Because No One Plans to Be Homeless

 

Hi,  Book Scan readers. I spent the first part of last week hanging out with  community planners at the American Planning Association’s national  conference. Though I haven’t read the book described below, I thought  the author (who gave the closing keynote at the conference) had some  beautiful thoughts on home ownership that real estate professionals  would appreciate. Enjoy! —MW

Early  Pearl has a great idea for dealing with an intractable problem. As a  homeless 11-year old Chicagoan, she sees all of the sturdy housing stock  that stands empty and abandoned in her south side neighborhood and  decides to take action.

From the cover of Blue Balliett’s new book, Hold Fast

She  gets some friends together and, with a few cameras, they snap  pictures of these empty houses. They send the pictures—along with their  imaginings of how the structures could be transformed into dream homes  for kids without anywhere to live—to community leaders in an effort to  spark a change in their unfortunate circumstances.

Early is only a character in Blue Balliett’s newest mystery novel, Hold Fast (Scholastic Press, 2013). But there are more than 30,000 kids in  Chicago alone who are homeless just like she is, and some 16,000 vacant  properties like the ones that Early dreams of inhabiting.

“Kids  will easily share their dreams about a home,” Balliett said in her  keynote speech at the American Planning Association’s national  conference last week. “They never make small plans.”

Balliett,  a bestselling author of young adult literature, told planners that she  came up with the idea for Hold Fast during the housing downturn, when she  noticed a dearth of news stories about the effect foreclosures were having on her target  audience.

“The  children were invisible,” she said. “I kept wondering about the kids:  Who are they and what does it feel like to grow up without a front  door?”

Of  course, community planners, writers, and nonprofit directors know as  well as real estate professionals the value of home when it  comes to children.

“What  kids need most is stability in their lives and a home provides that…  Blue’s book really captured that,” said Chicago Coalition for the  Homeless Executive Director Ed Shurna, who spoke on a panel alongside  Balliett at the closing keynote of the APA conference. “The danger is  that they are going to stay homeless as adults.”

W.  Paul Farmer, executive director and CEO of the APA, called on members to devote more of their attention to this  difficult problem.

“As  we have become arguably the best-housed nation in the world… we have  allowed ourselves to not realize that we have these problems,” Farmer said. “These are, in fact,  invisible to many people in the country.”

In a brief Q&A period, attendees asked panelists  what they could do to help solve the issue in their local communities.

“Part  of the key is to make your community care and take ownership in this  problem,” Balliett responded. “Become determined to do something.”

Meg White

Meg White is the multimedia web producer for REALTOR® Magazine and administrator of the magazine’s Weekly Book Scan blog. Contact her at mwhite[at]realtors.org.

 

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