Pubdate: Thu, 25 Dec 2014
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Copyright: 2014 Associated Press
Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/submissions/#1
Website: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388

DENVER SHELTERS SAY POT LEGALIZATION HAS LED TO INFLUX OF HOMELESS PEOPLE

DENVER (AP) - Chris Easterling was sick of relying on drug dealers in 
Minneapolis when he needed marijuana to help ease the pain of 
multiple sclerosis. They were flaky, often leaving the homeless man 
without the drug when he needed relief the most.

So he moved to Denver, where legal pot dispensaries are plentiful and 
accessible.

Easterling is among a growing number of homeless people who have 
recently come to Colorado seeking its legal marijuana and who now 
remain in the state and occupy beds in shelters, service providers say.

While no state agency records how many homeless people were drawn by 
legal weed, officials at homeless centers say the influx they are 
seeing is straining their ability to meet the needs of the increasing 
population.

"The older ones are coming for medical (marijuana); the younger ones 
are coming just because it's legal," said Brett Van Sickle, director 
of Denver's Salvation Army Crossroads Shelter, which has more than 
doubled its staff to accommodate the increase.

The shelter did an informal survey of the roughly 500 new 
out-of-towners who stayed there between July and September and found 
as many as 30 percent had relocated for pot, he said.

Shelters in some other parts of the state said they haven't noticed 
the problem or haven't surveyed their residents about it.

Colorado's homeless population and its marijuana dispensaries are 
both concentrated in Denver, which could be why shelters say they are 
experiencing a more noticeable rise.

Other factors could be driving the rising homeless rates. Colorado's 
economy is thriving, but the number of affordable homes and 
apartments is shrinking.

Julie Smith of Denver's Road Home, a city plan that aims to end 
homelessness, said the city's rising overall population could be a 
reason for an increase in the number of homeless people.

The city is eager to see the results of a study by Metropolitan State 
University of Denver's criminal justice and criminology department of 
issues related to legal marijuana, including any correlation between 
legal marijuana and rates of homelessness.

Many of those staying in shelters come to Denver with big plans and 
find they can't make ends meet, said Tom Luehrs, executive director 
of capital city's St. Francis Center.

The shelter has seen an increase from 730 people a day in 2013 to 780 
people this year, and as many as 300 new faces a month. Not all of 
them are pot smokers, Luehrs said, but many have said they were drawn 
to the state because of legal marijuana.

In Colorado, some out-of-town homeless people are seeking jobs in the 
marijuana industry but learn only after arriving that they lack the 
two-year residency requirement needed to work in a dispensary. Others 
have felony records that make them ineligible, Van Sickle said.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom