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S.F. Hosing Authority 

City government promised Katrina victims a haven, then it gave some of them the shaft

Wednesday, Oct 19 2005
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Page 3 of 3

Huntley made repeated rounds of various government and nonprofit agencies, only to receive vague promises, recorded answering-machine messages, and lots of disappointment.

"Basically, everybody's been handing out [business] cards and saying, 'Contact me. Contact me.' And then I can't get through to anybody. I've been handed so many cards that I could make a house with them."

With Jones' help Huntley finally connected with Bethel AME Church, which has for three decades operated a subsidized housing program for local poor people.

"To date we have been able to provide housing for five families," the Rev. Boyd says. "Members of the congregation have provided elements for housekeeping -- linen, towels, bathroom implements, and the like. They've provided clothing. They've taken a delight in responding to them, because that's what churches do."

Boyd also says that he's cooperating with KIPP, a charter school chain financed by Gap Inc. founder Don Fisher, to place Katrina evacuee children. By last week, the chain's Bayview school had placed a fifth- and a sixth-grader, says KIPP Foundation spokesman Steve Mancini. Meanwhile, an S.F. Unified School District spokeswoman explains that the SFUSD has enrolled 41 students across 21 different schools, all of them victims of Hurricane Katrina.

I applaud the efforts of Boyd and retired magnate Fisher. But I don't believe it was necessary for families such as the Huntleys to sit for weeks in a flophouse room wondering if they would end up on the street. I think it was wrong for our mayor to falsely suggest that the city had launched a coordinated effort to help Katrina victims. I'm saddened that San Francisco -- the city that opinion polls show most values government's role in protecting citizens from disaster, children from homelessness, and the disadvantaged from despair -- would so totally fail at aiding Katrina victims as to put those values in doubt.

About The Author

Matt Smith

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