׉?ׁB!בCט V Vu׉׉	 7cassandra://lGjPIMi-QTJPvmQQPoMRaxibUDzzK9YTp35TS4Q48sw $9`׉	 7cassandra://1ivje245kgpqbDCMZ2CizDlQWGNN8i5UcwZhod5WlVAa`U׉	 7cassandra://oAt2qmnKYIUucUDCTgSO7CK3M7d__nCTULJxSBV6X7w%`̶ ׉	 7cassandra://IIZMVriZUIl0azf03X1jyYDbggcoDg8KxsNphWiCe9o ;͠_$%2i׈E_٘%2iyA׉ETOLEDO
STREETS
NEW SP APER
Issue 105
$1
One Dollar suggested donation.
Your donation directly benefi ts the vendor.
Please only buy from badged vendors.
Community Leaders Share
Their Concepts of the
Future
Ken Leslie, Claire McKenna, Julie
Hage-Welsh, Lauren Webber, and
Candace Bishop have something to
say.
Page 4
"I hope the entire
community will rise
again"
Tony Inglis, Executive Director
of INSP, our global street
newspaper network, shares
stories of hope for the future from
vendors around the world.
Page 8
INSPIRING HOPE • FOSTERING COMMUNITY • CULTIVATING CHANGE
Toledo Streets is a member of the International Network of Street Newspapers
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STREETS
NEW SP APER
3
4
6
7
p 12 Mural in New
TSN World HQ
I am a simple guy and
I like 'simple'.
Ken Leslie
p 4 Community Quotes
12
p 11 Metroparks
Toledo
14
Page 2
Puzzle Page
13
Photos of TSN World
Headquarters
While many of you were
shopping online for Christmas
presents, the TSN staff and
volunteers were busy getting
the new space ready for
service.
Director's Desk A look
back at the whirlwind of a
year for Toledo Streets.
11
8
About the cover: Art Director Ed Conn
imagines what a future Toledo might look
like under glass.
Glass City Future
This month’s theme is future
focused – joining in the ritualistic
tradition of reviewing the
past year and looking forward
to the new year.
Community Leaders Ken
Leslie, Claire McKenna, Julie
Hage-Welsh, Lauren Webber,
and Candace Bishop have
something to say about the
future of Toledo.
"The system is failing all
the families that really
need it" How the threat
of eviction has perpetuated
health inequity and racial
injustice during the pandemic.
Reading for the Future
While nobody can totally
predict the future, we can rely
on trends, data, and maybe
a little bit of speculation to
forecast where we might be
headed.
"I hope the entire
community will rise
again." Tony Inglis,
Executive Director of INSP,
our global street newspaper
network, shares stories of
hope for the future from
vendors around the world.
Metroparks Toledo
Showcases the Future
of Urban Open Spaces
Metroparks Toledo won the
coveted National Gold Plaque
Award for outstanding parks.
Glass City Park shows we are
not resting on our laurels.
׉	 7cassandra://TgixECxIbwUpphcJW3Ygo7wI130ljdPlwvl5ulL3KhE%`̶ _٘%2iyC׉E*Glass City Future
Future Focused - Arika Michaelis
This month’s theme is future focused – joining in the ritualistic
tradition of reviewing the past year and looking forward to
the new year. Every January people all over the world set New
Year’s resolutions with real hope of pursuing their new, focused
goals. There is something so inspiring in the hopefulness and
drive people engage while envisioning the next twelve months of
their life.
This year seems unique. If 2020 taught us anything, it is that our
plans can quickly be derailed and, nonetheless, time ticks on.
This past year also showed us that the decisions each of us make,
no matter how seemingly insignifi cant, can have an impact on
all the people around us. Considering this and the many other
lessons 2020 brought, it’s apparent that 2021 will be different.
Looking forward to a year with so much uncertainty can feel
intimidating. We are still unsure when we can enjoy the warm
togetherness of friends, family and communities we haven’t seen
for a while. School, work, going to the gym and dining out all
look vastly different from last January and we don’t have a clue
if anything will return to how it was. We can’t pretend to be sure.
But we can still be future focused. 2020 has given us the ability
to look beyond our normal.
What can we be certain about in 2021? We have the power to
shape the time we spend this year. Hopefully we’re learned that
even if our plans are derailed, we can stay focused on our goals
for the future. We are looking forward, moving forward, whether
we like it or not. So set your intentions with lofty goals or
more practical ones. Set them so that you have something to be
laser-focused on while the world is ever changing in your peripheral.
2020 may have kicked our butts, but we have experienced
outstanding growth as individuals and as a society. We have
evolved into being able to face 2021, whatever it may hold, with
determination and bravery.
The Buck Starts Here
Toledo Streets and its vendors are a powerful, community driven solution
to the problem of homelessness. Our vendors earn their way out of their
individual situations through a collaboration of journalism, local business
partners and their own hard work. Use these four steps to be a part of the
solution.
Meet
Vendors
Buy a
Paper
Get
Informed
Take
Action
• Vendors -- the people who sell the paper -- are at the
core of Toledo Streets' mission. Each year more than
70 indiviuals work as vendors with Toledo Streets. At
any given time, more than 25 vendors are at work, in
the rain, snow, or heat. Vendors play an active role in
the management of TS, meeting regularly to discuss
issues of concern and even serving on our board.
• With the money made selling the newspaper, vendors
are able to secure basic needs, independence
and dignity, and work toward obtaining housing.
Vendors buy papers for a quarter and sell them for a
$1, keeping all income and tips for each sale.
Toledo Streets tries to tie its editorial to three basic
principals:
• Inspiring Hope, Fostering Community, and Cultivating
Change. We are a member of INSP, our global
organization of street papers around the world
which provides us with content relevent to social
justice, homelessness, and street community around
the world.
• Donate to the organization and give vendors experiencing
homelessness and poverty a hand up. It
supports not only the paper but also issues throughout
NW Ohio.
• Volunteer your time and expertise and help the
organization grow.
• Share Toledo Streets with your network, and tell
people about the organization.
Page 3
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damn map, and just walk it and
you will be there.
Hope, Happiness and
Health in 2021
By Julia Hage-Welsh
Community Leaders
Share Their
Concepts of the
Future
Focused on the Future
Ken Leslie
The future just happened, just now.
When you started this article is
now in the past. When you were
One of the biggest secrets I have
learned in my life is there are
no secrets to success, none. No
matter the career there are already
roadmaps to success. These maps
with the directions have been
printed by those who have already
been where we want to go - and
they are available to us, for free.
Finding the roadmap to your future
really is that simple!!! And it
shows you every step you need to
take to get to YOUR future. You
just have to take the steps, that is
ALL! Period. Simply walking the
steps on your map. That is it. It’s
that simple.
going to read this article, it was
the future. Now you are reading it,
you are now in the present. But the
next paragraph is in the future.
Being in the present is where we
all live. Right now, in this sentence.
And many, so many wish
we were living in the past. But we
live in the now. Right now. But in
this right now, you can focus on
your future. What will it look like?
It will look like whatever the hell
you make it look like.
Seriously!
Page 4
I’m a simple guy, and I like ‘simple’.
So put another way: say you
want your future to consist of
getting a book from the library and
for you to be sitting at home reading
it tonight. That book WILL
be yours simply by following the
map to get there, and TAKING the
STEPS needed to get to the damn
library.
See, no secret, map to get you
there, you just need to take the
steps on the map. If you do not
take the steps, you ain’t getting
there, and no book for you. So
tonight, when the future comes
and you don’t have a book to read,
you can spend the rest of the night
whining about why you do not
have a book to read. That’s on you.
Bam, that’s it, that simple. For
real. So just focus on your future,
2020, a year once set with positive
anticipation, left most wishing to
fast forward and forget about it.
