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Homeless Students Hurting for Housing

SBCC offers little help to homeless students

Bethany Hopkins

Issue date: 2/1/06 Section: Features
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Nina Valdez held a job and kept a 3.0 grade point average while living in her car.
Media Credit: Ian Vorster
Nina Valdez held a job and kept a 3.0 grade point average while living in her car.

Nina Valdez sits in her burgundy Plymouth, props her book against the steering wheel and turns on the car's small interior light. She is demonstrating how she used to study.
Valdez said she would always stay in the driver's seat because it seemed safer than the back.
"I kept a knife…just in case," Valdez said. For two months, her only home was a 1989 Plymouth Reliant K. Valdez came to City College from St. Louis, but her housing arrangement fell through the first week of the Fall 2004 semester.
Mark Egle knows a thing or two about trying to find a place to live. After a spontaneous decision to move down to City College from the Bay Area last week, all he as in Santa Barbara is a friend's couch. His solutionĀ­-standing outside of the Campus Center, wearing a bright pink sign around his neck that read "I need housing."
"It cuts out the middle man," Egle said. "I got two numbers after 10 minutes." He tried using the school's housing boards and national web sites, like craigslist, without success.
When it comes to finding a home, students are mostly on their own. "There's not really a lot out there for [homeless] students," Valdez said.
Carly Harrod, street outreach coordinator for Noah's Anchorage YMCA Youth Shelter, agrees "Santa Barbara is a very expensive city." Harrod has worked with City College students before, but Noah's Anchorage can only allow those who are under 18 to stay at the shelter.
Santa Barbara has no shelter for college-aged adults, and most 18 to 25-year-olds aren't ready for what they encounter in adult shelters. "There's mental illness, drug abuse," Harrod said. "It's scary to them."
Valdez avoided shelters for those very reasons. A few of the homeless verbally harassed her if they saw her sleeping in her car. "That's really scary," she said. "I'd get up at 5 o'clock in the morning to drive [to City College], so I knew I was in a safe place," she said.
Although she felt safe here, Valdez did not find the solution to her problem on campus. Even programs like Extended Opportunity Programs and Services only helps if students have specific requests.
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Winston Griffin

posted 11/21/09 @ 11:13 AM PST

Im a homeless college student myself and I know how hard it is to do the neccesary things to succeed. Ive been homeless since I was 16 and for 3yrs I haven't found the help I needed to succeed. (Continued…)

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