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Amazon To Build Homeless Shelter In Its New Seattle Headquarters (cnn.com) 238

Amazon is trying to do its part to help the homelessness problem in its hometown of Seattle. The company announced on Wednesday that it would donate more than 47,000 square feet of space within its newest Seattle headquarters building as a permanent location to house homeless people. CNNMoney reports: "Mary's Place does incredible, life-saving work every day for women, children, and families experiencing homelessness in the Seattle community," Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos said in a statement. "We are lucky to count them as neighbors and thrilled to offer them a permanent home within our downtown Seattle headquarters." Amazon is partnering with local nonprofit Mary's Place to create 65 rooms, which will house more than 200 homeless people every night. The new Mary's Place shelter will open in early 2020. It will also have a resource center like those the nonprofit offers in North Seattle and White Center, where 40-plus local nonprofits and volunteers work with staff to help families obtain employment and permanent housing.
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Amazon To Build Homeless Shelter In Its New Seattle Headquarters

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  • by bazmail ( 764941 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @09:04AM (#54399023)
    5 hobos for the price of 3 (for opening day only). Or is Bezos using them as guinea pigs for manned missions?
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by LabRatty ( 96497 )

      It is their battery solution to compete with Tesla. Save us Neo.

    • He needs cheap workers that will work for pennies and be thankful for his next packing warehouse, now that outsourcing into Mexico isn't feasible anymore.

      • It may be a way of keeping a stock of human test subjects on hand. You never know when you'll need that.
        • Expendable human subjects that nobody would be missing if they vanish...

          Say, wasn't Bezos one of the guys that wanted to build a rocket to Mars?

        • . . .we do what we must, because we can. . . .
          For the good, of all of us. . .
          Well, the ones that own stock. . .

          Question is, when will Prime deliver via Amazon Science Portable Hand-held Portal Devices ???

      • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @11:12AM (#54399843)

        He needs cheap workers that will work for pennies and be thankful for his next packing warehouse, now that outsourcing into Mexico isn't feasible anymore.

        Based on what I've heard about how much Amazon pays, I think most of the people in the homeless shelter will be Amazon employees. If they were honest they'd call it Employee housing.

    • Elon Musk uses solar panels; Jeff Bezos is going to use meatbags as batteries. Seen too many Matrix movies.
  • by crafoo ( 591629 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @09:07AM (#54399043)

    "...life-saving work every day for women, children, and families experiencing homelessness..."

    Well, at least men got included as long as they support a family. Wouldn't want all of those useless, disposable freeloading homeless men taking up a shelter slot.

    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      This is going to be great, in 2020 - too bad it's 2017.

      • by Pieroxy ( 222434 )

        This is going to be great, in 2020 - too bad it's 2017.

        Agreed. How dare they take the necessary time to build something great.

        • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

          by Anonymous Coward

          They should have signed up for Prime before they ordered it.

      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        The shelter exists today, it's just in a temporary location (a hotel building that will eventually be demolished to build an Amazon building).

    • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @10:49AM (#54399695)

      The "homeless problem" in Seattle isn't really represented by transitory homeless, like are describe here, families with women and children, although certainly that does account for some percentage, of course. The bulk of the problem is a bit tougher to deal with: the perpetual homeless, mostly men (roughly 6:1 men/women ratio, with under 1% being minors, out of an estimated 10,000 pop, of which about half are "unsheltered" [homelessinfo.org]), many with some form of mental illness, and many with substance addictions. Unless we as a society decide that some people are unable to live responsibly on their own and should be institutionalized, we'll have permanent homeless. Even if you build free housing, you can't force someone to live there if they choose not to, for whatever reason.

      So for the past few decades we've been shuffling them around from temporary site to site. Or a few entrepreneurial homeless find little niches in a tent nestled in some bushes in an industrial park somewhere, and no one wants to try to kick them out for fear of getting knifed by a semi-crazy person (and because it's effectively a crime to evict them now). And my sister-in-law has to passes by a homeless man on her way to work who's sunning himself on a public lawn and masturbating to a magazine, and everyone else has a similar story. And on it goes.

      It's an ugly truth, and we've been kicking this can down the road for a generation now, because we're apparently too "compassionate" to institutionalize people that need it. Who knows... maybe it *is* more compassionate to let these people live as they want... If there were an easy answer, I suppose we've have already solved it.