But, what if we think of what 2020
gave to us? It gave us the opportunity
to slow down, maybe spend
some extra isolated time with
family, to celebrate the little things
we have, and give kindness back
to a world that is living in strife.
There are many Americans who
have never been in a position to be
afraid to not have groceries, toilet
paper, or their next paycheck. For
many, 2020 opened the door to the
reality of sitting in this fear. There
are individuals that live in this fear
day in and day out. If nothing else,
I hope those who were met with
unexpected and unusual angst are
more thoughtful and empathetic to
those who struggle every day.
As a part of this fear of not having
essential items to survive, a
moment should also be taken to
think of those that live without the
essential item, security in survival.
The fear of being killed for
being who you are is a true fear
for some, a fear that is not only
unfair, but is somehow not questioned
by others. 2020 milestones
include the societal uprising of a
population that has been stifl ed
and muffl ed for too long. Having
the courage to stand up, speak up
and cause unrest means that we
are that much closer to change.
Without moments of unease and
discomfort, we cannot begin to
explore opportunities to learn and
grow.
So now what do we allow ourselves
to think about for 2021, this
future to come for all of us. Do we
think about the reclaimed opportunities
to travel, go to concerts, eat
out at restaurants, and just celebrate
big life events? Or do we begin
to celebrate the world around
us, the people we interact with,
and see the differences as beautiful
and not as something that hinders.
What if 2021 is our opportunity to
see things clearly, to not see age,
color, gender, ethnicity, societal
stature, political party, or other
adversity qualifi ers, but rather see
humans as humans. See humans
as individuals all going through
a unique struggle where we have
an opportunity to treat each other
with kindness, generosity, a helping
hand, a lending ear. Be present
to serve as assistance to others
rather than focusing on ourselves
and our needs fi rst. Give someone
else the last package of toilet paper
at the store, tip a little extra when
you order food out, go against
unconscious biases if you feel a
little less than wholehearted, think
about what others might be going
through and be an authentic, kind,
understanding human throughout
your day. We know 2020 wasn’t
what was expected, but through
our frustration, use what we
learned from 2020 to launch us
into 2021, where we have the opportunity
of a lifetime to rise from
the ashes, to think differently, to
act differently.
My Future, My Focus
By: Claire McKenna
I am sitting in our new offi ce as
I write for the fi rst issue of 2021,
which is fi ttingly a look towards
the future. But for me, you can’t
begin to have hopes for the future
without understanding the past.
It is staggering to think that by
the time you read this, I will have
worked for Toledo Streets Newspaper
for two years. Granted, this
is not a long time in the grand
scheme of things, but I initialFostering
Community
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work part-time while finishing
graduate school. Then, as the end
of my graduate degree came, I
couldn’t see my future without
TSN. I planned to stay a few more
months, but over and over again I
found myself unable to picture my
life without Toledo Streets Newspaper.
I
have realized that working here is
as much about helping the vendors
shape and imagine new futures as
it is about shaping mine. If you are
a loyal reader of the paper, you are
probably tired of me saying that
TSN has changed my life in ways
I could have never imagined. But
it has and it still does and I hope
to have it continue to do so in the
future.
Toledo Streets Newspaper is
action. Our staff and our vendors
don’t have the luxury of sitting
around hoping for goals and future
plans. We act. Not only are we
working to create a future filled
with less homelessness, but we
are working towards a future of
worthiness. A future in which we
all have a seat and a voice at the
proverbial table. A future that removes
the isolation, guilt, shame,
and loneliness that being without
creates. That is my future and my
focus. I am just lucky that I get
to work at a place where I get to
be part of creating that future one
increment, one moment of hope,
one paper sold at a time. And you
get to be a part of it too, maybe
without even knowing the brick
you laid in building our path to a
better future.
I could not tell you where I will
be a year from today. This job has
taught me that trying to predict the
unpredictable is not a good use
of my time. But what I do know?
We will continue. I will continue.
Vendors will continue. You will
continue. Continue to work towards
a future that we can all be a
part of.
Future Focused
By Lauren Webber
Have you ever heard this saying?
“The best time to plant an oak tree
is 50 years ago. The second-best
time to plant an oak tree is today.”
We can’t change the past, but we
can start to think about the future
today. When I think about my
future, financial security certainly
comes to mind today. There are
many questions to consider when
saving for your future. How much
money might I need every year to
live comfortably in retirement?
When do I want to retire? Will I
have excess savings to share with
my children or grandchildren?
Will I still be able to make a charitable
donation to Toledo Streets
Newspaper every year? These
questions can build up (compound,
if you will), and quickly become
overwhelming. This is where the
miracle of compounding interest
comes in to ease your troubled
mind and save the day! Compounding
interest is the idea of
earning interest on interest. Rule
of thumb to always remember: A
dollar saved today is worth more
than a dollar saved tomorrow.
Here’s an example of compounding
interest in action. Suzy Spender
loves to live in the moment.
Suzy is not thinking about her life
30 years from now. Instead, she’s
online shopping every paycheck,
treating herself to five-dollar gourmet
coffees twice a day, and trading
in her vehicle for the newest
model every year. Over the next
two decades, Suzy becomes more
successful at work, but her spending
tendencies have remained the
same, and she has not contributed
to a retirement account. Suzy
realizes she should start to catchup
her savings, so she contributes
about as much as she can per year
for ten years. For Suzy, this means
foregoing that second vacation
home she had her eye on and
adding $1,000 per month to her
retirement for the next ten years.
After ten years of future-focused
living, Suzy will have personally
contributed $120,000 to her retirement
account. Let’s assume she
earns an interest rate of 8%. At
the end of 10 years, Suzy will have
about $183,000, so she has earned
$63,000 on her retirement. Sounds
good right? Well, wait until you
hear about Prudent Penny.
Prudent Penny is just getting her
career started. She packs her
lunch for work every day to save
those few extra dollars. Penny is
also working hard to pay off her
car, which she plans to keep as
long as possible, and she loves her
local second-hand store. Styles are
just cyclical after all, right? Since
Penny has her eye on a comfy
future with minimal stress, she’s
decided to make retirement contributions
a priority today. Penny
can afford to add $200 to her
retirement each month. She’s a
consistent lady, so Prudent Penny
ends up sticking with a $200
monthly contribution for the next
30 years. At the end of this period
(keep in mind this is the same
length of time Suzy Spender lived
frivolously and then caught up her
savings at the end), Penny has personally
contributed $72,000 to her
retirement. At the end of the period,
with the same 8% interest rate,
Penny now has over $298,000.
Moral of the story: Start saving
today rather than tomorrow!
There’s plenty of other strategies
to consider when planning for your
financial future but recognizing the
benefit of compounding interest is
a must as far as I am concerned.
Where Do We Grow
From Here?
By Candace Bishop
Looking back over the past nine
months there have been many unanticipated
outcomes of this year.
So many new entrepreneurs have
been established this year, and so
many businesses have been challenged
with hard times. The events
of this year have challenged professionals
to work remotely from a
home, the one place that many of
us established to separate us from
our work. Direct service workers
are working above and beyond a
typical work week because they
are essential. For many students,
they have quickly adapted to new
learning styles, which has altered
the daily routines of many parents
throughout our community.
So many topics have been in the
forefront of discussion this year
such as racial equality/equity,
housing stability, unemployment,
COVID-19 and many more.
Page 5
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failing all the
families that
really need it”:
How the threat
of eviction has
perpetuated
health inequity
and racial
injustice during
the pandemic
The federal eviction moratorium,
issued by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, offers
temporary and crucial relief for the 30
to 40 million adults and children who
are at risk of eviction nationwide.
