
(Image source from: Time)
Denver officials have eliminated sizeable outdoor storage containers set up earlier this year for homeless people after finding that people were living inside them.
The city paid $30,000 for 10 4-by-6-foot (1-by-2-meter) containers meant to give homeless people a secure place to store clothing and other possessions.
But now, the city decided to do away with the containers since people were staying in the unventilated units all the time, Chris Conner, director of the city's Denver Road Home homelessness agency, told The Denver Post.
Some units near the Denver Rescue Mission shelter and facilities run by other nonprofit groups serving the homeless were damaged and vandalized and there were unconfirmed reports of narcotics sales and allegations of prostitution inside the containers, Conner said.
"There was a feeling that they had crossed a threshold and were making the area less stable and safe for people," Conner said.
Homeless advocate Ray Lyall said he was not surprised by people living in the containers.
"If it's cold, it's wet, I'd have slept in those things, too," he said. "I can't blame them for that."
The city is talking to a nonprofit group about moving the containers to another location that would likely be gated and only available to homeless people who are seeking jobs, Conner said.
Nonprofit groups and at least one business offer lockers for homeless people to use, some of them funded by the city. But they tend to be smaller and usually require people to check in with staffers before accessing them.
The eating house Sexy Pizza has four school-style lockers for roofless people outside its location near downtown Denver. Kayvan Khalatbari, a mayoral candidate who holds a stake in the business, said having the lockers in a residential area appears to have aided.
"You have more eyes on these around the day," he said. "We haven't had a single issue in almost a year that these have been installed."
By Sowmya Sangam