I've just read all the posts in this thread and I'm actually feeling tearful at the sheer ignorance and/or indifference some posters have shown. I have spent time every day this week (and almost every week for the past three years) working with homeless people who are living on the streets.
Today I was with a middle-aged veteran with mental health problems who sat and cried across the table from me because he is so embarrassed at being in a situation where he is living on the streets and needs to accept help. I also spent time with another man of a similar age who has worked and paid taxes all his life whilst living with, and caring for, his elderly widowed mother; she died and her tenancy died with her. He refuses to apply for benefits even though he has health problems, instead he scours the town every day for odd jobs; he does not beg and has never smoked, nor does he take drugs and he is teetotal, yet he sleeps each night on a bench. If we didn't have 'care in the community' another of the people I work with would be being looked after in an institution, but instead has lost touch with reality and is left to wander the streets. None of these people have a phone, none of them beg, none of them 'deserve' to be living on the streets and none of them want to be homeless. All of them need someone to not only care, but to take action on their behalf.
Those are just three of this week's examples - the number of clients so far this year is already greater than the total number from last year. They come from all walks of life and backgrounds and listening to their stories is at best upsetting and at worst truly harrowing. I work closely with the local food bank (referral only) and they are seeing a huge increase in working families being unable to afford to feed their children.
I seriously urge anyone who hasn't seen it to watch the film, 'I, Daniel Blake'. It is a heartbreakingly true account of the spiral of despair that leads so many of my homeless clients to consider ending their lives.