News & Views of Phillips Since 1976
Monday January 5th 2026

Minneapolis Encampments: A Stone Around The Neck

A call for more stringent social service screening

a photo of the author
Dwight Hobbes

By DWIGHT HOBBES

I survived homelessness and can say first hand that since at ‘92, this city has dealt with it like a cat covering up its waste.


For instance, a couple years ago or so, the community welcomed Powderhorn Park’s tent city only to have cars vandalized and people trying to burglarize homes. So, Minneapolis took an “everybody out of the pool” approach and the disenfranchised, notably women with children simply trying to get by, were thrown out. Bad actors committing crimes, including assault and rape in the encampment proved a stone around their neck, endangering and ultimately costing decent, flat broke folk what little shelter they’d found as they desperately tried to get system assistance.


Now, we’ve seen a dozen shootings within days, to which the response amounts to useless hand wringing on one hand and a shut the whole thing down answer on the other. The ongoing crisis calls for stringent social services screening, not a basically one size fits all solution. You help those who want to help themselves instead of parasites who take handouts for granted and get high as a priority.


Misguided humanitarians indiscriminately bringing supplies to the downtrodden enable the bad and do little for the good who don’t need to make do in a tent city but deserve help getting the hell out.

DWIGHT HOBBES is a long-time Twin Cities journalist and essayist.

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