Back at Tent City Interbay, residents will pack up and move to a better, new home.
Right now, there are a few tents house families, some with just mothers and children and a few reserved for couples. Children’s toys and planted flowers stood at the entrances of some of the makeshift shelters. A row of bicycles stands ready for repairs from a handy resident.
There’s a security office at the front, and a large tent in the corner that serves as a kitchen. Almost every day of the week a church or charitable group brings by food to be distributed among the residents. Women and children eat first.
“We run a tight camp,” resident Michael Lee Clifton said. “We do everything ourselves, and we’re organized.”
Each resident has a job to do on site -- from distributing blankets to running the kitchen.
“Give people rules – and something to work for,” Clifton said. “They feel like they have a job, like they have a purpose. They’re doing something positive for themselves and for the community.”
He recently spent his last night in Tent City Interbay talking about his transformative experience.
He never intended to stay long.
“That’s the reason why we’re here,” he said. “It’s not a place to camp out. It’s a place to help people get back on their feet.”
Paul Stroupe has lived in Tent City Interbay for the past five months. He said offering the encampments could keep others from camping out in their RVs or in unsanctioned shelters.
“We’re a solution – a sanctioned camp with rules,” he said. “I’d rather live here. If they knew they had this option, they might chose to do it. And it might clean up the neighborhood.”
Tent city Interbay serves as a saving grace for its residents, Stroupe said.
“If you want to have a job, if you want to have a career, you have to have a place to sleep,” he said. “You have to have a place to shower, a place to prepare your food.”
Clifton said that the tent city provided more than a shelter. It gave him the resources he needed – at a time when he was the most in need.
If the tent city weren’t around, he wonders what would become of the residents.
“We would have nowhere to go,” he said.
For more information about Nickelsville, visit https://sites.google.com/a/nickelsville.org/home/home. For more information about Tent City Interbay, visit www.sharewheel.org.