      So, kudos to Amazon for being willing to help, I guess, but it's not going to put much of a dent in Seattle's larger homeless problem if they're only going to take homeless families. I certainly don't blame them for this, because few people want a large population of the "ugly" homeless housed near them. Seattle's government is really the only ones who have the authority to rectify the situation, and all they've done is to talk endlessly about the problem. A year or two ago the Seattle mayor declared some sort of "homeless state of emergency", but like a lot of things he does, it's more about political perception than actually getting everything done. So far, it seems like its been private charities [ugm.org] and organizations that have done the most and best work in helping these people.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Far too much truth telling in your post. Few will want to listen to it. There's a lot we could do for treatment, but it would have to be involuntary - and that is just not going to happen now. They either have to be willing to get treatment, or they have to be an immediate danger.

        The saddest part - is that the people who are able to get on government disability, end up being worse off because it just enables their addictions.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by swb ( 14022 )

        1. Setup large dormitory style structures with staff (social workers, mental health, etc) for homeless transitional housing.

        2. Vigorously enforce laws on trespass and vagrancy

        3. Give repeat offenders of #2 a choice to go the homeless shelter and get evaluated or go to jail for two weeks

        4. Create a separate section of the jail for homeless people, but make it more like boot camp. Mandatory wake times, showers, and labor.

        At the homeless shelter, screen for mental illness and commit people with serious ment

        • by Vairon ( 17314 )

          1. Where is the money going to come from to build and staff these large dormitory style structures? Unless there's a tax surplus, who or what will be taxed or fined to pay for it? If based on a fine, does the party have money for the fine and likely to pay it?
          2. Who is going to pay for the increased police, jails (food, bed, staff), lawyers for defendants, court costs, jury fees, etc if we more vigorously enforce misdemeanor trespass/vagrancy laws? Also in some cases police can't do more than tell vagrants

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          3. Give repeat offenders of #2 a choice to go the homeless shelter and get evaluated or go to jail for two weeks

          And now they're not homeless, at least for two weeks. Problem solved—maybe not in the way you intended....

          • by swb ( 14022 )

            I think the idea would be you'd decide to go to the homeless shelter or leave.

            I don't know any rational person who would choose to live in a restricted, boot-camp type of environment if their choices were leaving completely or a less restrictive and supportive environment.

      • This is actually all the more reason to target women and families in an attempt to get them away from the perpetual homelessness which is a much harder issue to tackle. Trying to do everything more often leads to failing at everything.
      • Most of the homeless, including the mentally ill, would be happy to live in free housing, otherwise they wouldn't be going to shelters. Let's not throw up our hands and say "There's nothing to be done for these people short of locking them up!"
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Wouldn't want all of those useless, disposable freeloading homeless men taking up a shelter slot.

      I think we can handle it.

      Men, at least stereotypically, have better survival skills and can live in a tent somewhere while they do temp construction work to afford a shitty apartment where they can then live while they get hired on full-time at a fast-food restaurant.

      Some men of course have mental illness and/or addiction and that is relevant.

      I think we need more money for men's rehabilitative services...well al

    • Mary's Place is a womens' shelter, so yeah you'd expect them to primarily mention women and their children.

  • Homeless Shelter (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SJ ( 13711 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @09:09AM (#54399059)

    Is that what they're calling employee housing nowadays?

    • Building a company town, owning the company store, paying your workforce in scrip... who doesn't dream of this?

  • Hmmmm (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 11, 2017 @09:10AM (#54399061)
    I wonder how many of its own employees will take advantage of this.
  • Or! Or! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 11, 2017 @09:16AM (#54399091)

    Amazon could pay a living wage!

    • Good one, if you got more bombs like that you have a stand-up program going. Maybe try to tie-in a routine around suggesting them paying their company taxes instead of stashing it away into tax havens.

  • So in other words (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Kokuyo ( 549451 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @09:20AM (#54399127) Journal

    As a homeless man you're only worth something if there's a family attached to you.

    Isn't male privilege great!

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Isn't male privilege great!

      Welcome to the oppression olympics!

