What’s the Big Deal About Diapers?

Or, the origins of Help A Mother Out

A few months ago, Lisa and I were enjoying a rare night out without kids or spouses. Over happy-hour sushi and cocktails, our conversation took a more serious turn. Like everyone else these days, we’ve been feeling the pinch of the economic downturn and the worry of an uncertain future—and yet we both realized just how fortunate we still are: We have our homes, our households have steady (if unpredictable) incomes, our children are healthy and well cared for. Lisa had recently heard about the growing numbers of newly homeless women and children and about the tent cities in Sacramento (prominently, possibly erroneously, featured on Oprah), and was deeply affected by the knowledge that many of these families never thought this could happen to them either.

A few weeks later, we both attended a knitting class that was a benefit for the Women’s Daytime Drop-in Center in Berkeley, an incredible organization neither of us had heard of before. The center’s volunteer coordinator spoke passionately of the work they’re doing—providing a safe, calm space for homeless women and children to spend the daytime hours, when overnight shelters are closed—and their most pressing needs—general funding, of course, but also very basic things like diapers, wipes, and toiletries.

It was a revelation to us that something so basic as a diaper could have such a big impact: Diapers are not covered by public assistance programs like WIC and diaper companies do not make big donations to shelters or outreach programs. If you’re not a parent, you might be surprised to realize that a “jumbo” pack of Pampers costs from $10 to $15—that’s 20 to 30 cents per diaper, depending on the size of the diaper. And if you can’t shop at discount stores like Target or Costco and instead have to rely on corner stores or drugstores, you’ll often end up paying even more per diaper. For reference, a newborn baby goes through 60 or more diapers a week. When money’s tight, that’s a lot of dough to drop.

According to the DiaperBank.org, in low-income families, a baby can spend a day or longer in the same diaper, “leading to potential health and abuse risks.” And furthermore, without an adequate supply of diapers, low-income parents can’t take advantage of free or subsidized childcare, making it even more difficult for them to consistently attend jobs or school.

And so over another meal (this time of kid-friendly french fries and mac ‘n cheese) we conceived of Help A Mother Out as a way to raise awareness and to raise some funds—to get a few more diapers into the hands of mothers who really, really need them. Lisa started contacting Bay Area agencies that provide services to homeless and low-income women, and was immediately overwhelmed by both the need for assistance and other people’s desire to help out. We spread the word to our friends and colleagues via email, Facebook, and neighborhood listservs, and before we knew it, diaper drives were under way in San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley, Sacramento, San Jose, and San Diego. (And now even Tucson!)

It sounds big, and maybe it is, but it’s also very small: It’s one or two people, figuring out how to move beyond rhetoric to action; a handful of people buying cases of diapers off an Amazon wishlist; busy mothers donating their collections of hotel shampoos. It’s finding the time and the means to lend a hand to our community. We may not be changing the world, but changing diapers is pretty important too.

Are we living in the dust bowl days?

"Migrant Mother" - Dorothea Lange

California has been in the international limelight because of the Sacramento tent city – our modern day Hooverville, if you will. Since it was dismantled national media outlets have gone home (tip: you can still find homeless folks camping elsewhere, if you know the right people and have the guts to go in).  But now that our state’s famous now-dismantled Hooverville has been forgotten by the Today Show, what happens next on the national media stage?

This Canadian article notes “grim days” for U.S. towns: foreclosures, ghost towns springing up, childhood poverty, and new (and atypical) residents in RV parks. Likewise, there are otherinternational reports of American kids going to bed hungry. Then there are the local news reports: in the Central Valley things appear to be really bad, San Diego Unified can count 900 homeless studentsin their district, Imperial County clocks the highest national jobless rate at 25-percent. These are bits and pieces of international and local news sources. Where is the national media attention on rising family homelessness and childhood poverty? If you come across anything send your tips to us so we can check it out.

What’s the real scoop in your area? From where you are (even if you live out of state), what do you see? Are these our dust bowl days?

The perfect storm for child abuse

What happens when you have a family that is financially strapped and unable to meet the basic necessities of a child? Since the recession hit, there is an uptick of reported child abuse cases.

Reuters reports on what doctors at Boston’s Children’s Hospital see:

“We’re finding that it is directly attributable to what is happening economically,” she said. “Many of the hospitals around here report an increase of 20 to 30 percent of requests for consultation regarding suspected child maltreatment.”

