Hustle Her
You can’t solve a problem you refuse to name, and Bermuda has been trying to address homelessness without even having a legal definition for it. That’s why I invited Denise Carey, executive director of Home in Bermuda, to sit down with me after watching her take the room by storm at Disrupt HR. What she shares is clear, direct, and deeply human: homelessness isn’t a personality type, it’s an experience, and it can happen through far more pathways than most of us want to admit. We get into what “homelessness” actually includes using the European Typology of Homelessness and Housing Exclusion: roofless and rough sleeping, emergency shelter, housing insecurity, inadequate housing, hidden homelessness, seniors on fixed incomes, people aging out of systems, domestic violence displacement, people leaving institutions, and working people priced out of rent. Denise explains how Bermuda’s housing pipeline gets bottlenecked when “temporary” shelter turns into decades, and why derelict buildings and vacant properties have to be part of any serious housing strategy. We also talk about community safety and reentry housing for people leaving incarceration, including the uncomfortable truth that stability creates accountability. Housing, employment, and support reduce recidivism, lower public costs, and make all of us safer because we know where people are and how they’re being supported. Along the way, Denise shares the emotional toll of this work and the belief driving her forward: every person in our community has value, and none of us has the right to give up on them. Subscribe for more real conversations, share this with someone who needs a new perspective on homelessness in Bermuda, and leave a review if you want more guests like Denise. What part of this conversation challenged your view the most?
61 episodios
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