Olga

Featured Video Play Icon

Olga was renting a little house, but the people taking her money were not the owners. She ended up losing everything and eventually became homeless in Los Angeles.

After trying to sleep on the streets, Olga eventually got a tent to live in. She would walk all night because homelessness is dangerous.

Olga has a part-time job cleaning offices in Northridge, which is an hour or more bus ride each way from where her tent is. Imagine getting off work and your only choice is to come home to a tent in downtown Los Angeles.

Olga shares about the challenges for homeless people going to the bathroom and taking showers. She mentions they now have a shower. Olga is referring to a make-shift shower the small tent community made that consists of a large rectangle box for privacy and a water jug at the top.


IP 19 Logo Icon crop

Invisible People

           

We imagine a world where everyone has a place to call home. Until then, we strive to be the most trusted source for homelessness news, education and advocacy.

Related Topics




Get the Invisible People newsletter


RECENT STORIES

80 years old and homeless veteran in Los Angeles needs help

Wendell

Displaced - social impact fim

Displaced: When Surviving Homelessness is a Crime

Homeless man sitting on sidewalk near Skid Row Los Angeles

Prince

homeless woman in Grants Pass

Amber


RECENT ARTICLES

HOA fees and homelessness

Uncapped HOA Fees are Driving People into Homelessness

Barbara Poppe at Supreme Court

Battle Against Homelessness: Barbara Poppe’s Journey from Activism to Advocacy

Grants Pass: Cruel and Unusual Punishment for Poverty

SCOTUS’s Grants Pass v. Johnson: Cruel and Unusual Punishment for Poverty

Misinformation about homelessness

Tackling Misinformation: Strategies Advocates Can Use to Spread the Truth About Homelessness

Get the Invisible People newsletter