From Salon:
After two months of sleeping in the Salvation Army Center of Hope
homeless shelter, Margaret Davis has had no luck finding an apartment
she can afford.
The 55-year-old grandmother receives about $750 a month from the
federal government. She's trying to live on just $50 cash and $150 in
food stamps each month so she can save enough for a place to call home.
Davis is homeless even though she receives funds from the
Supplemental Security Income program, a hard-to-get federal benefit that
was created nearly 50 years ago to lift out of poverty Americans who
are older, blind, or disabled.
Davis' job options are limited because she gets dialysis treatment three
times a week for kidney failure. As she prepared to spend another night
in the crowded shelter, she checked her phone to see whether a doctor
wanted her to have her left leg amputated. ...
Falling into homelessness is not a new issue for people who receive
supplemental income from the Social Security Administration. But moving
recipients out of shelters, crime-ridden motels, and tent encampments
and into stable housing has been getting harder, according to nonprofit
attorneys, advocates for people with disabilities, and academic
researchers. ...
"We are trapping people in a place where dignity is out of reach," said
Rebecca Vallas, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation, a progressive
think tank that conducts research on economic equity. "The program
started with good intentions," she said. "It is hard for me to see this
as anything but willful neglect." ...