Monday, April 2, 2012

TAMPA EPOCH - Street Stories by Warren Elly


VOLUME 1 ISSUE 5 - APRIL 2012
Street Stories
By Warren Elly








For the 15 years he’s patrolled Hillsborough County with a Sheriff’s star and a gun, Deputy Steve Donaldson had always dealt with the Homeless like every other bay area cop; he’d arrested the same folks, over and over on misdemeanor charges that had them released in hours. 

Revolving door justice, Donaldson says, solves nothing. “They just end up back on the street again, and it starts all over. It’s the never-ending cycle we’d become so used to. Well, after 15 years I finally realized there’s got to be another way to address the Homeless issue”. 

Everything changed for the veteran Deputy after the bad economy had put a panhandler on just about every corner of every major intersection in his Town ‘N Country Patrol District. In June of 2010, Donaldson’s Master Sergeant passed on his new assignment – find new ways to deal with the Homeless. The veteran Deputy knew what was needed but he really didn’t’ know how to do it.  

Donaldson’s idea, to get the Homeless a roof over their heads, sign them up for assistance, and them get jobs was named the ‘Homeless Initiative’, with a simple objective; “If can we help these people get off the streets, then we won’t have to deal with the problem”. 

From the start, Deputy Donaldson had no script, no detailed plan. Instead he hit the streets and started listening, working to earn trust in the scattered, but well wired Homeless community in his Town ‘N Country Patrol District.  It took some convincing before folks would believe he’d help them get off the streets and not just keep arresting them. “It’s like starting up a business; you plant seeds and see what will grow”.  It was a new and radical idea for the Sheriff’s Office, going from handcuffs to a hand up, but never a hand out. “They’ll have to bring something to the table, because nobody gets something for nothing in my book”, says Donaldson.

“When we first started we relied exclusively on public resources. It was a fairly simple idea; we’d pick people up see if they wanted assistance, giving them two choices. One I can help you get off the street, or two when you violate the law by camping or panhandling, we will arrest you repeatedly or we can help you and get you off the street”. 

It didn’t take long for Donaldson to prove he meant what he said, and word spread. “Once they realized we were offering legitimate help, they would say, I see where this is going to go, and they began to accept the offer of help”. 

The first strategy was to take the Homeless who wanted help to the Hillsborough Mental Health Center where they were assisted with housing, a resource that quickly ran out. “The alternative was to find our own resources, to cultivate our own type of jobs program our own type of housing initiatives and that kind of thing”. 

At a Saturday morning men’s church breakfast, Donaldson met a man who owned several homes that had fallen into disrepair. Because of the housing downturn, he couldn’t afford to fix them up. Thieves were breaking in, stealing air conditioning units and otherwise trashing the properties. Maybe, the owner asked the deputy, the homeless could use one of his houses. 

Suddenly Donaldson had a solution for two problems; how to secure vacant homes targeted by vandals, and how to get his Homeless clients off the streets. 

At the core of the idea is what many experts see as the only true first step to eliminating Homelessness; a strategy often talked about, but rarely enacted called ‘Housing First’.  “In order to rehabilitate, you need shelter. A lot of problems go away when people get a roof over their heads and some sort of supportive structure”.  

Using grant money and private donations from Home Depot among others, Donaldson paired Homeless people with construction skills or just a willingness to work hard with willing homeowners. Next thing he knew, the first home rehab project was coming together. 

Three men got a roof over their heads, so long as they were willing to work for it, and deputies would have one less vacant home to worry about in Town ‘N Country. Donaldson, keeping a close eye on the men, worked with the homeowner to let them live in the house for free in exchange for their labor. After six months of work on the house, they’d need to be searching for jobs and eventually start paying an affordable rent, like $50 a week.

One of the men, 45 year old Albert Swinger, told the Tampa Bay Times he’d been having trouble getting a job because would be employers would not look beyond his criminal past. Convicted of drug and property crimes, Swinger says “they think I’m still who I used to be”. Now, thanks to the joy of having a home, he and the others have the chance to prove they could support themselves and get off the streets. 

One of the key ingredients, Donaldson says, is to exploit what he calls the virtues of the uniform; he calls it ‘Street Engagement’. “A lot of miracles happen when it’s a uniformed patrol officer that does it. Because it’s what you least expect, it gets a lot of attention because typically law enforcement usually makes arrests, enforces the laws. We don’t normally solve problems like this. When they see officers solving problems from the ground up, everyone snaps their head at attention and everybody hears about it”.

Some proof came in early March when fellow deputies brought Donaldson into a shoplifting call. The 20-year-old woman in handcuffs had been homeless for 2 months after family issues got her kicked out of her parents’ home. Instead of going to jail, Donaldson took her home, where he mediated a settlement between the young woman and her parents that lead to her being welcomed back into the family. “Everybody needs a spokesperson everybody needs an intermediary if you need help. A street strategist. That’s what we do as well. I show up in uniform and I’m with a homeless person, I’m trying to help, then their case is much more legitimate now, its more likely that they will get the help… for sure”.

Deputy Steven Donaldson’s supervisors and fellow patrol deputies, even citizens, he says, have seen a remarkable transformation in Town ‘N Country. The panhandlers are gone. No more signs flying.
Among Deputy Donaldson’s other successes, Robert Rashford; now living in one of the rehab homes and paying the homeowner rent.  Rashford became one of the first to get a job, hired, the Sheriff’s office says, as an on-site Sales Representative with Mobile Auto Glass and Repair, the program’s first private sector employment partner. 

Street Engagement is an idea that’s spreading. Deputy Donaldson says he’s very encouraged and excited to be working with TPD Officer Dan MacDonald, the City’s newly assigned Homeless Liaison for Tampa Police. 

He’s also hoping the Hillsborough Sheriff’s Homeless Initiative and Street Engagement approach becomes a national solution to the Homelessness that’s still growing.

 
Deputy Steven Donaldson
Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office
District III Office: (813) 247-0330
Email: sdonalds@hcso.tamp.fl.us
Facebook.com/HelpCopsHelpUs

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