As featured in ABC7 News:
ELK GROVE, Calif. -- A pilot project in a California town is paying
homeless residents to tidy up their living areas, and it's changing the
culture of the city.
The idea stemmed from a conversation with
one of the city's police sergeants, said Sarah Bontrager, the housing
and public services manager for Elk Grove, a city of 174,000 people
located 15 miles south of Sacramento.
"We
got together to talk about homelessness, and from my perspective I
wanted to build better relationships with people who were experiencing
homelessness, and he wanted to address some of the complaints that come
to his officers," Bontrager told CNN.
The number one complaint surrounding homelessness was the amount of trash.
"Our
public works staff were previously doing cleanups out at encampment
sites ... and just spending a lot of time and money doing it. We also
wanted a way to reduce interactions at the early stages of Covid," she
said.
So they came up with the idea to offer an incentive to
those who live in the homeless encampments to clean up their area so
staff could spend less time picking up trash.
"We distribute
trash bags, and we go out every two weeks to pick up the trash, and if
they have it bagged, they are eligible for up to $20 in gift cards to a
grocery store," Bontrager said.
The recipients can use the gift
cards on anything but cigarettes and alcohol. Bontrager said that they
usually use them for food or hygiene items. Many of the homeless
residents have expressed how thankful they are to be able to go pick out
items themselves instead of relying on shelters or other charitable
organizations, she said.
Bontrager
said that the program has significantly improved the relationship
between city officials, like police officers, and the homeless
community. They have even been able to find housing for some of the
participants.
Besides the social benefit, it saves the city a lot
of money for the same work. In almost a year, Bontrager said the
program has used only $10,000 of its $15,000 budget. She said the city's
efforts cost at least $1,000 every time the city cleaned up an
encampment.
"It would cost easily $1,000 in staff and equipment,
so we are saving thousands of dollars to them put back into other city
projects," she said.
Overall, Bontrager said that what sets their
program apart from some others that have similar structures, is that
theirs is the only one she knows of that gives incentive for taking care
of their own space.
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