Slab City on CBS news
Slab City on CBS news
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-18563_162-5 ... s-victims/
Since the housing bubble burst, nearly 4 million American homes have been lost to foreclosure. Now 1.6 million children will be homeless at some time during the year -- 38 percent more than at the start of the recession. As CBS News correspondent Ben Tracy explains, unemployment has driven some families to the southern California desert.
Near the shores of California's Salton Sea, where the road gives way to barren desert, is a place where many have gone to park their troubled lives.
Bill Ammon has lived in what's known as "Slab City" for 13 years.
"This piece of property is public-owned," he said, "and it's so useless, so desolate, that nobody wants it and they let us be here."
Slab City takes its name from the concrete slabs it sits on -- all that's left from a World War II training camp. Now it is home base for more and more people who can't afford to live anywhere else.
There are nearly 2,000 people living in Slab City, many refugees of the Great Recession.
"It's just whole [other] world out here," said Vince Neill. "It's not like modern-day society."
Neill parked his RV here two months ago along with his wife and six kids. He recently lost his audio-visual business and their home in Modesto, Calif.
"I would apply to 30-40 jobs a day online," said Neill. "And there's just nothing."
He could no longer afford to stay at an RV park and heard about Slab City. The family lives on food stamps and money from odd jobs.
"Did you ever imagine ending up here?" asked Tracy.
"No, no," said Neill. "I always wore a shirt and tie, and worked in an office. And had a nice car and house. But we've lost pretty much everything."
A field of debris is what passes for a neighborhood in Slab City. There is also a church, a music venue called the Range, and even an internet cafe. But electricity comes from the sun, there is no sewer, no running water. A hole in the ground is the only shower for miles.
"When we moved here, it was like the end of the world for me," said Andy Moore, 12, who has a sister, Franky, 14. Their mom told CBS News they came here because she cannot afford to heat their house in Washington State this winter. Andy worried what her friends at school would think.
"I feel a little bit embarrassed about it," said Andy, "because they're probably going to start thinking different of you like, 'Oh, they're really poor and they have to live out here and they can't afford to get a house or a trailer park.'"
Parents like Vince Neill are simply worried about keeping their families safe. "Twelve-gauge is usually what everybody uses out here," he said, because theft and drugs are part of Slab City life.
"I'm the nicest man you'll ever meet, unless you're messing with my family."
Neill is hoping his family won't be in Slab City for long and plans to look for work in Los Angeles this spring.
http://www.slabcity.org/
Someone mentioned a documentary about Slab City, but not a title.
Anyone know?
Since the housing bubble burst, nearly 4 million American homes have been lost to foreclosure. Now 1.6 million children will be homeless at some time during the year -- 38 percent more than at the start of the recession. As CBS News correspondent Ben Tracy explains, unemployment has driven some families to the southern California desert.
Near the shores of California's Salton Sea, where the road gives way to barren desert, is a place where many have gone to park their troubled lives.
Bill Ammon has lived in what's known as "Slab City" for 13 years.
"This piece of property is public-owned," he said, "and it's so useless, so desolate, that nobody wants it and they let us be here."
Slab City takes its name from the concrete slabs it sits on -- all that's left from a World War II training camp. Now it is home base for more and more people who can't afford to live anywhere else.
There are nearly 2,000 people living in Slab City, many refugees of the Great Recession.
"It's just whole [other] world out here," said Vince Neill. "It's not like modern-day society."
Neill parked his RV here two months ago along with his wife and six kids. He recently lost his audio-visual business and their home in Modesto, Calif.
"I would apply to 30-40 jobs a day online," said Neill. "And there's just nothing."
He could no longer afford to stay at an RV park and heard about Slab City. The family lives on food stamps and money from odd jobs.
"Did you ever imagine ending up here?" asked Tracy.
"No, no," said Neill. "I always wore a shirt and tie, and worked in an office. And had a nice car and house. But we've lost pretty much everything."
A field of debris is what passes for a neighborhood in Slab City. There is also a church, a music venue called the Range, and even an internet cafe. But electricity comes from the sun, there is no sewer, no running water. A hole in the ground is the only shower for miles.
"When we moved here, it was like the end of the world for me," said Andy Moore, 12, who has a sister, Franky, 14. Their mom told CBS News they came here because she cannot afford to heat their house in Washington State this winter. Andy worried what her friends at school would think.
"I feel a little bit embarrassed about it," said Andy, "because they're probably going to start thinking different of you like, 'Oh, they're really poor and they have to live out here and they can't afford to get a house or a trailer park.'"
Parents like Vince Neill are simply worried about keeping their families safe. "Twelve-gauge is usually what everybody uses out here," he said, because theft and drugs are part of Slab City life.
"I'm the nicest man you'll ever meet, unless you're messing with my family."
Neill is hoping his family won't be in Slab City for long and plans to look for work in Los Angeles this spring.
http://www.slabcity.org/
Someone mentioned a documentary about Slab City, but not a title.
Anyone know?
Re: Slab City on CBS news
I don't know how fun it would be to throw a burner party in what is essentially becoming a Hooverville. We could make a benefit out of it by bringing shower water and other essentials for Slab City's recessionary refugees.
