“I lost everything — my apartment, my furniture — because I was unable to work,” he said.
He found temporary residence with his sister, but was eventually without a home again.
Frazier turned to the Inter-Faith Council, living in the Community House men’s shelter for two months.
“They helped me with clothes, my teeth. They gave me three meals a day,” he said. “They’ve just been wonderful.”
The council’s Executive Director Chris Moran said he believes his non-profit and agencies like it can’t be the sole solution to homelessness.
“I want to hear elected officials and county officers talking about how to fix this problem,” Moran said. “It’s all about workers, about getting workers what they need to get by.”
The average worker needs to make $15 to $17 per hour to live in Chapel Hill, Moran estimated. Many do not make these wages and rely on the council and similar agencies.
The number of people with income below the poverty rate in Orange County is also rising, according to the American Community Survey released last week.
The survey estimated that 18 percent of Orange County residents lived below the poverty line in 2009. This figure is up about 4 percent from the 2008 survey.
Frazier attributed a portion of this statistic to the increase in prices of all goods, from food to electricity.
“It’s hard out there for someone in my status. The government hasn’t given us a cost of living raise in two or three years,” Frazier said. “The fact that they aren’t doing that makes it harder on me right now.”
Chapel Hill Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt said society as a whole must help reduce the strain placed on at-risk families in order to keep them from becoming homeless.
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“If we, as a community, could help people to take care of other parts of their lives, — transportation, health care, childcare — they can be more stable and devote their resources to housing,” Kleinschmidt said.
“One of the things that will help us get through this hard time is remembering that we must help each other.”
Frazier is now collecting disability and other financial assistance, and he lives in Abbey Court Condominiums, a low-cost housing complex in Carrboro.
He said he would still like to find a job, although he doesn’t know if it’s possible because of his health.
“You have to be really strong when things like that happen,” he said. “Sometimes you just have to swallow your pride and ask for help.”
Contact the City Editor at citydesk@unc.edu.