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Pat LaMarche

Pat LaMarche

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Hard Hearted Gainesville: "No Soup for You"

Posted: 01/31/11 08:57 PM ET

For more than a week, documentary filmmaker and homeless advocate, Diane Nilan and I have been winding our way through the southeastern United States speaking at universities, churches, and with civic groups discussing the need for new or expanded services for the homeless.

In many cases we've been screening her latest film, "On the Edge." Sometimes -- like when we showed the film at Tallahasse's Big Bend Homeless Coalition -- it's a dismal hour because the room's full of men, women and children who could have been featured in the show instead of just watching it. And when the homeless start to cry, it's not just empathy. They cry because, with slight variation, they're watching their own stories.

College students watch "On the Edge" from a different perspective. The students from the School of Social Work at Georgia Southern University echo the sentiments from rural northern Georgia and the Carolinas: there just aren't enough shelters and services for the ever increasing number of folks in dire need. And these "haves" are eager to help the "have-nots."

Then, we went to Gainesville.

We showed up around noon at the St. Francis House Soup Kitchen. We were greeted by about 10 fresh young faces at the food service line. Members of the University of Florida's Circle K club -- a division of Kiwanis International -- stood before full pans of food eager to feed the needy. Other than these volunteers, the room was empty. Poised with ladles in hand, they asked us to sign the numbered sheet so they could feed us.

It was noon time at a soup kitchen in a city of more than 120,000 people and there wasn't a person there eating.

We asked for the kitchen manager. Michael Robles came over and introduced himself. I said, "We hear there's a limit on how many people you can feed here at St. Francis." Robles confirmed that matter how much food he had, no matter how many nice kids volunteered to help, no matter how many hours he was willing to stay open, and no matter how many hungry people came to the door, the soup kitchen was not to feed more than 130 people.

About a year and a half ago, the Gainesville City Commissioners decided to enforce a decade old regulation that restricted St. Francis House from feeding more than 130 individuals at their soup kitchen. As frustrating as turning hungry people away when you have food can be; even more exasperating to Robles and the rest of the shelter staff is that "on the books" appears to be "off the books" and no city leader has ever produced proof of the regulation.

Still city commissioners enforce the rule and Robles is reminded that if he's feeds 131 people, his kitchen will be shut down and the single dad will be out of work.

Robles doesn't get it, "Because the shelter half of the building serves 280 people a day with showers, mail boxes, phones messages and hygiene products, we could probably feed 400." Robles estimates the higher number because folks don't have to be homeless to be hungry. "One of my toughest days, a mom came in with her two kids and we had already fed 128 people. I told her that she put us over the top. She said, 'Well, just feed my kids and I won't eat.' And that's what we had to do. We piled those two trays really high though." Robles smiled, "If the kids couldn't finish what they had, well I guess they took it home."

We stood in an overflowing food storage room. I asked why the city commissioners would so hardheartedly enforce such a ridiculous rule when there were plenty of hungry people and the soup kitchen had plenty of food. Rubles speculated, "It's about zoning." Once at the outskirts, St. Frances House is now in the heart of down town Gainesville; an anchor building surrounded by rundown workforce housing in an area only recently converted from septic systems to public sewer. Robles continued, "Developers want this area. Look across the street, they've built a dog park! They care more for their dogs to recreate than for the people to congregate."

The Gainesville Commissioners could change the law or suspend its enforcement. Or they could just continue letting people go hungry.

 
 
 
 
 
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Diane Nilan
traveling the country to give voice & visibility t
10:10 AM on 02/09/2011
I've created a petition to invite the wrath of Jon Stewart and The Daily Show to Gainesville. Please sign and share this: http://www.change.org/petitions/jon-stewart-take-on-gators-of-gainesville#comments
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ZENNEPHI
01:31 PM on 02/03/2011
The City fathers of Gainesville would gain blessings indeed, if those in need of sustanance and care
for physical, spiritual and a "Help Up", versus merely a Hand Out; could get it.

The rule {and a golden one at that} of Saint Benedict of Nursia is too"...Entreat all soules that come
to you, in the works of mankind, as if they were Jesus Christ, in the person..."
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Diane Nilan
traveling the country to give voice & visibility t
08:48 PM on 02/02/2011
This story is so outrageous! Here's my Change.org posts on this issue and a link to a petition that's driving the city leaders crazy: http://news.change.org/stories/homelessness-tour-day-7-the-out-of-reach-basics

Share wildly! It's helping!
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jAtkeison
Green Global Warming Campaigner
06:36 PM on 02/02/2011
The people of the South can be very generous and most of the time will do anything for their neighbors. Unfortunately there are also many who have taken up the attitudes of arrogance and smugness with regard to "their own kind." We know the costs that have ensued from such attitudes over the recent couple of centuries: everyone except the richest have suffered a reduction of life's possibilities, no matter what one's race, and many have suffered the loss of life itself.
Restrictions on simple human assistance have a hidden race code and a barely concealed class signature. Again, some of my fellow Southerners have declined the opportunity to be decent human beings. Again, it is the powerful who impose this "social norm" on the community at large.
03:05 PM on 02/02/2011
wow, quite a story. And all the food we in the USA throw away each day.
08:36 AM on 02/02/2011
If this were an animal shelter and they were withholding food from dogs and cats, there would be outrage. PETA/ HSUS would be be demonstrating/letter writing/phone calling and there would be a real potential for change. The shelter could even be charged for neglect. But homelessness and hunger in this country are hidden even ignored, our shame, for the richest nation in the world.
03:50 PM on 02/01/2011
Thank you for bringing some national attention to this issue. If you're interested in learning more about the meal limit controversy in Gainesville, check out the documentary film Civil Indigent, which profiles a local activist who is determined to get the limit repealed:

http://civilindigent.com/
08:06 AM on 02/01/2011
Sign the petition! Do something about it
http://www.change.org/petitions/demand_city_of_gainesville_fl_to_feed_all_who_are_hungry
06:05 AM on 02/01/2011
The continued destruction of American values.
09:21 PM on 01/31/2011
I'm sure that many, if not all, the Gainesville Commissioners go to church every Sunday, probably to one of those huge, multimillion-dollar churches, and they consider themselves to be very good Christians indeed. Typical.
09:53 PM on 01/31/2011
Actually, the entire commission is made up of self-described "progressive" Democrats, and the mayor is a secular liberal. Funny that the author neglected to mention that piece of information, which is why your stereotype fails. The bottom line is they are all doing the favor of a downtown developer (also a liberal Democrat) who has a vision for a revitalized downtown that doesn't have room for the poor and downtrodden. Lots of tax increment financing subsidies are going to his and other projects, and the politicians who voted for them cannot afford to have the homeless complicate this progressive "visioning." Of the seven, I believe only one is a regular church-goer.
11:28 PM on 01/31/2011
well Gator watcher i know the writer of this article is just tryiong to make evryone aware of the crazy rule .. I say build another soup kitchen and put it a bit out of downtown don't worry the hungry homeless peopel will walk there to eat theyhave no other choice...
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swabby01
08:37 AM on 02/01/2011
not all democrats are liberal or progressive and if what you say is true those democrats aren't either and we real liberals would not claim them. you can have 'em. real liberals don't let folks starve.