(currently Zeke Chaparral)
Re: Slab City on CBS news
Not the first or only place like it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off_the_Gr ... n_the_Mesa
http://stillpointpictures.com/
http://www.sundancechannel.com/films/500318619/
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0920467/
http://www.ericdsnider.com/movies/off-t ... -the-mesa/
An interesting docko.
I liked it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off_the_Gr ... n_the_Mesa
http://stillpointpictures.com/
http://www.sundancechannel.com/films/500318619/
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0920467/
http://www.ericdsnider.com/movies/off-t ... -the-mesa/
An interesting docko.
I liked it.
- unjonharley
- Posts: 10434
- Joined: Tue Sep 09, 2003 11:05 am
- Burning Since: 2001
- Camp Name: Elliot's naked bycycel repair
- Location: Salem Or.
Re: Slab City on CBS news
I saw that mess on the TV.
Dirt poor was used to describe people that were so poor they could not afford a wood floor for there home.. The Bennett family (5 kids) up the road from our farm did not have a floor (late 40s). We did not have a phone.. The running water was "Jon run get a bucket of water".. We also had a out house..The other side of my family's farm didn't have electric..
You could come to our home or the Bennetts home and there would be no trash thrown out in the yard.. We took a bath in a #3 wash tub.. We didn't spray paint shit all over the place.. There were not junk cars in the yard.. I had patches on every thing I wore but they were washed and kept clean.. It just wasn't that hard..
There is no reason for poor people to make and live in that mess in slab city..
Dirt poor was used to describe people that were so poor they could not afford a wood floor for there home.. The Bennett family (5 kids) up the road from our farm did not have a floor (late 40s). We did not have a phone.. The running water was "Jon run get a bucket of water".. We also had a out house..The other side of my family's farm didn't have electric..
You could come to our home or the Bennetts home and there would be no trash thrown out in the yard.. We took a bath in a #3 wash tub.. We didn't spray paint shit all over the place.. There were not junk cars in the yard.. I had patches on every thing I wore but they were washed and kept clean.. It just wasn't that hard..
There is no reason for poor people to make and live in that mess in slab city..
- unjonharley
- Posts: 10434
- Joined: Tue Sep 09, 2003 11:05 am
- Burning Since: 2001
- Camp Name: Elliot's naked bycycel repair
- Location: Salem Or.
- Ugly Dougly
- Posts: 17612
- Joined: Wed Sep 10, 2003 9:31 am
- Burning Since: 1996
- Location: เชียงใหม่
Re: Slab City on CBS news
It's always fun to throw a party!Packoderm wrote:I don't know how fun it would be to throw a burner party in what is essentially becoming a Hooverville. We could make a benefit out of it by bringing shower water and other essentials for Slab City's recessionary refugees.
Who needs and deserves the entertainment more than these guys?
- unjonharley
- Posts: 10434
- Joined: Tue Sep 09, 2003 11:05 am
- Burning Since: 2001
- Camp Name: Elliot's naked bycycel repair
- Location: Salem Or.
Re: Slab City on CBS news
Big ole drunken LNT partyUgly Dougly wrote:It's always fun to throw a party!Packoderm wrote:I don't know how fun it would be to throw a burner party in what is essentially becoming a Hooverville. We could make a benefit out of it by bringing shower water and other essentials for Slab City's recessionary refugees.
Who needs and deserves the entertainment more than these guys?
- Drawingablank
- Posts: 2595
- Joined: Thu Mar 31, 2011 8:46 pm
- Camp Name: Barbie Death Camp
- Location: NY
- Contact:
Re: Slab City on CBS news
When I clicked the link to view that it started with a 30 second commercial for expensive vacations - seems like a really inappropriate and insensitive spot for that commercial.
Savannah: I don't know what it is, but no thread here escapes alive. You'll get 1 or 2 real answers at minimum, occasionally 10 or 12, and then we flog it until it's unrecognizable and you can't get your deposit back.
Yet Another Crappy Birgin Guide
Yet Another Crappy Birgin Guide
- Ugly Dougly
- Posts: 17612
- Joined: Wed Sep 10, 2003 9:31 am
- Burning Since: 1996
- Location: เชียงใหม่
Re: Slab City on CBS news
Well, yeah, nothing would torque them more than a pile of junk left behind.unjonharley wrote:Big ole drunken LNT partyUgly Dougly wrote:It's always fun to throw a party!Packoderm wrote:I don't know how fun it would be to throw a burner party in what is essentially becoming a Hooverville. We could make a benefit out of it by bringing shower water and other essentials for Slab City's recessionary refugees.
Who needs and deserves the entertainment more than these guys?![]()
Re: Slab City on CBS news
Hilarity in marketing.Drawingablank wrote:When I clicked the link to view that it started with a 30 second commercial for expensive vacations - seems like a really inappropriate and insensitive spot for that commercial.
Try discussing police criminality on a forum with googly ads, with adblock turned off.
- Ugly Dougly
- Posts: 17612
- Joined: Wed Sep 10, 2003 9:31 am
- Burning Since: 1996
- Location: เชียงใหม่
Re: Slab City on CBS news
I got a T. Rowe Price commercial!Drawingablank wrote:When I clicked the link to view that it started with a 30 second commercial for expensive vacations - seems like a really inappropriate and insensitive spot for that commercial.
Re: Slab City on CBS news
So, is it official? Will there be a massive springtime burner party at Slab City?
(currently Zeke Chaparral)