Wednesday, October 14, 2020

Maybe the City of Boston or the State of Massachusetts can sue the Pine Street Inn.

The Pine Street Inn farms homeless people out to others every day, while it takes all the credit, makes its supportive programming in the shelters skeletal, and rakes in millions of dollars that it spends on a few hundred units every few years of "permanent supportive housing," which is basically project-building financed, again, by others, with the end result being rent paid to the Pine Street Inn.  There are 6,000 homeless people in the Boston area from one year to the next; while their issues continue to be unaddressed, they present an endless supply of prospective tenants, on waiting lists, for Pine Street Inn housing.  

The Pine Street Inn throws everybody out the door every morning, from Monday through Saturday.  The nearby Whole Foods, for no additional money and with no recognition, babysits everybody with food stamps who doesn't go to the Women's Lunch Place or St. Francis House.

For a list of the services that the public assumes that the Pine Street Inn provides which it doesn't provide, please feel free to read my Twitter @HomelessUncensored.  It's my 2nd Twitter about homelessness; the first one was permanently deactivated by Twitter after someone at Metro Housing Boston tried to take away my Section 8 voucher and I told her that I was going to make her famous for it.