But, with the moratorium set to expire
on New Year’s Eve and without
emergency rental assistance to pay
the mounting rental debt, renters
are being pushed off the edge of the
eviction cliff.
The struggle of Black and Hispanic
renters
By Emily A. Benfer
The cost of rent is taking futures
When the pandemic struck, Marlenis
Zambrano was a fulltime caregiver
for the children of Department of
Defense (DOD) employees. For
27 years, her housing was secure,
she provided for her family, and
was able to save for her children’s
college tuition. Her daughter attends
Virginia Commonwealth University
and her son is a senior at Dartmouth
College—first generation college
students. Shortly after DOD families
pulled their own children from the
daycare due to the pandemic, Ms.
Zambrano’s wages were cut, and
she received a five-day notice of
eviction from her Alexandria home.
Ms. Zambrano, who is Hispanic, is
one of the many renters of color who
are particularly vulnerable to eviction
due to the pandemic and pushed to
make impossible choices. To protect
her family’s health and safety, Ms.
Zambrano was forced to put her
daughter’s college tuition fund toward
the rent.
Families across the country are
paying rent with their futures. “As
a parent, as a hard-working mom,”
Ms. Zambrano, who is advocating
to keep families housed, told me, “I
feel like the system is failing all the
families that really need it.” The need
is almost unfathomable: an estimated
50 million adults and children across
the country live in renter households
that suffered COVID-19-related job
or income loss, with people of color
hit the hardest.
Page 6
The human costs and housing loss
will be especially heightened among
people of color. Black and Hispanic
landlords are in greater financial peril
as they struggle to pay their mortgage
and offer payment plans to renters
at higher rates than white landlords.
Among renters, nationally, nearly
half of Black and Hispanic renters
have little to no confidence in their
ability to pay next month’s rent,
compared to less than a quarter of
white renters. These racial disparities
are in great part due to decades of
racially discriminatory housing laws
and policies that excluded people of
color from mortgages and deepened
segregation lines while promoting
the investment of billions of federal
dollars in white communities.
The sordid legacy of these laws is
embedded in the cavernous racial
wealth gap that propelled entire
generations into poverty, poor health,
and housing precarity.
As a result of the extreme
socioeconomic divide, over 70 per
cent of Black and Latinx adults
entered the pandemic lacking the
emergency funds to cover three
months of expenses, compared to
under half of white adults. Without
a safety net when crisis strikes, the
downward fall is immediate and
precipitous, and recovery may be
impossible. The administration’s
unveiled efforts to terminate fair
housing, dismantle civil rights
protections and advance “not in my
backyard” suburban policies only
intensifies the opportunity gulf by
carrying past offenses forward.
Further highlighting the sticking
power of racially discriminatory
policies, housing stability varies
drastically by race. The percentage
of Black people in a community
is a greater predictor of eviction
filings than poverty level in some
communities. On average, even across
similar education levels, Black renters
face eviction at nearly twice the
rate of white renters. Coupled with
widespread housing discrimination in
the rental market, people of color are
at extreme risk of housing loss and
the social and economic inequalities
it causes. In the pandemic context,
many of the communities most in
need of COVID-19 emergency rental
assistance are also communities of
color.
Winnette Dickerson, a tenant leader
with VOICE organizing to stop
evictions, summed the effects of
disparity when she told me, “We
black and brown people will never
be able to catch up. The plague of
financial and housing insecurity
will be looming over our heads. The
goals of financial security & home
ownership will remain a distant
unreachable dream for us.” Ms.
Dickerson, a longtime volunteer at a
homeless shelter, also faced eviction
during the pandemic after being
furloughed from her job as a drug
counselor.
Policy makers must act
Ending the COVID-19 eviction crisis
presents an opportunity to break a
link in the systemic racism chain.
Yet, policy makers have abandoned
their duty to prevent the clear and
steep human toll of the COVID-19
eviction crisis, with some justifying
inaction by assigning blame and
moral lashings to the people hardest
hit by the pandemic. Without rental
assistance, parents will be forced into
even lower-wage jobs that, where
available, will hardly cover rental
debt on top of housing costs, and
could increase the risk of contracting
COVID-19 and spreading it to loved
ones. Researchers determined that
lifting eviction moratoriums over the
summer resulted in 433,700 excess
cases and 10,700 excess deaths.
Underscoring the health inequity,
Black and Hispanic adults have
higher COVID-19 hospitalization
and death rates than their white
counterparts. In addition to taking
lives, the eviction crisis is on track
to devastate and further disadvantage
communities of color and strip
any chance of true equality and
opportunity in America.
Federal and state policy makers
must both defend against this
pressing threat to equality and
repair past harms. In the immediate,
this means extending the CDC
eviction moratorium beyond
January, as well as adopting robust
state eviction moratoriums, and
providing the emergency rental and
foreclosure assistance necessary
end the eviction crisis. Then, policy
makers must redress longstanding
inequality among people of color by
guaranteeing equal access to safe,
decent, and affordable homes in
thriving communities during and after
the pandemic.
Ms. Zambrano has hope for her
children. “I know my children are
going to be somebody one day, and
not suffer the way I did,” she said. It’s
every parent’s hope. It’s time every
child has the same chance to reach for
it.
Emily A. Benfer is health and housing
law expert, a law professor at Wake
Forest University School of Law, the
co-creator of the COVID-19 Housing
Policy Scorecard with the Eviction
Lab and the Chair of the American
Bar Association COVID-19 task force
committee on eviction.
Courtesy of INSP.ngo
׉	 7cassandra://x7Ufh9qB_cgC2CebjxDVCvmOz8RGMESWeX7O-ScB_w4# `̶ _٘%2iyG׉EReading for the Future
by
Franco Vitella
While nobody can totally predict
the future, we can rely on trends,
data, and maybe a little bit of speculation
to forecast where we might
be headed. Of course, the future is
also in our hands – the decisions
we make can have the greatest
impact on what is to come. If you
want to learn more about what you
can do to be part of what is hopefully
a better tomorrow, stop by
any Toledo Lucas County Public
Library location to check out one
of these fascinating, future-focused
books.
that it never quite arrives. We’re
always looking down the road,
dreaming about lies ahead. Much
how Netfl ix’s TV series Black
Mirror conjures up semi-plausible
future scenarios, Alexander
Weinstein’s collection of short
stories Children of the New World
imagines a near future that feels
vaguely familiar and realistic. The
stories deal with disaster, social
unease, our reliance on technology…and
they’ll haunt your dreams
for a little while after you’ve read
them.
Manifesta: Young Women, Feminism,
and the Future by Jennifer
Baumgardner and Amy Richards
This indictment of the current state
of feminism (albeit, published
20 years ago), maps a future for
the feminist movement, provides
examples of what a world with
equal rights for all might look like,
and argues that passing an Equal
Rights Amendment should still be
a goal for feminists.
Calvin Baker argues that our
traditional approaches to solving
racial tyranny – desegregation,
diversifi cation, and more representation
– are no longer enough.
Baker instead calls for full integration,
participation for all African-Americans,
as well as other
oppressed groups, in every facet of
national life. Baker frames life in
the United States as starting with a
revolutionary democracy and that
the fi nal steps of that revolution,
meaningful and actual inclusion
and participation, need to happen
now.
Covid Update for Lucas Toledo
Libraries
Although all Library locations are
currently closed to walk-in traffi c
during the Toledo-Lucas County
Health Department stay-at-home
advisory, we are maintaining our
regular open hours and have many
ways to help you:
Activities to Go: Visit any location for
contactless pick up of the latest set
of Activities to Go. Each envelope
has directions and supplies for fun
activities at home for preschoolers,
kids ages 5 – 10, or teens.