Many cases bear the imprint of economic troubles, like a 9-year-old diabetic boy hospitalized after his mother, a single parent, could no longer afford insurance co-payments needed to treat his disease. She left him home alone for long stretches on days when he required medical attention.

“She had difficulty with the bare bone things that would keep this child healthy,” said Scobie.

Add to the mix overwhelmed social service agencies and we have the perfect storm for prolonged child abuse.

Invisible Families Part 1

Updated 4/24/09: Mark’s personal story is very powerful in and of itself. He is trying to get a grant through the Jenzabar Foundation.  If you found this video powerful, please click through here to post a comment by April 30, 2009 (it is based on number of comments). Thanks!

Through Twitter I’ve come into contact with Mark Horvath of InvisiblePeople.tv. With a consumer camera and a standard laptop, Mark is documenting the fastest growing population in California –  the homeless. He has a unique perspective on this issue (he was homeless 15 years ago) and we encourage you to learn more about his story on his website.

Mark was recently in San Luis Obispo at the invitation of the Prado Day Center. There he met Cecilia and Juliana and interviewed them for Invisible People. I find Cecilia’s resilience inspiring:

This is where the abstract meets real life. Cecilia is someone who I might have gone to school with. She is a mom who is trying to raise her 3 year old daughter and 9 year old son while shuttling her time back and forth between a daytime center, the park, and a night shelter. She is someone who up until recently had a place for her family to call home. I keep wondering:  How does she look for work while taking care of her three year old daughter Juliana? How does she entertain her kids while they wait 2 hours every night for a shelter bed?

This is what is really going on out there, and from the looks of it, Cecilia’s story isn’t unique.

What to do? The National Center on Family Homelessness suggests people to contact their legislators and voice your concerns about child homelessness. Learn more about the characteristics and needs of homeless families.

MomsRising also has a handy online form to fill out and send to your Senator in support of the “Helping Families Save Their Homes in Bankruptcy Act.”

We want to hear your ideas on what average citizens can do to help families-in-need. Please post a comment below and tell us your thoughts.

Special thanks to Mark Horvath for allowing us to use this footage to continue this conversation. Get this guy a grant so he can take InvisiblePeople.tv to the next level (or fund his project directly via PayPal).

Less chronic homeless, more families – Sacramento Bee

Just read this article in the Sacramento Bee regarding a recent study on the demographics of who is actually homeless in Sacramento. St. John’s Shelter is mentioned in the article. Heartbreaking news, St. John’s has no place to send homeless families once they graduate from the 90 day program. There is no adequate affordable housing infrastructure to allow families to keep a roof over their heads.

Michelle Steeb, director of the St. John’s Shelter for Women and Children, said her program was turning away about 20 people per day in 2007 for lack of beds.

“Now, we are turning away over 300 a day,” she said. “We are hearing many stories of people affected by the economy.”

While praising the effort to find housing for the chronically homeless, Steeb said “no new housing is coming online for homeless families.”

“It’s disturbing to me that 45 percent of the people who graduate from our program have nowhere to go” after staying for the maximum 90 days, she said. “We are cycling them back out to the streets.”

Water water everywhere and not a drop to drink.

I’ve been in touch with St. John’s Shelter. They still do need baby wipes, baby food, and diapers.Also copy paper – they have a ton of paperwork to do.

If you are a Sacramento resident or live in the area, please get in touch with us to learn how you can help support our drive in your area.

If the government can make cheese, why can’t they make diapers?

I recently learned that there are such places called Diaper Banks. In fact, we have one in the Bay Area, which was started last year. Here are some facts you should file away and write to the Big Cheese(s) about:

  1. While safety-net programs such as SNAP (food stamps) and WIC (Women Infants Children)cover the cost of infant formula, they do NOT cover diapers.
  2. Diaper companies do NOT give diapers away (unless you are Jon and Kate Plus 8 or the California octuplets).
  3. Interestingly, infant formula companies donate formula and the government subsidizes it under SNAP and WIC.
  4. Diapers cost exponentially more at an inner city convenience store than they do at a big box store or online.
  5. Most laundromats do NOT allow you to wash cloth diapers. If you are poor, you probably don’t own a washing machine.
  6. Most licensed daycare centers (esp. free or subsidized) do not accept cloth diapers. Parents must provide disposable diapers.
  7. If a family can’t afford diapers (e.g., they need it for shelter, food, transportation) a baby will spend extended periods of time, sometimes days at a time in the same soiled diaper.
  8. Washing and re-using disposable diapers is unhealthy and unsanitary.
  9. Unhappy babies are crying babies. Crying babies are more likely to be abused by an already stressed out caregiver.
  10. If you cannot afford diapers, you cannot take your child to free/subsidized childcare. Therefore, you cannot make your commitments such aswork, school, or job training.
  11. Start over.

