 2019































Sunday 08.11.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Phoenix, Leading a Trans Recovery Group to Save Local Lives

Phoenix Cutler, who used to be homeless and addicted to crystal meth, leads a trans support meeting in this room at the new Foundation for Recovery in Sparks. “Basically there's no inclusive group in Reno that talks about sex, drugs, you know … how …

Phoenix Cutler, who used to be homeless and addicted to crystal meth, leads a trans support meeting in this room at the new Foundation for Recovery in Sparks. “Basically there's no inclusive group in Reno that talks about sex, drugs, you know … how to have sex on hormones, how not to have sex on hormones, body positivity and just living your true life,” she said during an interview with Our Town Reno.

Making Support Groups More Inclusive

Phoenix, who has lived in several different parts of the U.S. as a service child, says Reno and Nevada in general don’t feel inclusive, which is why this trans group is so needed here.

“Las Vegas was probably the worst I’ve seen along with Oklahoma for transgendered youth being basically kicked out of their house for trying to live their true life,” she said. “For the most part, (in Reno), sometimes we're still kind of backwards. You know, the old country mentality.”

Phoenix points to alarmingly high suicide and substance abuse rates for trans youths, as another vital reason for this endeavor.

“It's very important for the group to be inclusive, instead of exclusive, because people need to know it's open, you know, versus just having the same old people sitting around a table,” she said. “You know, if we don't bring new people in, new blood into groups, then guess what, the groups die off … it’s the same thing with any other type of group in Reno, AA, NA, people forget that nowadays. You know, if you’ve been in the same group with the same people, everyone knows each other. There's no new lifeblood and the new person in the group is the best thing in the world, because you get to help that person. You get to show them what you have and you get to show them how you live your true life.”

Phoenix spoke at the opening of the Foundation for Recovery. “People don't realize that if you find a good support system, you can conquer the world,” she said in our interview afterwards. “We can be more inclusive. Don't judge a book by its cover. …

Phoenix spoke at the opening of the Foundation for Recovery. “People don't realize that if you find a good support system, you can conquer the world,” she said in our interview afterwards. “We can be more inclusive. Don't judge a book by its cover. I'm 6’5. I have purple hair, but you know, I have the biggest heart in the world. I will help anyone that's in need.”

From Crystal Meth Addiction to Becoming a Leader for Positive Change

Phoenix, who now manages a Supercuts hair salon, has a life of struggles and turnaround to share as inspiration. “I started living my true life, in October three years ago,” she said. “That was after I finally had, I was finally done with crystal meth. I was on and off meth from the age of 18 to 32. I’ve been clean as of, August 28th of this year, I'll be clean three years. And my journey … I did everything I could to survive. I was homeless. I was living in a car.  I stole from, you know, family members. It wasn't a true life I needed to live… People forget that, you know, being happy in your own life, becoming your true self, doing what you need to do is the best thing you can do to survive.”

Phoenix also points to the dangerous levels of violence against the transgender community, especially trans women of color.

“If you have some type of addiction that lands you on the streets, it can kill you, especially with everything that's going on in the world today. One thing that makes me really nervous is how many trans women of color have been killed, just this year alone, it's been a lot. Nobody's doing anything, you know? And that scares the living bejesus out of me because I was there. I was doing what I had to do to survive. “

For Phoenix, getting arrested in Reno at one point when she was hitting bottom was a wakeup call. “If I was to stay on the streets, I know that I would've died,” she told us. “The turning point for me was that, so basically the thing is, look at yourself. Do you see yourself there in 10 years or do you see yourself dead in 10 years? Get yourself a good support system.”

“If you're afraid to come to the group, talk to me,” she said. “I'll do what I can to help. If I need to facilitate, you know, where you might need to go for counseling or something like that, I'll try and put you in the same direct path I was … Peo…

“If you're afraid to come to the group, talk to me,” she said. “I'll do what I can to help. If I need to facilitate, you know, where you might need to go for counseling or something like that, I'll try and put you in the same direct path I was … People might be scared to come to the group because they are afraid that they might be outed or they are still living behind a veil. Come out from wherever you are. Life is too short. Live your life. Nobody else will for you. Carpe Diem.”

Advice for Parents and the Community

Phoenix says love and acceptance, including self-acceptance, is generally what’s needed the most.

“My advice for the parents would be they're your kid, love them. One day you're going to need the love. You know, it's just not about what's in between our legs, it's what's in our mind, what's in our heart. People forget that love is just not, it's not a gender. It's your heart. It's your soul. I was born this way and you know what? A lot of younger, the younger generation doesn't realize that… love yourself first. You know, people come and go in your life. There's one person that you wake up everyday with and look at in the mirror, that's yourself. Love yourself before you love anybody else.”

Phoenix would also like to see a local homeless shelter specifically for trans kids as well more pressure on organizations which still practice discrimination.  

