There’s one thing that just about everyone in Greensboro agrees on: The city should do what it can to help the homeless population.

The homeless are facing a plethora of difficulties in their lives and one current goal of Greensboro and Guilford County government officials is to help them in multiple ways.

However, as the county and the city address the problem together, there’s another worry – that Greensboro, Guilford County and compassionate community organizations are making Greensboro and the surrounding area a magnet for homeless people across the state.

City and county officials say that many of the problems with the downtown Greensboro homeless refuge – the Interactive Resource Center – are simply the result of overcrowding.

One question is why so many homeless people have been coming to the Greensboro area. Some say the city’s and county’s good faith efforts to help the homeless are attracting more of that group.

Chairman of the Guilford County Board of Commissioners Skip Alston said this week that one difficulty of dealing with the problem was that, on the one hand, county government wants to do whatever it can to help the homeless; however, on the other hand, it wasn’t beneficial for the county to take actions that attract homeless people from around the state.

Alston said he’d heard suggestions from some other elected leaders that, before the city or the county provides services to the homeless, the recipient of those benefits should be required to provide evidence of city or county residency.

Alston said there were some major problems with that approach.

Number one, the chairman said, is the fact that, for the homeless, it’s often very difficult to prove where they’ve been living, and, number two, these are all people in need no matter where they were before they arrived in Guilford County.

“These people are human beings who are asking for help,” Alston said.

He also said he’d heard that the Interactive Resource Center – which was just approved for nearly a half million dollars in funding from the City of Greensboro for the fiscal year that began on July 1– was planning to ask Guilford County government for additional funding.

 He said Guilford County had already adopted its fiscal 2024-2025 budget, and he added that the county was already strapped for money, given all of its other responsibilities.

“They’re asking us for money we don’t have,” Alston said, adding that the IRC should have made a formal request before the Board of Commissioners adopted its fiscal 2024-2025 budget in mid-June.

Alston added that Guilford County government was already spending a great deal of money addressing the homeless problem, including building shelters with beds for those without homes – even for the homeless who have children. Those places, Alston said, will provide the formerly homeless a stable place to live while they get back on their feet.

 The Interactive Resource Center isn’t a homeless “shelter” – there are no beds there – however, the center is now open both night and day so the homeless always have a place to shower, escape the summer heat, check emails, etc.

Greensboro and Guilford County have been implementing a lot of other measures in recent years meant to help – as have the community-based organizations that benefit the homeless.

One thing is clear: The word among the homeless in North Carolina is that Guilford County is a very desirable destination.

Even before the latest efforts by the area’s local governments to help the homeless, Greensboro and Guilford County had a reputation in North Carolina as the place that those down on their luck should go when they got out of prison.

The Rhino Times spoke with several former state prison inmates years ago who said that, in the state’s prison system, the common advice from one inmate to another was that Guilford County was the place you want to go after you’ve served your time.

“They say that, when you get out of prison, head to Greensboro,” one former prison inmate told the Rhino Times.

That former inmate, like others who had served time, said that the word regarding the attractiveness of services for the homeless and financially challenged in Guilford County was well known across the state prison system – and a considerable number of people who got out of prison took that advice by getting on a bus headed for Greensboro.

Mike Haley, a prominent Greensboro businessman who used to own many McDonald’s restaurants, is now a resident of Florida who has an office on Summit Avenue in Greensboro.

Haley said the homeless on Summit over the years had become more and more of a problem, resulting in trash, loitering, panhandling, traffic issues and other concerns.

He said the radical decline he has witnessed on that street over the years had been amazing.

Haley opened that office on Summit in 1990 and, in recent years, he said it has been going downhill.

“I have sympathy for the homeless,” Haley said, but he added that the city’s way of addressing the situation hadn’t been effective.

He said that he felt like the city wasn’t enforcing the laws on the books and that was really hurting the area and bringing down property values on his building and other property on Summit as well as in other parts of downtown.

“You could see it starting here,” Haley said of the Summit Avenue area.

“They helped me with the trash, but there is no enforcement of the laws,” he said of the city’s rules on panhandling.

Haley said Greensboro was now in danger of going the way of Asheville, which has become a magnet for the homeless across North Carolina.

Asheville has seen a dramatic increase in its homeless population the last few years.  A recent opinion piece in The Carolina Journal stated that Ashville was turning into the “wild west” of North Carolina and was “becoming synonymous” with “violent crime, an exploding homeless crisis, and an [housing] affordability problem.”

Haley said there are signs up on Summit saying that panhandling isn’t allowed, but police don’t enforce the rules.  He said a bus stop placed near his building years ago and the reluctance of Greensboro government to enforce the laws meant to prevent these problems had led to the decline on the street.

“It destroyed my area,” he said.

As a Florida resident, Haley said, he tries not to get involved with Greensboro politics, but he added that this had been such a pervasive issue for his business that he was willing to speak out.

Haley also said he felt that Greensboro City staff was doing what it could to try to address the problem; however, it was an uphill battle and the city’s efforts weren’t enough given the extent of the homeless situation in his area.

Greensboro Mayor Nancy Vaughan told the Rhino Times after the Greensboro City Council voted on Monday, Aug. 5 to extend funding to the Center, that she did feel like the Center was attempting to address complaints.

“I do feel confident that we had our concerns heard,” Vaughan said after the City Council meeting.

Vaughan said that the City of Greensboro was taking actions meant to address the problems that stemmed from the Interactive Resource Center and the homelessness situation downtown, such as moving the “Safe Parking” program away from the Center.