      The point of equal opportunity is not to make sure everyone has an equally shitty life. The point is if there is a problem you try to fix it. That means if, hypothetically, you spot that women have been systematically discriminated against in tech jobs then you try to fix that. What you don't say is "oh that's OK because men have it worse here so it evens out". Likewise, if you spot that, hypothetically, men are more likely to be homeless, you tr

      • Troll (Score:3, Informative)

        by s.petry ( 762400 )

        Discriminating is not "equal opportunity" at all. When nationally 80% of the homeless population is men, having a program which discriminates against men is flat out evil. That you attempt to claim discrimination is fine because "bogey man" makes you evil.

        Real numbers show that gender discrimination is not a problem in the workplace. 61% of all college graduates are Women who are _CHOOSING_ not to go into STEM jobs. The graduation numbers have favored women for well over a decade, and were pretty close

        • Well look who's a fragile snowflake.You're so ready to take offence that you seem to jump at any opportunity, imagined or not. Here's a free clue: at no point did I say discrimination was OK. So... Well your entire outraged screed was based on something you invented rather than read.Kinda entertaining that you then accuse me of being impervious to reality. That's what I call ironic.

      • Re:So in other words (Score:5, Informative)

        by grasshoppa ( 657393 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @11:49AM (#54400139) Homepage

        The problem, and I think you missed this, is that no one is even trying to solve the male homeless problem. Instead we see shelter after shelter set up for women and children, who represent the minority of homeless.

        Homeless men have effectively been told they have no value to society UNLESS they are in service to a woman or a child.

        This, and literally hundreds of other things, is what goes through most men's minds when we're being lectured about our privilege.

        Hence, Kokuyo's joke.

      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        What you're missing is: no one gives a shit unless they have some compassion for the ones you claim are oppressed in some area. People who are themselves actually oppressed sometimes find that compassion hard to come by.

  • Aplaud the intent... (Score:4, Informative)

    by kenh ( 9056 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @09:23AM (#54399155) Homepage Journal

    Amazon is partnering with local nonprofit Mary's Place to create 65 rooms, which will house more than 200 homeless people every night. The new Mary's Place shelter will open in early 2020.

    But this will have no effect on the homeless population until 2020, how does this help the homeless community today?

    • by tsqr ( 808554 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @09:29AM (#54399201)

      Amazon is partnering with local nonprofit Mary's Place to create 65 rooms, which will house more than 200 homeless people every night. The new Mary's Place shelter will open in early 2020.

      But this will have no effect on the homeless population until 2020, how does this help the homeless community today?

      It doesn't, and it obviously isn't supposed to. But not to worry, there will probably still be homeless people in 2020.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      You can't reasonably everything anyone does to have an immediate effect on the entire population, and to do that instantaneously to boot.

      Now I worked in non-profits for many years, so I know that the closest thing you can do to that is to give a substantial amount of money to an organization that is already working in the field and has a reasonable plan for using that money. But what you don't see is that such gifts don't usually come out of the blue, they're the result of a process of courting that takes

    • It gives them something to look forward to.
    • It doesn't help today unless you expect the shelter to be built in the next few hours.

      Otherwise, Mary's Place's other locations are still around.

  • Amazon interns will have first hand work experience at packing homeless people into boxes for shipment as robots drag them off the streets.
  • 200 people every night? Like they have to stand in line every night to get a bed? This is one reason that all the temporary shelter solutions don't work. Every evening, the homeless have to stand in line for the chance at getting a place. And every morning they get tossed back out on the street. And maybe they don't get one, so they have to find a warm doorway quickly. Pretty soon they just say, "Fuck it. Not worth the trouble." And move back under the freeway where they can stake out a (relatively) permane

    • Re:Every night? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by bluefoxlucid ( 723572 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @10:49AM (#54399691) Homepage Journal

      I find it amusing that this comes to 235sqft per person, and I've taken flack for designing apartment microunits at 224sqft per single individual as part of a universal social security plan. People stopped arguing that it wasn't affordable and started arguing that I'm trying to shove people into prison cells or something (never mind that they're allowed to go anywhere outside)--to which I'd typically respond with something about cardboard boxes, bad weather, and food from dumpsters.

      People don't seem to care about making the lives of others better; they just want to win a moral victory so they feel good.

