NO
RE: “Porno for Guidos” and “\m/>_<\m/” [Film, Sept 25], in which author Zac Pennington reviews the films Don Jon and Metallica: Through the Never, respectively.
ZAC PENNINGTONโPlease shut up.
Chrysanthemum
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BEGGING FOR RESPONSE
RE: “The Millionaire Panhandler” [Feature, Sept 25], in which author Joe Streckert surveyed 50 people whose primary source of income is panhandling on the streets of Portland.
HELLO PORTLAND MERCURY AND JOE [STRECKERT]โMy name is Ledena, I’m a street outreach worker at JOIN, and I wanted to write to say thank you so much for the way you handled the “myths and facts” about flagging for income and panhandling in Portland. I saw the cover of the Mercury this morning after doing outreach and was about to blow a gasket until I read Joe’s article. With the recent coverage of Portland’s homeless and the regime change over to Charlie Hales, I was super happy to see something like this, refuting the pretty overwhelming and mythical judgments of how much money people make on the streets and why they do it.
Ledenaย
JOE [STRECKERT]โI wanted to send a quick note to congratulate you on your article. You did an excellent job assuring the voices of people living in very desperate situations were represented in the article. I really appreciate this aspect of your writing. Thanks for tackling this “thorny” subject with a keen focus on dignity and respect. Please let me know if there is any way I can support your efforts.
Wayne Centrone, Center for Social Innovation
Having been a transient homeless person in Portland (more specifically, a dirty kid in Portland), I can say most assuredly people are not generous in Portland. Anywhere you go. Some of the best spots still only yield $60 on the best day, panhandling for 10-plus hours (both sidewalk and off-ramp). It’s true that it’s really pretty much impossible to determine an accurate portrayal of homeless “income” as some cities love travelers and consistently give us $20 bills, and others (read: every single city on the West Coast) are liable to give you closer to $0.36. And that, again, depends on the day, the weather, the people who drive or walk past you, etc. I’ve been in some cities and towns where one day I’ll make $120 in under three hours, and then not make another $10 for the next four days. It’s not really quantifiable. It isn’t even really understandable unless you’re actually out there and know the city, the places to fly [signs], the ways people respond to your signs, the days people are more likely to give you cash, so on and so forth. Even if you are making $80-100 a day, you have no bank account, you have no reasonable way to save money; you probably want to rent a hotel room, watch some TV, take a four-hour shower, and drink some decent whiskey. Y’all can be as academic as you want about it, but you’re still ultimately clueless to the reality of homelessness. No sass, just saying, sociology degrees only take you so far.
posted by catsunicorns
I work at Powell’s City of Books and spend a lot of time traversing the adjacent blocks, and I get hit up for cash INCESSANTLY. Just today while waiting for my lunch at the food carts on SW 10th, I was asked for money three times by three different people in the span of five minutes. It was astounding, for lack of a better word. I’ve definitely noticed an uptick in panhandling in general, but there are days when it feels like every third person on the sidewalk wants something from me. In my estimation, the problem is out of control. If it weren’t for my job, I would seldom if ever go downtown. Don’t get me wrong; I have empathy for people on the street, but it’s easy to feel overwhelmed to the point of indifference. I’m not sure what the solution is, but nonetheless it’s good to see a conversation happening around this issue.
Posted by foxtrot
CONGRATULATIONS TO FOXTROT for sharing… and caring. Foxtrot wins this week’s Mercury letter prize, with two tickets to the Laurelhurst Theater, where one can observe a broad spectrum of human experience.

There really are only a few hotspots for panhandlers that aren’t in roadways. Besides Powell’s/north Park blocks and Pioneer Square area, what other ones are there?
If you work in or around one of the hotspots, of course you think it’s a big issue, but few others see it much. I got tired of it too, when I worked near Pioneer Square, but I hated the path-blocking, aggressively friendly canvasser kids far, far more.
I would suggest if begging for money doesn’t pay enough, go out there and get a job and pay taxes like the rest of us.
catsunicorns, please stop describing the money that people give you as something you have “made”. It is pretty clear that you do not “make” anything, with the exception of the occasional semi-solid bm.
catsunicorns if the average homeless person gets $30 a day as you point out, that’s over 10k of tax free money a year. if the homeless are making $80-100 a day, that’s over 30k of tax free money a year. WHY THE FUCK ARE THEY STILL FUCKING HOMELESS? That is more than the average single mom makes per year. That’s about $14 dollars an hour.
This is why it is never going to go away, i get it. Cause if i asked you for 30k of tax free money, and you gave it to me, I would not give it back to you and be like “just kidding”.