Hacking Darwin: Genetic Engineering
and the Future of Humanity
by Jamie Metzl
Author Jamie Metzl, a geopolitical
expert and futurist, explores how
genetic engineering will impact
our future lives. With gene editing
technology like CRISPR and other
genetic approaches that stand to
change the way we experience
disease and even expand our
lifespans, there is a trove of information
to consider on what genetic
engineering means for our future.
Children of the New World by
Alexander Weinstein
The fun part about the future is
On the Future: Prospects for Humanity
by Martin Rees
After living through 2020, you
may not feel very hopeful about
the future. The pandemic and apparent
societal divisiveness aren’t
necessarily bright spots that bode
well. Scientist Martin Rees argues
to set aside that pessimism. While
humanity faces future challenges,
our approach to the future – in harnessing
technology to overcome
threats – is what will defi ne us,
and this book gives some insight
into the future that might be awaiting
us.
Book Bundles: We’ll put together a
Book Bundle for children, teens and
adults. Choose a category or let us
surprise you. Complete a request
form or call any location.
Computer use by appointment:
Call 419-259-5200 or any location
to schedule one hour of computer
time. Customers age 2 and older are
required to wear masks. If you have
a medical exemption we ask that you
make a computer reservation at one
of our locations with an accommodaMore
Perfect Reunion: Race,
Integration, and the Future of
America by Calvin Baker
In A More Perfect Reunion, write
tion space. Accommodation spaces
are available at Heatherdowns,
Kent, Main, Mott, Oregon, Reynolds
Corners, Sanger, Sylvania, and West
Toledo.
Page 7
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Street vendors around the world look beyond the pandemic
by Tony Inglis, Executive Director ,
INSP
A note to readers: Street papers provide
trustworthy independent journalism and
an opportunity for society’s most vulnerable
and marginalised to earn a meaningful
income. The impact of the pandemic
has severely affected their work. Find out
how to support your local street paper
through subscriptions and donations here.
https://insp.ngo/supporting-street-papervendors-around-the-world-during-thecovid-19-pandemic/
“This
year has been very challenging
and fi lled with sorrow for everybody,”
says Lawrence Odion, a 26-year-old,
originally from Nigeria, who sells
street papers. It’s a sentiment people
at all levels of society should be able
to agree with. Lawrence works with
zebra., a magazine based in the South
Tyrol region of northern Italy. Back in
the early throes of 2020, the severity
with which COVID-19 hit Italy was
frightening, and yet still seemed far
away to many, despite warnings that
should have been heeded from its
impact in east Asia.
The onset of a year that became
defi ned by the pandemic seems both
exceedingly long ago and painfully
fresh in the memory. Most people’s
lives have been affected. For society’s
most vulnerable and marginalized,
it has exacerbated problems already
familiar to them: food insecurity,
unstable housing, social isolation,
income, and access to social services
as they are weakened at a time they’re
needed most. Street papers, which exist
to alleviate that strain – providing
employment to those who are homeless,
in poverty, excluded from the
job market or on life’s fringes – have
been impacted too. It’s been hard, but
the effects they’ve felt have not been
uniform. For every group that has
found times tough, there have been
some glimmers of light.
The new year approaches, and with
it some hope that there is an end of
the coronavirus tunnel in sight – a
vaccine, and the potential for homeless,
refugees, and other marginalized
people to receive it early on – even if
the social and structural consequences
of the pandemic may be felt into the
future. INSP checked in with street
paper vendors of differing circumstances
across the world to refl ect on
these past months and to look forward
– sometimes with an understandable
sense of anxiety, and sometimes with
hope.
Japan
The Big Issue Japan, along with other
east Asian street papers, was the fi rst
to understand how the coronavirus
may affect their work and the lives
of the country’s socially excluded
population.
“People were gone, and sales were
Page 8
in the single digits, sometimes zero,”
says a 64-year-old Tokyo-based vendor
who only wants to be identifi ed as
‘ST’. The initial slump in his income
was made up by support from the
magazine’s fundraising and a special
subscription service developed in
response to the pandemic. “I don’t
know what I would’ve done without
it,” he says.
ST has been living in a 7.3 square
meter room with a roommate for over
a decade. “It makes me feel safe because
it’s a private space with a roof.
I’m not a materialistic person, so here
with just a futon to sleep on is enough
for me,” he says.
began, he has had to move slightly
further away from this spot due to
restrictions on who can freely go in
and out of the university entrance. He
no longer fi nds it so easy catching the
eyes of students as the fl ow out.
“On campus, students passing by
could see me when they went out
for lunch, but now sitting in this
small corner, who would notice?” he
bemoans. “You can’t enter the school
even if you go to the bathroom, you
have to go to the McDonald’s across
the street.”
Li has also struggled with lower back
pain and bone spurs this year. He
can’t manage to bring back issues of
the magazine to his pitch anymore
which are often popular with his customers,
missing out on vital income.
“Taiwan’s virus prevention results are
very good,” says Li, more optimistically,
“unlike other countries, which
have been locked down for several
months. So, I have not been afraid
Faktum vendor Thomas Jakobsson. [Courtesy of
Faktum]
customers who would usually be
away on holiday stayed in the cities.
“We are in the front line when we
sell the street paper, but I don’t have
much choice. I need the money,” says
58-year-old Faktum vendor Thomas
Jakobsson about his experiences these
past months. “For a month now I’ve
had my own apartment, but before I
lived at a place which I shared with
other people. And I knew they had
coronavirus there. Food was served at
a buffet table and that didn’t feel safe.
I tried to keep my distance because I
don’t want to get sick.
Big Issue Japan vendor ‘S.T.’ (he does not want to
reveal his identity) at his pitch in Tokyo. [Courtesofof
The Big Issue Japan]
ST still has anxieties about being on
trains and in public bathrooms and
supermarkets because of the virus
despite the precautions he takes, and
worries deeply about how the pandemic
has run roughshod on the city’s
businesses.
“I started walking. At one point, I was
surprised to see more people in the
park than usual. I guess we all think
the same way,” says ST. “When I
went for a walk the other day, I was
stunned to see there were only two
stores open in the shopping arcade
I passed. It was painful to see the
posters of ‘temporarily shut down’
or ‘closed’. A few of the izakaya and
restaurants had banners saying: ‘We
will go out of business if we don’t do
something. Please help us’.
“I still can’t fi nd hope for 2021. Rather
than hope, I’m more concerned
about whether we’ll really host the
Olympics in Tokyo. Vaccines, athletes,
visitors from overseas…would
people enjoy it? I’m optimistic that
the world returns to normal with the
end of COVID, but it’s diffi cult to
predict what will happen right now.”
Taiwan
Every morning at 11am, Li Longzhu
places a small wooden stool just
inside an entrance of National Chengchi
University in Taipei, ready for a
day of selling The Big Issue Taiwan.
Unfortunately, since the pandemic
“I’m such a cuddly and physical person
so I think it’s shitty. I used to give
a hug to people when they bought the
paper sometimes, but that isn’t possible
anymore.”
Thomas has spent the pandemic
getting sober and writing an autobiographical
story for a book Faktum is
publishing.
Big Issue Taiwan vendor Li Longzhu. [Credit: / The
Big Issue Taiwan]
from beginning to end. After all, there
are few cases here, and I am also very
open to life and death. I can tell you
that people have great desires and
great worries. Since this larger situation
cannot be controlled, worry only
adds to the trouble.
“I hope [next year] can reduce a little
pain, for the world and my back!”
The Big Issue Taiwan has been successful
in supporting vendors, adopting
a ‘pay it forward’ scheme in collaboration
with SinoPac Bank, similar
to the one devised by The Big Issue
(UK). The magazine also worked with
a local social enterprise to regularly
handout free rice to vendors who have
been particularly hard up.
