“It’s my passion—homelessness is what I’ve cared most about for decades,” says Kevin Fagan, whose new ebook, “The Lost and the Found,” takes a deep take a look at folks dwelling on the road and exhibits what compassionate motion can obtain.
Fagan, a multi-award-winning former reporter and editor on the San Francisco Chronicle, is aware of his topic effectively.
He has been homeless himself, as a teen from a financially struggling residence. Overlaying homelessness extensively over his decades-long profession, his tons of of articles embrace the much-talked-about 2003 sequence “The Shame of the City,” for which he lived on the streets for six months.
Launched on Feb. 11, “The Lost and the Found: A True Story of Homelessness, Found Family and Second Chances” (Atria/One Sign Publishers, 288 pages, $28.99) is a character-driven work exploring the entwined tragedies of homelessness and habit with statistics, insights and human tales. Fagan is talking about it at varied public occasions all through the area this month.
Kevin Fagan drew from his longtime stint as a reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle in writing his new ebook. (Courtesy (Atria/One Sign Publishers)
Two case research follow readers essentially the most. Rita, a former Florida seaside lady, had a heroin and cocaine habit that price her the custody of her kids. After arriving in San Francisco, Rita turned a well-recognized presence on “Homeless Island,” a triangular patch of concrete that’s virtually a personality itself.
“That was the most profound example of that kind of despair that I’ve ever seen,” says Fagan, of the now-demolished spot at South Van Ness Avenue and Mission Road the place a colony of unhoused folks lived, and panhandling and drug use thrived.
Tyson, who grew up in upscale Danville, most popular getting excessive and being the place the motion was to benefiting from greater schooling and profession alternatives. The streets of San Francisco have been an irresistible draw.
Tyson “knew that if you have to be homeless, there’s no better place than San Francisco,” the ebook says. “This is where the booze and the dope are plentiful, the cops are lax and the homeless culture is so widespread you can disappear into it.”
About 8,000 persons are homeless in San Francisco on any given night time, statistics present.
Fagan successfully follows Rita and Tyson’s journeys. Because of Fagan’s Chronicle tales, each have been reunited with their estranged households. One takes a heartbreaking flip, however each give homelessness a human face and comprise terrific hope and pleasure.
“I wanted the hope to come through,” Fagan says. “Hope is always important.”
Together with their tales, Fagan offers info and figures, an examination of causes for the homeless disaster, and the way it may be mounted. Poverty and financial inequality prime the listing of causes. Fagan traces the issue again to the Eighties when the Reagan administration brutally slashed funding for housing and social packages for poor folks. Higher housing, and extra of it, is important. Fagan disputes the notion that people who find themselves dwelling on the road wish to keep that approach.
“Homeless people do want a roof over their heads,” Fagan writes. “They just don’t want to be told what to do, when they can sleep and eat, or when, where and how they can feed their habits,” he provides, referring to guidelines enforced at conventional homeless shelters.
Fagan is in favor of navigation facilities—amenities with onsite social companies (together with job counseling and housing and medical referrals) that enable residents to be with their companions and pets. Whereas there’s no fast repair—it takes about two years for a longtime homeless particular person to simply accept assist—“nav centers” (there are about seven in San Francisco) typically attraction to chronically homeless folks, Fagan says.
Because the ebook covers points starting from tent camps to psychological sickness to the opioid disaster, Fagan additionally notes that Australia, New Zealand and England have higher homelessness insurance policies than the USA: “They have housing programs. There, you won’t end up living outside. They have national health care and better living wages.”
Fagan apparently states that San Francisco “gets a bad rap” in relation to coping with the difficulty: “San Francisco has some of the best practices in the country,” he says, citing methadone therapy, well being care and Homeward Sure, which helps unite folks dwelling on the streets with relations on the lookout for them.
“If we didn’t do the things we do in San Francisco, we’d see thousands more homeless people on the street,” he says.
Compassion, too, is essential, says Fagan, who condemns pressured removing of homeless folks from public locations.
“Just about every homeless advocate I know says that a step-up of sweeps is a terrible idea,” he says. “Police don’t really like harassing homeless people,” he provides. “Compassion ebbs and flows,” Fagan says. “Right now, there is compassion fatigue.”
Fagan, who retired from the Chronicle earlier this yr, continues to embrace the career.
“I was always attracted to journalism,” says Fagan, who, regardless of getting tossed out by his mom at age 16, “did OK. … I didn’t get addicted to drugs, I went to college,” provides Fagan, who praises his mother and father for the appreciation of the written phrase they instilled in him.
He continues, “As a journalist, I was taught to be objective: ‘Don’t get too friendly with your subjects. Keep your feelings out. But over the decades, I came to understand homelessness in a fairly deep way.”
Interviewing chronically homeless folks, he says, “You have to have a gentle, nonjudgmental conversation.” It’s important to current them as three-dimensional human beings: “They want to talk, it’s nice to be paid attention to. You need to listen.”
Fagan, who has coated serial killings, landmines, wildfires, the Columbine bloodbath and executions at San Quentin (he calls them “controlled” and “very weird”), admits, “So much that I write about is depressing.”
Train, meditation, and remedy are his strategies for stress reduction.
Kevin Fagan seems at 7 p.m. Feb. 19 at Mrs. Dalloway’s in Berkeley; 12:30 p.m. Feb. 22 on the Public Library in Mill Valley; 5:30 p.m. Feb. 27 on the Commonwealth Membership in San Francisco and 6 p.m. March 26 at Ebook Passage in Corte Madera. Go to kevinfaganwriter.com.