    • 200 people every night? Like they have to stand in line every night to get a bed? This is one reason that all the temporary shelter solutions don't work. Every evening, the homeless have to stand in line for the chance at getting a place. And every morning they get tossed back out on the street. And maybe they don't get one, so they have to find a warm doorway quickly. Pretty soon they just say, "Fuck it. Not worth the trouble." And move back under the freeway where they can stake out a (relatively) permanent campsite.

      I in no way admire or support ISIS in any way, they're scum of the earth. However, with that said, they treat their homeless better.

      ISIS consider it their responsibility to feed, house, and clothe anyone in their territory who is unable to do it themselves. They consider themselves religious bound.

      If you're homeless in ISIS territory, they give you a home. Granted, the home probably belonged to a previously homeless man who was used as a suicide bomber before you arrived and they'll probably pressure you

      • Maybe a better example is something like Catholic Charities. There are lots of religious organizations with the mission to help the poor. One problem with this is that decades ago, a good chunk of the wealthy were also highly religious and felt duty-bound to help out. More well-off people also lived in cities and saw on a daily basis what happens when you don't do something.

        These days, religion and charity seem to be more a domain of the poor, who have fewer resources to give. Most growth in Catholic parish

      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        ISIS consider it their responsibility to feed, house, and clothe anyone in their territory who is unable to do it themselves.

        But you know what they do with their booze/meth/heroin users? Seattle's streets would be cleaned up pretty quickly if we used the machete method. Heck, we'd make serious inroads into the problem if we just forgot to restock the Naloxone.

  • I sold my soul to the company store...

  • We call this an insane asylum. Let's see if Bezos can come up with a workable new way of running something like this. He might surprise us.

  • So that employees, customers and business contacts won't have to experience homeless people first hand.

    This is how NYC real estate developers have managed requirements for affordable housing when they build developments targeted at the wealthy. A small, separate entrance with its own elevator to the floors with the few affordable rentals in the building is part of the building.

    While I guess it's laudable to gesture by our e-commerce overlords, if they run the homeless people through an invisible side entra

  • by ErichTheRed ( 39327 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @10:49AM (#54399693)

    Most chronic homelessness is caused by mental illness and addictions. Instead of putting up shelters, why not spend a little extra and reopen public mental hospitals? Before the deinstitutionalization movement in the 70s, states had huge mental health treatment systems in place. Admittedly, part of that was because there was nothing that could be done to treat mental illness before the 50s and the only thing to do was to lock them away. But, we've seen that treatment isn't 100% effective, people relapse, they self-medicate with drugs and alcohol, etc. Why not operate facilities where people who need treatment can be placed until they're stable enough to actually live in the community?

    • Why not operate facilities where people who need treatment can be placed until they're stable enough to actually live in the community?

      Well, IIRC, a large part of that deinstitutionalization movement was because the courts decided that people can't normally be institutionalized against their will. Unless there is a crime involved, if they say they want to leave, they get to leave. Add in that the Republicans won't want to pay for it. So, now, they just walk and are homeless till they commit a crime and get jailed which is where most of those deinstitutionalized people went.

    • Because the ACLU legal cases that emptied the loony bins (before Reagan closed them) have not been reversed.

      And from a social POV that's good. The cost of homelessness is less than the cost of government locking up 'inconvenient people' with committal powers.

  • by HockeyPuck ( 141947 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @10:55AM (#54399733)

    This is great for the homeless population, but for those that aren't employed by high-tech. They just can't afford to live in Seattle anymore. Teachers, fire-fighters, police, food service workers, etc can't afford to pay $2000 for a 1bedroom apartment. What we all saw in SanFrancisco/Silicon Valley area, is happening in Seattle.

    Hope these high tech workers don't plan on having kids, there will be nobody to teach them. Maybe Amazon can buy Khan Academy and launch Amazon-School. "Alexa, teach my child to read."

    • That's why the light rail is being built. So that non-techies can live in Tukwila or Lynnwood and commute to their jobs in Seattle.
  • Megacorps (Score:4, Funny)

    by Fieryphoenix ( 1161565 ) on Thursday May 11, 2017 @11:48AM (#54400127)

    I have played too much Shadowrun to think this can be anything good.

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