Sweden
Sweden has turned heads with its
hands-off approach to the pandemic.
For those selling street papers, it has
meant there has been little disruption
to their ability to earn an income.
Gothenburg-based magazine Faktum
did not have to halt selling or pull its
vendors from the street. Vendors even
saw an increase in sales as regular
“‘Thank goodness’, that’s what I feel
for 2021,” says Thomas. “Hopefully
COVID has calmed down and, since
I’ve become sober, I can move on. I
have contact with my children again.
My daughter said ‘Dad, it feels like
you came back from the dead’. I’m so
happy about that.
“I have positive things to look forward
to. I try to spread joy. And when
you give, you get back. It’s easy, yet
diffi cult.”
South Africa
Big Issue South Africa vendor
Shadrack Rolihlahla, 57, lives in
Delft, a township in Cape Town,
where crime and poverty is high.
According to the street paper’s social
work team, since the pandemic began,
crime has increased as unemployment
is high.
“I do not feel safe as people are being
killed every day due to violence,”
says Shadrack. “In my community,
people are suffering. Some people
lost their jobs and people died from
COVID-19. Since [the pandemic
started] we do not have access to
social services or health facilities.
Everything is like watching a movie –
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outdoor patio, so that vendors can
continue producing art. We’ll soon
hold an auction for the sale of works,
generating additional income.”
The social work team added that
food security is the biggest concern
for the communities their vendors
come from. People are being encouraged
to create their own vegetable
gardens and using skills they’ve
learned selling the street paper and
applying it to selling arts and crafts,
and even food items, to earn extra
income.
“This year was hard having little
food, no work and my family suffering,”
says Shadrack. “I hope and Big
“If it hadn’t been for [financial] help
from the government, I would be at
the bottom of the river,” says Ariel,
who has been renting a room from a
family who live near the Vélez Sarsfield
football team stadium. “[Hopefully
next year] we can let this crap
go and start a normal life again.”
Austria
In Vienna, things are looking a little
better for street paper vendors now
compared to the initial March coronavirus
lockdown. The local magazine
Augustin has learned how to continue
selling even as restrictions remain in
place, for example moving those who
sold in bars, restaurants and cafes to
busy spots on the streets.
Issue South Africa vendor Shadrack Rolihlahla.
[Courtesy of The Big Issue South Africa]
pray that COVID-19 goes away and
that next year work will be better
and life will have more opportunities.”
Argentina
“Emotionally,
the pandemic has
not really affected me – I was not
locked up much!” says Carlos Ariel
Amadeo. “It’s been the same normal
worry that anyone has. No depression,
just worried that this will get
worse, and with a little fear about
the illness and uncertainty about the
economic situation. No one is safe.
But yes, I feel safe. I am not obsessed
with it; I live a normal life.”
Ariel is a vendor for Buenos Aires
magazine Hecho en Bs As, a publication
which has dealt with an extremely
strict, prolonged lockdown
and the sudden death of its founder
Patricia Merkin. Despite the potential
for instability, it has continued to
support those it works with.
“We have been in permanent contact
with vendors,” says vendor coordinator
Ángeles Mezzera. The street
paper’s ties to a parallel food project
– ‘A cultivar que se acaba el mundo’
– which trades in organic food,
advocates fair trade and employees
socially excluded people, many of
whom are also vendors, meant that
Hecho staff could respond to any
urgent needs.
“From there [the food project’s
space] they were given access to
food, subsidies were managed that
the Argentine government had
provided to all people with self-employed
jobs, and some vendors were
distributed unsold magazines that
they could deliver,” adds Mezzera.
“We also moved our art workshop
to the food project since it has an
Augustin vendor Susi. [Courtesy of Augustin]
Augustin’s social workers also pointed
out that social isolation of their
vendors – both from their colleagues
and from Augustin staff – has also
been a worry.
“I hope my partner can get back to
Austria again,” says vendor Anna, 59.
“He was deported to Nigeria and I
miss him very much.”
60-year-old vendor Susi adds: “I’m
very sad I can’t visit my family. My
dad is more than 80 years old and I
haven’t seen him in a long time now.
Right now, I’m thinking of the Augustin
stall where we usually sell pear
cider during the Christmas season. I
love working there, but we can’t do it
this year.
“I wish everything would get back
to normal. I would like to visit the
vendor lounge at Augustin to drink
coffee and talk to my colleagues. And,
of course, I wish more people would
buy the paper again and we could talk
One issue that persists is how the
lockdowns has affected refugees and
asylum seekers, a cohort of which
make up Augustin’s vendor group.
This community rely on street paper
income and it has been severely hit
due to sales restrictions and drops.
They have also been unable to go
back and forth from their home
country due to tighter border restrictions,
and fear sanctions from local
government. An already precarious
living situation has been made more
uncertain by the pandemic.
properly without distance. I’m feeling
a bit lonely.”
USA
66-year old Al Mayfield continues
to sell Street Spirit in Oakland. The
tragedies of coronavirus are nothing
new to Al. He lost two brothers at a
young age – one to medical issues
and another to a motorcycle accident
– and, after being violently robbed in
1994, fell into a coma. He survived,
but had to have a plate installed in his
stomach and his leg amputated. He
has been shifted around homes due to
circumstances outside his control and
bandied about homeless shelters.
Through it all, there has been support
– the Citizens Neighborhood Assistance
Program, the Berkeley Food
and Housing Project, and Street Spirit.
He now lives in subsidised housing
with one of his surviving brothers in
North Oakland.
Most of all, he has missed church
during the pandemic and hopes to
be back. “Church is in my heart,” he
says. Despite a life full of losses and
grief, and now this global disaster, Al
is an optimistic person. He is still selling
street papers and living his life.
“Try to grasp hold of the good stuff
and be happy about it,” he says.
Canada
Most will now be familiar with the
term ‘pre-existing health conditions’.
Dealing with a personal medical
emergency at the same time as a
global medical emergency seems an
unfathomably difficult task. 69-yearold
Roger Perreault, who sells
L’Itinéraire in Montréal, has been battling
breast cancer which has spread
to his liver and lungs. He also has
glaucoma, lymphedema and a hernia.
His outlook for the diagnosis provides
a lot of food for thought when making
our own optimistic approaches to life
right now.
“Apart from all that, things aren’t
too bad!” says Roger. “Psychologist,
Brigitte Lavoie once said: It’s in the
case of extreme suffering that human
beings find unsuspected sources of
strength that were inside of them all
along and they didn’t know it. Give
yourself the permission to do what
makes you feel good, she said.
“For example, I put all my efforts
into saving up for a trip last summer.
I was planning on going to Spain and
Germany. So much for my plans! At
least for this year…
“I started going out for long walks
that soon became discovery adventures
in my city. It sure beats being
bored and asking myself what I could
have done if only. Those activities
allow me to really enjoy the present
moment, rather than dream of it. Why
live life based on an uncertain future?
When I wake up in the morning, I
don’t ask myself what I’m going to
do anymore, but what I’m going to do
with what is offered to me. At night
I take a moment to appreciate the
chance I’ve had of living that day and
what it’s brought me. And you know
what? I feel a lot better.”
***
Across the country, in British Columbia,
Megaphone vendor Peter Thompson
is feeling cut off from his family
and heritage due to the pandemic. But
he has also relied on the history and
traditions of his community (Peter is
Nlaka’pamux Nation) to get through.
“My traditional medicines have
played a big part in keeping me
healthy during COVID-19,” says
Peter. “I regularly smudge my home
and I cook for myself to keep healthy.
I have been using lots of garlic and
lemons, and eating a lot of oranges
and apples to keep my health good. I
make a hot lemon, ginger, and garlic
drink that keeps my immune system
strong.