I found most of these facts on various diaper bank websites and in an About.com interview with Hildy Gottlieb, the founder of the nation’s first diaper bank , Southern Arizona Community Diaper Bank.

Question: If the government can make cheese, subsidizeinfant formula, AND childcare to the poor, why can’t they contract with Seventh Generation or gDiapers to manufacture diapers and then subsidize?

What are your thoughts or insights on this?

Mother’s Day is May 10th

Do you know what you are getting that special mom for Mother’s Day?

Buy a mom-in-need a case of diapers, wipes, or tampons and we’ll email you a nifty Mother’s Day ecard you can give to that special mom in your life.

From now until midnight, May 8th, email us, helpamotherout (at) gmail (dot) com, your proof of purchase ($25 or more) off one of our administered Amazon wishlists ($25 ships FREE and DIRECT!), and we’ll send you a swell ecard to forward to your honoree.

SNAP to it, San Diego

Struggling families all around our state have it tough. Due to the recent surge in applicants, San Diego County officials are working on making the federally-funded food stamp, or SNAP, application process easier.

According to the San Diego Union-Tribune:

The supervisors’ letter to their board colleagues notes that a “tidal wave of applicants” has struck the county in recent months because of the recession and rising unemployment.

San Diego County has been the lowest-enrolled major metropolitan area in the country for years, signing up less than one-third of residents eligible for food stamps, a national study shows…

…Critics say San Diego County makes it unnecessarily difficult to apply for and collect food stamps, in part because caseloads are so high and recipients are reluctant to subject themselves to home searches.

County officials say the home calls are needed to prevent fraud and are conducted only when caseworkers suspect that applicants have mischaracterized their eligibility.

Per this article, the county recently laid off 29 county employees in February. Of those laid off, 18 worked at the agency in charge of food stamps.

When you have nowhere else to turn

During the economic boom homeless shelters across the state were already filled with people down on their luck. According to this article from the San Bernardino Sun, it was mostly singles and couples who needed the help. Every single day of this economic recession, we are seeing more and moremothers and their children who have nowhere else to go.

From the San Bernardino Sun:

SAN BERNARDINO – For much of the past year, Norma Banuelos and her three daughters have divided their time between a home fraught with domestic violence in Redondo Beach and small motel rooms in Montebello.Early this week, Banuelos drove her Honda Accord, piled high with her belongings, to the Salvation Army on Fifth Street with the hope of getting a meal, a roof over her head and a new start in life.

“I am desperate and scared,” she said as she sat near the emergency homeless shelter, holding her sleeping 6-month-old daughter in her arms. “All I want is to get situated and put my kids in school.”

 

The Banuelos family is one of an increasing number of destitute families showing up in recent months at the Salvation Army and other facilities that provide meals and shelter to the homeless in San Bernardino County.

These are scary times for many of us. The reality is, most of us have extended family, or a rainy day fund to fall back on if things got really tough.  Maybe we wouldn’t want to move in with the folks. Perhaps it would be a huge personal disappointment if we had to relocate our family out of the state. But it is still there as an extra security blanket.

California gets an F

Dear Sunny California,

Remedial action is necessary.

According to the National Center on Family Homelessness, California ranks #40 (*States ranked 1-50 1=best, 50=worst) in the State Report Card on Child Homelessness. You can read the full California state report here.

Out of the 2.2 million children living in poverty in our state, 292,624 are homeless. These are the current statistics; what about the invisible folks who aren’t otherwise accounted for (i.e., families who have become homeless as a result of the economic downturn)?

What’s more, California does not have a statewide Interagency Council on Homelessness, nor a 10 year plan to end homelessness that focuses on children and families.

Homeless in the heart of affluence

Homelessness is soaring in Marin County — California’s most affluent county — as agencies see 25 to 50 percent increases in requests for help. And it’s families who’re feeling the hit the most, according to SFGate.com:

Conroy, 54, is one of what many social service providers are calling the newly homeless – people who would never be destitute, without a place to live, if the national economy were not collapsing.

