Thursday, June 18, 2009

Homeless Woman's Death Outside Shelter Stirs Questions

Woman's Death Outside Shelter Stirs Questions

Friends Say She Was Rejected Because of AIDS Complications; City Disputes Account


By Petula Dvorak and Yamiche Alcindor
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, June 18, 2009

Renee Paige died waiting.

She sat on the green, metal bench outside a D.C. homeless shelter last week, waiting for permanent housing, waiting for the bad spells of her full-blown AIDS to pass, waiting for the rain to stop and waiting for a spot in the shelter, her friends said.

She died in the evening June 7, sitting up on her bench outside the nonprofit Community for Creative Non-Violence, at Second and D streets NW.

Paige, 50, was buried yesterday after dozens of her friends and family members heard her eulogized at True Gospel Tabernacle Baptist Church in Southeast Washington. Many remembered her as a giving person who was a holiday bell ringer for the Salvation Army.

Keena Stewart, 52, met Paige 15 years ago while they lived in the same apartment complex. She said Paige often cooked up large pots of soup and invited neighbors to join her for dinner. For fun, Paige rearranged the furniture and danced around the living room to her favorite songs.

"She was used to having her own," Stewart said. Before her illness stopped her from working, Paige provided for herself and her two daughters, Tamisha and Ashley.

Eric Sheptock, an advocate for the homeless, said Paige's death should illustrate the problems facing the city's homeless. "She got failed by the system," he said.

Accounts varied of how she came to be outside a shelter the night she died.

"They kicked her out of the shelter. They put her out because she couldn't keep herself clean, her bowels and so forth, because of her AIDS," said Tamela Bowens, 46, a friend of Paige's who helped arrange a memorial service for Paige on June 8.

"Now that the pain is over, she's in a better place. She's warm now," one of the homeless women who shared a bench with Paige said at the makeshift service last week.

Another woman added: "And dry."

According to the data on shelter availability compiled nightly by the Community Partnership for the Prevention of Homelessness, the 100 beds available in emergency shelters for women were all filled the night of June 7, when Paige died.


But city officials said she wasn't kicked out of the shelter. "On this particular night, she just decided to sleep outside," said Mafara Hobson, spokeswoman for Mayor Adrian M. Fenty (D).

"Apparently, when the weather is nice, there is a drop in shelter check-ins."

But three weeks before she died, in Street Sense, the newspaper written primarily by homeless people about homeless issues, Paige said she had been without a place to stay even when the weather wasn't so nice.

"I was out in the rain last night. I have full blown AIDS. I just got out of the hospital," Paige told Street Sense, in a story about the city's spending on services for the homeless.

Her wolf calls of "Ahh-ooo" to passersby, the bits of food and furtive nips of drink she shared with her fellow sidewalk denizens, and her relentless thumbing through the popular self-help book "The Seat of the Soul" became a common sight at the corner, where she camped out, rain or shine, for weeks, friends said.

The interim deputy director of the shelter, Bernard Robinson, said he is "done talking about" Paige.

Robinson said he is frustrated that Paige's friends said she was turned away from the shelter because of her illness. "We have people with AIDS here right now," he said.

But he would not elaborate on the reasons Paige was sitting outside on a bench, with a canopy of several umbrellas and tarps covering her through the late spring's heaviest rains.

Paige was quite vocal about her medical condition and her frustration with not getting shelter when she spoke up at a community meeting in April about emergency shelters, said Mary Ann Luby, with the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless.

She was hospitalized twice for pneumonia before her death, Luby said.

Last year, Stewart visited Paige in the hospital.

"I grabbed her and told her everything would be okay," she said.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

The real failure lies with the greedy, robotic, Nazi insurance companies who, despite consistently racking up enormous profits, routinely make decisions to discharge patients from the hospital into precarious circumstances. The insurance companies pass the buck to hospital social workers, whose hands are tied. They are given the impossible task of locating an appropriate placement within the slim time frame allowed by the monolithic insurance criminals. Hospital social workers in turn pass the buck to those agencies that work to find housing for homeless individuals, a preponderance of whom also suffer from some form of mental illness, which can complicate finding an appropriate placement match. The key to effectively addressing atrocities like this is to revise the criteria that are used for discharging homeless people who have presented to the hospital for medical or mental health emergencies. Too often the current system leads to them being patched up and/or medicated and sent back to the streets or to a shelter that is almost certain to be ill-equipped to address the person's needs. Insurance companies are the culprits. They squeal from a pin prick while they systematically "dismember" their victim-clients.

Vonni Media Mogul - Javonni Brustow said...

That is just so sad.. No one ever wants to see something like that happen or even imagine that being them.