“My hope for 2021 is that the pandemic
will end so I can see my family
in person again. I am especially
missing my family that live on my
traditional territory near Lytton, B.C.
Normally I go back home every summer
to see family and re-stock my traditional
foods, like pine mushrooms,
venison, fish, and moose meat. I also
gather my sage and cedar supply for
the year. I wasn’t able to go this year,
so if I can just see my family and visit
home in 2021, I will be happy.”
Macedonia
Hearing from vendors, social isolation
has been almost as troubling as loss
of income. “Working for me means
not only earning money, but communicating
with different people, making
friends, getting familiar with strangers,”
Igor Shajnoski, 32, who sells
Lice v Lice in Struga and lives with
his family in a house in the nearby
village of Radozda on the banks of
the UNESCO protected Lake Ohrid.
L’Itinéraire vendor Roger Perreault. [Credit: Adil
Boukind]
“Those thoughts on resilience
changed my way of seeing things,
made me adopt new behaviours and
understand the world differently. I
should never be blocked by the things
I cannot do, by what I may never do.
Igor has had long periods of not
working this year because of lockdown,
but feels good to know he
has a position with the street paper
and takes much pride in his work.
“My wish is for the best sales at the
magazine. I am working for that and I
know in turn it will improve my life.”
Page 9
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Showcases the
Future of Urban
Open Spaces
By Ed Conn
Late October of 2020, I was on
a walk on the river trail at Side
Cut Park when a passerby in
mask signaled a "We're #1" sign
to me. I looked around to see I
was wearing any team gear that
would have warranted a sporting
response when my walking mate
told me what that was all about:
that Metroparks Toledo was named
No.1 large-city park for 2020 by
some group called the American
Academy for Park and Recreation
Administration.”
“Well that is cool,” I thought.
At home, I looked up the release
to read that Metroparks earned
the National Gold Medal Grand
Plaque Award for Excellence in
Park and Recreation Management.
Turns out, this is really big stuff
which in normal times is awarded
at an annual conference attended
by 20,000. The win puts Toledo in
the same class as park districts in
larger cities known for outstanding
facilities, like past winners Chicago,
Cleveland, Austin, Charlotte,
and Portland, Oregon.
This announcement came a week
before voters would ultimately
approve a two million tax increase
that would generate $16
million more in tax revenue for
Metroparks Toledo over the next
10 years. Dave Zenk, Metroparks
Toledo Executive Director, said
this revenue will be necessary for
complete the vision for completing
the Glass City Metropark along the
Maumee River in East Toledo as
well as other river-based projects.
Scott Savage, the Metroparks
Toledo board’s president, said he is
thrilled the local park district was
chosen as the nation’s top among
large cities in 2020.
“Our community has supported
conservation like no other, from
passage of a land levy 18 years ago
that was the catalyst for connecting
parks and people to parks, to Issue
17 on access to green space for
everyone,” Mr. Savage said. "Each
step of Metroparks’ progress since
1928 refl ects a community that
values natural resources and the
role these treasured parks play in
creating a great place to live."
An indication of how parks will
lead Toledo into the future was the
recent dedication of phase 1 of the
new Glass City Metropark in East
Toledo. It was a soft opening to say
the least on a chilly December day.
The curtain was pulled back just
enough to showcase what may be
one of the fi nest small park setting
adjacent to a downtown neighborhood.
Scott Carpenter, Metroparks
Toledo spokesman, indicated that a
more robust celebration will occur
in 2021 when the weather improves
and the virus hopefully gets
under control.
The park district is proud of completing
Phase One of the massive
project, Mr. Carpenter said, and
agreed to start letting people onto
the site to become acquainted with
it as the rest of the project continues
to take shape. Plus, one of
the featured attractions – a lighted
sledding hill – is likely to become
a big hit in the coming weeks of
winter. The hill will remain open
until 8 p.m. throughout the winter.
“This will be the gift that keeps
on giving, “ Mr. Carpenter said,
a reference to the park’s multiple
other features almost guaranteed to
draw in more visitors as they get
fi nished over the next fi ve or six
years.
The park will feature an earthbermed,
modern pavilion with a
high-tech projection screen, plate
glass windows, and ample tables
and chairs in a meeting area that
can be rented out. It will hold up to
200 people. The pavilion also has a
green roof. Visitors will be able to
walk up a ramp next to it and look
out across the park’s vast expanse
or watch boats ply the Maumee
River one spring arrives.
Next to the pavilion is a large,
grassy knoll with terrace steps similar
to an amphitheater. Outdoor
concerts with seating for 5,000 to
6,000 people are expected.
During warmer weather, there will
Page 11
be canoe and kayak opportunities
on a self-served basis, much like
what has been in use at Howard
Marsh Metropark which opened in
2018.
Phase 2 will include a skating pond
and ribbon and a water play area.
A multipurpose Market Hall will
offer food, beverages, and ice-skating
rentals. The park will also see
the addition of six cabanas, two
picnic shelters and a campground
for tents, recreational vehicles
and modern huts. This phase will
also add three miles of trails, open
spaces, shoreline restoration, prairie
and wildlife restoration, said
Emily Ziegler, chief of planning
and capital projects.
As with other recently-opened
parks, the public will get a sense of
the layout early on but need to wait
for things to grow before getting
a better vision of what Glass City
will look like once completed.
Park district offi cials believe those
and related projects, including the
future Riverwalk and improvements
to International Park, will
serve as the same type of catalyst
for East Toledo that Fifth Third
Field was for downtown Toledo’s
Warehouse District when it was
built 20 years ago.
The future of Toledo will be led by
our parks. Just be patient while the
trees mature.
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Page 12
׉	 7cassandra://PueyCFB5OKWj6T-_3spa62WlPpr-vBB9ZkOuG5UT68U!`̶ _٘%2iyM׉EFrom The Director’s Desk:
A Whirlwind of a Year for
Toledo Streets Newspaper
Arika Michaelis,
Executive Director
What a whirlwind of a year! This
past year has been anything but
ordinary. For Toledo Streets Newspaper,
that is especially true. For
three months this year our doors
were essentially closed to the people
we serve. For three months we
didn’t produce a new publication of
Toledo Streets Newspaper. We’ve
seen a signifi cant decrease in paper
sales, vendor meeting attendance
and new vendors oriented. And still
our vendors and our organization
fl ourished.
In 2020, Toledo showed us that
they cared. When we were forced
to shut down paper production
and sales, our community came
together to raise funds to sustain
our vendors through the upcoming
uncertainty. Through the summer
and fall, vendors were selling less
papers but were reporting making
nearly the same income they
had before the pandemic. Toledo
showed up with love and understanding
for our community and
they continue to do so.
Even during our three months of
halted paper production, we looked
for every opportunity to help our
community. We partnered with local
organizations to deliver groceries
and provide lunches, we walked
vendors through fi ling for the fi rst
stimulus package, we’ve continued
to assist vendors getting new IDs
and birth certifi cates. But most
impressively, in 2020 we helped
eight vendors into new homes and
watched four vendors move up into
steady employment opportunities.
As for the organization, Toledo
Streets has seen a lot of change in
2020. I was hired on in February,
we welcomed new and returning
Page 13
interns from the University of
Toledo, new board members came
on as others rolled off. And those
are just personnel changes! This
year Toledo Streets focused on a
few important goals for the organization
to level up. Those included
hiring an executive director,
being able to plan publications
further out and moving into the
new Toledo Streets Newspaper
World Headquarters (as coined by
former Board Chair, Tom Kroma).
We didn’t quite reach some of our
goals but we did accomplish a lot
of them. I have been Executive
Director for almost a year, we have
our publications planned through
April and as of December 15th,
we are moved into our new World
HQ just a few blocks from our last
home on Madison Ave.