“Usually, with a lot of middle-income families, if you hit hard times, you just move out of the area,” said Diane Linn, director of the Ritter Center in San Rafael, one of Marin’s emergency aid agencies. “So seeing middle-class people come here – that’s big. It tells me things are very bad.

“We would have never seen this in the past.”

Thanks to foreclosures and job losses, even formerly upper middle-class folks are quickly tumbling into need, and social service agencies are having a hard time keeping up with demand.

Bubble by the bay?

According to this article in the SFGate.com today, San Francisco has not been as hard hit by the recession as other regions of the state. Unfortunately, the number of families on the waiting list for family shelters has increased:

Homeless advocates say they’ve seen plenty of anecdotal evidence that the economy is putting more people out of their homes. The waiting list for family shelters has increased from an average of 75 families in summer 2007 to about 165 families now, said Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness. She pointed out that many families don’t appear on homeless counts because they find temporary housing with friends or in hotels.

Friedenbach added that homeless drop-in centers – where people can take showers or stow items in lockers – regularly see more than 300 visitors a day, compared to about 200 before the recession started.

Anyone out there have any additional insights on San Francisco?

March, 2009 Articles of Interest

Tarp Nation – New American Media 3.29.09

California’s Own Hooverville, Circa 2009 – Mother Jones 3.26.09

Hidden homeless emerge as U.S. economy worsens – Reuters 3.26.09

Fighting Her Way Out Of Homelessness – CBS The Early Show 3.26.09

Cities Deal With a Surge in Shantytowns – New York Times 3.26.09

Schwarzenegger Opens California Fairgrounds to Homeless Camp – Bloomberg 3.25.09

Governor Praises Teamwork On ‘Tent City’ Plan – KCRA.com 3.25.09

Conditions deteriorating in west Valley towns – Fresno Bee 3.23.09

Crisis a challenge for census – Sydney Morning Herald 3.23.09

Blacks lose ground in job slump – Los Angeles Times 3.21.09

In Sacramento’s tent city, a torn economic fabric – Los Angeles Times 3.20.09

Sacramento may try to copy Ontario – Contra Costa Times 3.20.09

California “tent city” for homeless to be closed – Reuters 3.20.09

Some US Families, Victims of Financial Crisis, Move Into Low-Cost Motels – Voice of the America 3.19.09

Some feel burned as media spotlight falls on capital’s homeless camp – Sacramento Bee 3.19.09

Governor Tours Sacramento Homeless Camp – MSNBC 3.18.09

Sacramento and Its Riverside Tent City – New York Times 3.11.09

As Jobs Vanish, Motel Rooms Become Home – New York Times 3.10.09

Loaves & Fishes: Don’t Bring Food To Tent City – MSNBC 3.07.09

Pictured: The credit crunch tent city which has returned to haunt America – Daily Mail 3.06.09

Sarcramento struggles with spiralling homelessness problem – Telegraph.co.uk 3.06.09

Reusing Disposable Diapers

Came across this article on mom’s washing and reusing their disposable diapers:

Welcome to life in Mendota – the unemployment capital of California. With a 41% jobless rate, the town’s social fabric is tearing at the seams. Alcoholism and crime are on the rise. To save money, some mothers wash and re-use disposable diapers. Unemployed men with nothing to do wander the streets and sit on benches.

Does anyone else out there think there is some Terribly wrong with this picture?

Have You Found Parking?

I recently found this article from last summer by way of the LA Homeless Blog:

With numbers rising, New Beginnings, a homeless agency in Santa Barbara, California, has launched a Safe Parking Programme, aiming to provide a refuge of sorts for those who have nowhere to go other than their vehicle.

Guy Trevor lost his job as an interior designer when the market contracted, thanks to the mortgage foreclosure crisis.

With his furniture sold and his belongings in storage, he now lives in his car, spending the nights in one of the 12 gated parking lots in Santa Barbara run by New Beginnings.

“I see myself as a casualty of a perfect storm,” he said. “The people sleeping at the parking lot are very friendly. They’re just like me – they come from normal, everyday homes. I think a lot of people in this country don’t realise that they, too, are a couple of pay-cheques away from destitution.”

The Sacramento tent city is going to close!

I just got this article in my inbox and had to share. Wow. I guess all of the international media attention kicked the Sacramento city (and State) officials into shape. I had also been reading someblog posts about the environmental impacts the tent city was having on the river and open space. From my layperson perspective, I think this is all very good news. It is a shame that it takes an international airing out of our dirty laundry to make things happen.