Reporting by Our Town Reno in July 2019

Monday 08.05.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 

Lisa Lee, Opening a Peer Recovery Community Center in Sparks

Lisa Lee, who used heroin and survived without safe shelter as an adult, is now the Program Director of the Foundation for Recovery branch of Northern Nevada. The new center on 621 Pyramid Way will be open Monday to Friday 7 am to 7 pm. Photo by Luc…

Lisa Lee, who used heroin and survived without safe shelter as an adult, is now the Program Director of the Foundation for Recovery branch of Northern Nevada. The new center on 621 Pyramid Way will be open Monday to Friday 7 am to 7 pm. Photo by Lucia Starbuck

A Christmas in July with Peers

With community activists, recovery specialists, academics and local residents in recovery on hand, Lisa Lee, herself combining all those attributes, recently opened a new large, multi room, sunny Sparks office for peer community recovery.

After an opening speech introducing staff and the center’s guiding principles, attendants were invited to fill out recovery reminder cards which would be sent out to them on the anniversaries of their sobriety.

The event was billed as a Christmas in July, Grand Opening of the Northern Nevada Recovery Community Organization, with Reno Mayor Hillary Schieve also in attendance. Prior to the gathering, Lee explained the importance of having a staff of so-called Peer Recovery Support Specialists, who have lived experience.

“Not a lot of providers know [...] what it's like to be on the bus for two and a half hours to get from point A to point B. If you're in recovery, chances are you've experienced homelessness, you've lived in abject poverty, you've accessed things like food stamps and food banks, you've ridden the bus, you've ridden your bike, you've walked places, like all of these things. So it's really helpful to have people that are in the know walking with people,” Lee said.

Lee said the local branch of the Foundation for Recovery will be open and free for anyone, at any point of their recovery. She said no one’s journey is the same and people need different help, and that their problems can be worsened especially if th…

Lee said the local branch of the Foundation for Recovery will be open and free for anyone, at any point of their recovery. She said no one’s journey is the same and people need different help, and that their problems can be worsened especially if they are facing homelessness, food insecurity or poverty. That’s why she said she will also have food stocked and an inviting place for someone to be heard.

A Kind, Open and Mobile Approach to Help

Lee says traditional methods of quickly directing someone to available resources isn’t always the best approach.

“I say things like, ‘How can I best support you? What are your goals? What do you need to do today to be alright?,’ because it might not be like, ‘Oh well you need to work on your resume and look for a job,’ when they're freaking hungry or their lights just got shut off or whatever it may be,” she said. “Like checking in with environmental conditions and how they're coping with those right now is super important rather than like, ‘You need to go to a meeting.’”

The new center will have mobile, outreach programs, like helping incarcerated women, and also meeting with people living without stable shelter on the streets or along the Truckee River. Other organizations, such as a local Crystal Meth Anonymous group, are also using the space to hold meetings.

Yoga classes are also being offered at the space. Lee said anyone with a special talent and passion is also invited to offer community classes. Photo by Lucia Starbuck

Yoga classes are also being offered at the space. Lee said anyone with a special talent and passion is also invited to offer community classes. Photo by Lucia Starbuck

Drawing on Her Own Experiences


Lee says inclusivity was a huge determining factor in choosing a location. She originally wanted to be in downtown Reno, but never found a place that was wheelchair accessible such as the Sparks location, which already had a ramp. Lee said Reno’s rents were too high anyway.

She said she will draw on her own experiences getting help, and then helping others with other local organizations in recent years, to guide her work.


“Recovery is an interesting experience because it's a lot like being reborn or something and you're like this little raw, squishy egg in the world trying to figure it all out. I think having other people who've been there, like those have been the most impactful people for me. [...] Not somebody who read it in a book, but somebody who like walked through the fire and came out of it. I just think that's really important. I think it's almost like an obligation that you at least help one other person,” Lee said.

Lee (left) gave the floor to those who are helping with the center during the opening ceremony.

Lee (left) gave the floor to those who are helping with the center during the opening ceremony.

Survivor’s Guilt

Lee, who was known as Turtle while living on the streets during her early adult years, lost many of her close friends due to the hardship of their lives.

“I wake up in the morning everyday at four and I go for a run and I listen to an audio book and I watch the sunrise and I hear the birds chirp and I'm just like, ‘This is something that so many of my friends don't get to do because they’re dead.’ I think about that and I'm like, ‘God why am I here?,’ There's a lot of like survivor’s guilt. [...] But then it’s like, well I am here so I’m obligated to make sure that someone else's kid doesn't die, to make sure that they get a chance.”

Lee says her goal is to one day close her doors because that would mean the problem is solved. However, until then, Lee plans on helping people even if it’s as small, she says, as planting the seed in someone’s mind to consider or at least become educated about recovery.

Reporting and Photography by Lucia Starbuck for Our Town Reno





Wednesday 07.31.19
Posted by Nicolas Colombant
 
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