Building our new offi ce has been
quite a project this year. From
building out new walls, painting a
huge space, installing new cabinets
and countertops and everything in
between, this was an all hands on
deck feat. We still have a few tasks
to complete before our space is
totally fi nished but we are offi cially
moved in and operating from a
space that we built with our own
hands for our community to enjoy!
I couldn’t be more proud of our
team and our new offi ce. We’ve
taken special care to make every
bit of it feel like home.
Looking forward, I have high
hopes for Toledo Streets Newspaper’s
upward growth in 2021.
Our vendors, staff, board and
community have remained resilient
and steadfast in our vision to
inspire hope, foster community
and cultivate change. I am hopeful
we will help more vendors move
into stable housing. I am certain
we will watch more vendors to
move up into steady and full time
employment. With a community
of supporters like TSN has, our
vendors are in good hands to build
upon their dreams, believe in
their futures and make their goals
their realities. Thank you for your
support in 2020, I look forward to
working towards a brighter 2021
together!
I AM INCLUDING A ONE-TIME DONATION OF:
� $1000
COVERS COST OF PRINTING ONE MONTH OF TOLEDO STREETS NEWSPAPER
� $500
ELIMINATES BARRIERS TO EMPLOYMENT BY PROVIDING ALL NEW VENDORS WITH VESTS, SIGNS AND BADGES
� $250
SUPPORTS TOLEDO STREETS EMPLOY VENDORS’ CREATIVITY IN STORY-TELLING, POETRY, PHOTOGRAPHY AND
MORE
� $100
� $50
PROVIDES ESSENTIAL SUPPLIES SUCH AS SOCKS, HATS, HAND-WARMERS AND PONCHOS TO TSN VENDORS
SETS 20 NEW VENDORS UP FOR SUCCESS AFTER ORIENTATION BY PROVIDING THEM WITH 10 FREE PAPERS
EACH
� $______
A GIFT AT ANY LEVEL MAKES A DIFFERENCE
NAME ______________________________________________________________
ADDRESS ___________________________________________________________
CITY _______________________________ STATE _______ZIP________________
TELEPHONE ____________________________ EMAIL_____________
� I AM INTERESTED IN RECEIVING EMAIL NEWSLETTERS FROM TOLEDO STREETS NEWSPAPER
� I WOULD LIKE TO BE CONTACTED ABOUT HOW MY COMPANY/ORGANIZATION CAN SUPPORT
TOLEDO STREETS NEWSPAPER
TOLEDO STREETS NEWSPAPER CREATES INCOME OPPORTUNITIES FOR PEOPLE EXPERIENCING HOMELESSNESS AND
POVERTY BY PRODUCING A NEWSPAPER AND OTHER MEDIA THAT ARE CATALYSTS FOR INDIVIDUAL AND SOCIAL
CHANGE
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THEME: Famous Duo
ACROSS
1. *Timothy Q. Mouse's friend, in Disney classic
6. River in Germany
9. Bridle parts
13. Whatsoever
14. Like tuna tartare
15. Forearm bones
16. Plural of #3 Down
17. Hardware stor
18. "Gladiator" setting
19. *Ferb Fletcher's stepbrother
21. *Mr. White's unfortunate student
23. Welcome spot for weary travele
24. It shall, for short
25. Cul de ____
28. Young herring
30. Dieter's cuisine, for short
35. Gator's cousin
37. French "place"
39. Chunk of iceberg
40. St. Louis monument
41. Like new TV set
43. Front of ship
44. Singular of loci
46. Additional
47. Reality TV's Spelling
48. *Assistant to regional manager Michael Scott
50. Missing a limb
52. More, in Madrid
53. Like acne-prone skin
55. Pimple fluid
57. *Shirley's roommate and fellow bottle-capper
61. *Rory Gilmore's mom
65. Make an effort
66. Legal org.
68. Long stories
69. Scottish valleys
70. Doctor Dolittle, e.g.
71. *One of The Carpenters duo
72. Bone-dry
73. Opposite of WSW
74. Red or orange announcement
DOWN
1. Slightly wet
2. *Malone and Stockton of the ____ Jazz
3. Skirt length
4. Shrovetide dish
5. *Mary-Kate and Ashley
6. Geologists' studies
7. *____ and cheese
8. Moved under the rug
9. "All ____, no bite"
10. Footnote word
11. *Amy Poehler's comedic partner
12. Welsh alternative to Siobh·n
15. Was almost out of gas, e.g.
20. Source of indigo dye, pl.
22. "____ Be Home For Christmas"
24. In the best possible way
25. Coffee burn, e.g.
26. *Bow and ____
27. Spherical bacteria
29. *Corona's main squeeze?
31. What willow did
32. Read-only chip
33. Greek bazaar
34. *Clark's fellow traveler
36. College party chant
38. Celestial bear
42. Dancer's beat
45. Daisy dukes, e.g.
49. "Wizard of Oz" man
51. Archimedes' exclamation
54. Furlough
56. Flower part
57. Frog delicacy
58. Wheel shaft
59. Swerve
60. European sea eagle
61. *David and Paul on the "____ Show"
62. Italian currency, pl.
63. Maple genus
64. Negative contraction
67. *Jerry's fellow treat-maker
Page 14
Solutions
׉	 7cassandra://UqyAi9Pc3QYfdq8JfICE8L68JcIV70hnmh5ZEBhPWkQ'd`̶ _٘%2iyO׉E)"TOLEDO
STREETS
NEW SP APER
Mail: 1216 Madison Avenue
Toledo, OHIO 43604
TOLEDO STREETS WORKFORCE
DEVELOPMENT, CORP.
Board of Directors – 2020
Chair
Lauren M. Webber
Vice-Chair
Tom Kroma
Treasurer
Lauren M. Webber
Secretary
Kristy Lee Czyzewski
Ken Leslie
Michelle Issacs
a new job, because he lost his old job because of
presiding judge, Leonie Mengel, as he summed up
the case after the two-day trial.
Michael P. has said that he wants to fi nd
attack. “I was drunk,” he admitted in the courtroom.
“Otherwise I wouldn’t have done such a stupid
thing.” P. seemed depressed as he described in
court how he felt that his life had been slipping
through his fi ngers. He has suffered for many years
from a rare nerve disease: problems with walking
and balance are consequences of the disease and
sometimes he is unable to leave the house despite
using medication. The fact that he could only calm
his nerves with alcohol was confi rmed by an expert.
Did the combination of alcohol and pills make him
aggressive? This possibility cannot be excluded,
according to the expert. However, “how [the attack]
actually
happened
remains
unclear,”
said
the
his sentence, mainly as a result of his behaviour after
the attack. While it is true that he ran away on the
night of the attack, shortly afterwards he apologised
to the victim in person on several occasions. And,
although the victim told him that he didn’t need to go
to the police, P. did so a little while later. “I wanted to
take responsibility for what I did,” he said in court.
Sven, his victim, did not appear in court, but later
said in a conversation with Hinz&Kunzt that, “if he
hadn’t contacted the police then they never would
have found him, so he has my respect for that.”
Michael P. only vaguely remembers the
The 27-year-old got off so lightly, in terms of
Seifert, the coroner, in the court proceedings that
were held nearly seven months after the attack. Sven,
a homeless man, had to be taken by ambulance for
treatment in hospital. The sentence for the attacker
was rather mild: he was sentenced to one year and
three months in custody for causing grievous bodily
harm and given a further two years on probation.
This was just what the prosecution asked for. After
he completes his sentence, Michael P. will be a free
man.
“He was incredibly lucky,” said Dragane
he could sleep deeply. It was 6.20pm when a dark
fi gure suddenly appeared in front of him at the
Ohlsdorf station in Hamburg, where he had settled
down to sleep. Then things kicked off. “I was
only just able to prop myself up,” the 45-year-old
remembers. Then came the pain as a 12-centimetrelong
cut was slashed across Sven’s throat. It could
have been fatal.
