There's the crisis on Wall Street, the economic downturn on Main Street, and then there's Rice Street in St. Paul, where Darren Beckom used to live.
Beckom, 45, lost his house in the 1200 block to foreclosure in September. Now he is homeless.
He was one of about 2,000 poor and homeless people seeking help Monday at Project Homeless Connect, a semi-annual event at the Minneapolis Convention Center that brings together a huge range of service providers, from medical to legal to housing organizations. The event is sponsored by Hennepin County and the city of Minneapolis. This is the sixth Project Homeless Connect event since 2005
"It is always kind of upsetting because there's never enough help," said Penny Cantazaro, who sat behind a table in one section of the Convention Center and fielded a continual stream of inquiries from homeless people who were looking for a place to stay other than a homeless shelter. "It's only gotten worse since the foreclosure problem," she said. She is an outreach specialist for HousingLink, which lists affordable housing on its website.
The number of families in Hennepin County shelters totaled 880 in the first seven months of 2008, up 25 percent from the same period last year, said Cathy ten Broeke, coordinator of the Office to End Homelessness in Minneapolis and Hennepin County, which puts on Project Homeless Connect. She blames the increase on the worsening economy, including the rise in unemployment and the surge of foreclosures. She said 10 percent of the families in local shelters were victims of foreclosures, most of them renters whose landlords lost buildings to foreclosures.
"Making matters worse, families who were foreclosed on are now flooding the rental market, tightening up vacancies and increasing rents," she said. "The lowest-income families and individuals just can't compete."
Running out of options
Beckom said he was unable to pay his subprime mortgage after he was laid off from his job. His wife and kids have moved to her mother's house in Illinois and Beckom lives at the House of Charity in Minneapolis while he looks for work.