It is also being unveiled that the tent city may not have been a bastion of “refugees of the recession” as had been depicted in the media. For me, it doesn’t change my mind that this area is still magnifying the economics of this crazy time and many families up there (not to take away from what families in the Bay Area are going through) are still in dire need of help. It is pretty incredible that St. John’s Shelter went from turning away an average of 20 women and children a night in 2007, to 240 people these days.

Cal-Expo or Bust

It looks like the Sacramento tent city residents will be moving to Cal-Expo (California State Fairgrounds).

From Bloomberg:

“Schwarzenegger said he ordered the state facility known as Cal-Expo to be used for three months to serve the 125 tent city residents, some of them displaced by the economic recession. The encampment may be shut down within a month, said Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson. The move comes after the Sacramento City Council last night agreed to spend $880,000 to expand homeless programs.”

Reuters reports on St. John’s Shelter

Hi. Please read this article. Even if you don’t live in Sacramento. Even if you don’t live in California.

Nearby St. John’s Shelter, which caters to women and children, has been running at or near capacity for months — filling roughly 100 beds a night — with a waiting list well over twice that long, case manager Kellie Dockendorf said.

This is up from the daily average of 80 women and children turned away in 2008. And getting in can take up to 45 days.

The mix of clientele is changing too, she said.

“We’re getting a lot more working people. We’re getting more people with education. We’re getting a lot more people who are working part-time or not getting enough hours to pay their bills,” she said.

Keysia Bell, 38, had made a living as a caregiver for the elderly until full-time work became harder to find.

After a period of paying to stay with friends or relatives for weeks or months at a time, then renting a house she could no longer afford, she ended up at St. John’s two months ago with her 17-year-old and 10-month-old daughters.

“I’m out of a job. I’m out of a place to stay. I have a baby daughter, and it all just became overwhelming,” she said.

Obama's Press Conference Tonight

Did you hear the press conference this evening? I caught part of it, and this part was extra juicy. So glad this issue is starting to gain momentum.

QUESTION: Thank you, Mr. President. A recent report found that as a result of the economic downturn, one in 50 children are now homeless in America. With shelters at full capacity, tent cities are sprouting up across the country.

In passing your stimulus package, you said that help was on the way, but what would you say to these families, especially children, who are sleeping under bridges and in tents across the country?

PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, the first thing I’d say is that I’m heartbroken that any child in America is homeless.

And the most important thing that I can do on their behalf is to make sure their parents have a job. And that’s why the recovery package said, as a first priority, how are we going to save or create 3.5 million jobs? How can we prevent layoffs for teachers and police officers? How can we make sure that we are investing in the infrastructure for the future that can put people back to work right away? How do we make sure that when people do lose their jobs, that their unemployment insurance is extended, that they can keep their health care?

So there are a whole host of steps that we’ve done to provide a cushion for folks who have fallen on very hard times and to try to spur immediate projects that can put people back to work.

Now, in the meantime, we’ve got to work very closely with the states to monitor and to help people who are still falling through the cracks.

And, you know, the homeless problem was bad even when the economy was good. Part of the change in attitudes that I want to see here in Washington and all across the country is a belief that it is not acceptable for children and families to be without a roof over their heads in a country as wealthy as ours. And so we’re going to be initiating a range of programs as well to deal with homelessness.

St. John’s Shelter

I received this lovely message from Twyla Teitzel, St. John’s volunteer coordinator, in my inbox. Twyla asked that I share with all of you. Twyla previously offered to come down here to talk to my group of friends about St. John’s. But since I can rarely get all my mamas in the same room, this is the next best thing!

  • *********************

from Twyla Teitzel
date Sat, Mar 21, 2009
subject RE: donations
mailed-by stjohnsshelter.org

Thank you so much for all you are doing for the women and children of St. John’s. I am so touched by the generosity and kindness that all of you have extended to your Sacramento neighbors. Words cannot express how you have touched and are helping to transform the lives of women and children.

Although I am a native of Sacramento, it was just over a year ago when one of my yoga students offered me a job at St. John’s. I did not even realize there was a homeless shelter in Sacramento. As a mother of two, you can imagine how challenging it is, yet how rewarding it is, to be able to help homeless children and their mothers.

St. John’s could not stay open if it wasn’t for the generosity and thoughtfulness of people like you.

Thank you so much. Please contact me anytime if you have any questions.

With gratitude,
Twyla Teitzel

Volunteer Services Coordinator
St. John’s Shelter
tteitzel@stjohnsshelter.org