Vendor Representative
Marthia Russell
Julie M. McKinnon
Ken Leslie
Chris Csonka
Deb Morris
Zobaida Falah
•
Kristy Lee Czyzewski•
•
Treasurer
Lauren M. Webber
Secretary
•
Vice-Chair
Tom Kroma
For Sven, the attack came out of nowhere.
In the evening, he had some drinks so that
By Benjamin Laufer and Jonas Füllner
Ohlsdorf station in Hamburg when he was slashed
across the neck in an unprovoked attack that could
have cost him his life. His life-threatening injuries
were infl icted on him by a 27-year-old, who admitted
that he was drunk at the time of the attack and who
later handed himself into police after running away
from the scene of the crime. Hinz&Kunzt learns
more about the attack and its repercussions.
Translated from German by Hazel Alton
Courtesy of Hinz&Kunzt / INSP.ngo
•
•
•
•
Bryce Roberts
Chair
respect the space of other vendors, particularly the space of vendors who have been at a spot longer, and will position myself at least two blocks away from a working vendor unless
otherwise approved;
45-year-old Sven was sleeping outside
•
“I get scared by
every little noise”:
The aftermath of
a violent attack
•
Board of Directors – 2018
Mail: 913 Madison Street
Toledo, OHIO 43604
CONTINUED FROM P 3TOLEDO STREETS WORKFORCE
DEVELOPMENT, CORP.
OUR GLOBAL INSP COMMUNITYOur Global INSP Community Page 19
understand I am not a legal employee of Toledo Streets but a contracted worker responsible for my own well-being and income;
•
not buy/sell Toledo Streets under the infl uence of drugs or alcohol;
agree to sell no additional goods or products when selling the paper;
his illness. “I want to get my life back on track,” he
said, after four months in custody. Sven’s life has
been unsettled since the attack last winter. “Sleeping
has changed,” he explains, “I get scared by every
little noise.” Sven would most like to have his own
apartment, or at least a room of his own. When
you have your own place, he says, “you can sleep
properly again.”
agree to treat others- customers, staff and other vendors - respectfully, and I will not “hard sell”, threaten or pressure customers;
only purchase the paper from Toledo Streets staff or volunteers and will not sell papers to other vendors;
agree not to ask for more than a dollar or solicit donations for Toledo Streets by any other means;
All vendors must agree to the following code of conduct to:
The following list is our Vendor Code of Conduct, which every vendor reads through and signs before receiving a badge and papers. We request that if you discover a vendor violating any
tenets of the Code, please contact us and provide as many details as possible. Our paper and our vendors should positively impact the city.
While Toledo Streets is a non-profi t program, and its vendors are independent contractors, we still have expectations of how vendors should conduct themselves while selling and representing
the paper.
Vendor Code of Conduct
understand Toledo Streets strives to be a paper that covers homelessness and poverty issues while providing a source of income for the unhoused and underprivileged. I will try to help
in this effort and spread the word.
understand my badge is the property of Toledo Streets and will not deface it. I will present my badge when purchasing the papers and display my badge when selling papers. I realize
badges cost $1 to replace when lost or damaged;
always have in my possession the following when selling Toledo Streets: my Toledo Streets badge, a Toledo Streets sign, a vendor’s license waiver from the mayor, and Toledo Streets
papers;
agree to only use professional signs provided by Toledo Streets;
Abby Sullivan
Shannon Nowak
Shawn Clark
Amy Saylor
LaParis Grimes
Wanda Boudrie
Our vendors purchase each paper for $.25 and ask for a dollar
donation. In exchange for their time and effort in selling the
paper, they keep the difference. They are asking for a hand up, not
a hand out. By purchasing the paper, you have helped someone
struggling to make it. Not just in terms of money, but also in
dignity of doing something for themselves. We thank you.
FREELANCE PHOTOGRAPHER
Crystal Jankowski
Our Staff
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
John Keegan
WRITING TEAM LEADER
Jonie McIntire
ART DIRECTOR
Ed Conn
Toledo Streets seeks to empower individuals struggling with
extreme poverty to participate on a new level in the community
through self-employment, job training, and contributorship.
Our Mission
Toledo Streets is a registered nonprofi t corporation in Ohio.
While your gifts to the vendors, who are independent contractors,
are not taxed deductible, any donations you make directly to
our organization are deductible. These monies go to supporting
programming, which includes job training and skills development.
Our vendors purchase each paper for $.25 and ask for a dollar
donation. In exchange for their time and effort in selling the
paper, they keep the difference. They are asking for a hand up, not
a hand out. By purchasing the paper, you have helped someone
struggling to make it. Not just in terms of money, but also in
dignity of doing something for themselves. We thank you.
Toledo Streets is a monthly publication called a street paper. We
are part of a worldwide movemment of street papers that seeks to
provide simple economic opportunities to homeless individuals
and those experiencing poverty.
Toledo Streets is a registered nonprofi t corporation in Ohio.
While your gifts to the vendors, who are independent contractors,
are not tax deductible, any donations you make directly to our
organization are deductible. These monies go to supporting
programming, which includes job training and skills development.
Our Mission
Toledo Streets seeks to empower individuals struggling with
extreme poverty to participate on a new level in the community
through self-employment, job training, and contributorship.
Our Staff
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Arika Michaelis
VENDOR MANAGER
Claire McKenna
ART DIRECTOR
Ed Conn
INTERNS
John Brindley, II
Julia Holder
Trinity Episcopal Church
Toledo Streets is a monthly publication called a street paper. We
are part of a worldwide movement of street papers that seeks to
provide simple economic opportunities to homeless individuals
and those experiencing poverty.
Vendor Code of Conduct
As a vendor representing Toledo Streets Newspaper , I:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
agree not to ask for more than a dollar or solicit donations for Toledo
agree to treat all others—customers, staff,
pressure customers.
agree to stay off
other
private
Toledo
property
and
highway
understand I am not a legal employee of
for my own well-being and income.
Streets Newspaper
vendors—respectfully,
exit
Toledo
under
and
ramps when selling
Streets Newspaper
agree to sell no additional goods or products when selling the paper.
will not buy/sell
the
in luence
agree to only use professional signs provided by Toledo
Toledo
Streets badge, a
Streets
sign,
and
of
but
drugs
will always have in my possession the following when selling Toledo
Toledo
Streets
papers.
understand my badge, vest, and sign are the property of Toledo
them in any way.
Toledo
I
Streets
will
Toledo
a
or
Streets Newspaper.
Streets Newspaper
agree that badges and signs are $5 to replace and vests are $10 to replace.
understand that when you are wearing your vest you are representing Toledo
inappropriate behavior while representing
Streets Newspaper may result
in
Streets Newspaper : my Toledo
will
and
Streets Newspaper,
disciplinary
not alter
thus
action
any
by any
not
contracted
alcohol.
will respect the space of other vendors and will position myself at least two blocks away from a working
vendor unless otherwise approved.
other means.
“hard sell,”
threaten
Streets Newspaper.
worker responsible
or
Page 15
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affordable.
Local produce, meat, dairy and everyday necessities
near downtown Toledo. Committed to offering
affordable, healthy food; delivering nutritional
education; and providing job training opportunities.
Open to everyone. | WIC/SNAP accepted.
1806 Madison Ave.
UpTown Toledo
marketonthegreen.org
Hours:
Mon. – Fri. 8 a.m. – 9 p.m.
Sat. and Sun. 11 a.m. – 7 p.m.
© 2019 ProMedica
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, !Toledo Streets Issue 105 Final R5_#QU\M4