With the help of caring neighbors, a St. Paul mutual-aid group has raised $30,000 to directly help homeless community members — no questions asked.
St. Paul Camps Support has led supply drives and financial support collections for unhoused people in St. Paul since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic and the murder of George Floyd. The group, which has since transitioned into a mutual-aid fund, is made up of a mix of people: professional mutual-aid practitioners, volunteers and students.
In 2020, St. Paul organizers commuted to Minneapolis to assist at large encampments in Powderhorn Park and other areas before turning to their own neighbors in St. Paul, said community engagement organizer Sean Lim.
"This group of amazing, talented folks quickly realized that there wasn't really a similarly built-out encampment support network or collective servicing the needs of folks here in St. Paul," Lim said.
They collected and distributed supplies including propane, winter clothing, food, tents, sleeping bags, hygiene products and cookware out of Caydence Records & Coffee on St. Paul's East Side. As donations increased, the group found a home at the Minnesota Youth Collective office in the Hamline-Midway neighborhood.
Early in the pandemic, volunteers would go out in groups and ask individual homeless people what they needed, then compile lists and post them on social media, Lim said.
"It was really beautiful to see how social media was able to facilitate mutual aid and how neighborhoods would dedicate their time and energy and resources to ensuring that people do not freeze out in the cold," he said.
But soon, that became a large task for a weary volunteer crew. This fall, St. Paul Camps Support voted to turn to direct mutual aid, a form of direct action and solidarity between neighbors. They collected the Venmo or CashApp accounts of their homeless neighbors, who would receive a deposit every two weeks, no questions asked, Lim said.