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A homeless woman got an apartment. Then came conflicts with neighbors
Posted on 4/25/24 at 1:50 pm
Posted on 4/25/24 at 1:50 pm
shocker. can we not admit that the majority of these losers are just shitty people?
A homeless woman got an apartment. Then came conflicts with neighbors.
In 2021, Staci Jameson had been living in a tent when she received what thousands of homeless people in D.C. desperately need: a housing voucher. She landed a one-bedroom apartment in an upscale building downtown, with rent fully paid each month by the government.
But Jameson, a 38-year-old mother of three with a history of heroin addiction, was soon accused of threatening staff, undressing in the lobby and rubbing her backside against a police officer responding to a complaint about her, according to police records and evidence presented in court. So in 2022, her landlord, Borger Management, launched the legal process to get Jameson out of the building.
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Almost two years later, the case is still winding its way through landlord-tenant court, and Jameson is still living in the building. The case illustrates the myriad challenges that come after unhoused people are given a place to live, as well as the mental health and other support that is often needed to help them succeed.
LINK
A homeless woman got an apartment. Then came conflicts with neighbors.
In 2021, Staci Jameson had been living in a tent when she received what thousands of homeless people in D.C. desperately need: a housing voucher. She landed a one-bedroom apartment in an upscale building downtown, with rent fully paid each month by the government.
But Jameson, a 38-year-old mother of three with a history of heroin addiction, was soon accused of threatening staff, undressing in the lobby and rubbing her backside against a police officer responding to a complaint about her, according to police records and evidence presented in court. So in 2022, her landlord, Borger Management, launched the legal process to get Jameson out of the building.
Embroidered Custom Patches - Proof Before You Pay
www.custompatchfactory.com/Embroidered/Patches
Embroidered Custom Patches - Proof Before You Pay
Ad
Almost two years later, the case is still winding its way through landlord-tenant court, and Jameson is still living in the building. The case illustrates the myriad challenges that come after unhoused people are given a place to live, as well as the mental health and other support that is often needed to help them succeed.
LINK
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