I don't understand the city rule, it doesn't make any sense to me. Why must a faith-based facility be open five days a week, not, say, four? Or two? Is the facility only faith-based because it's in a church? Can non-faith-based facilities be selective about their hours? Seems like government at it's best, to me. It's great the city says they have beds to accommodate the people who will be displaced, but it still makes no sense.
Someone mentioned food dontation to the homeless - the reason restaurants and grocery stores can't dontate "old food" (stuff past it's expiration date) is because the FDA says it's not safe to consume. Will day-old bread hurt you? No, probably not, and I'd rather see it go to someone who is hungry than to the rats around a dumpster, but if we feed expired food to the homeless on purpose, we are saying they are worth less than people with homes. I have a home, so it's not OK for me to eat day-oold cheese, but the homeless guy, well, who cares if he gets sick? That's the reasoning behind it, and to a point, I understand.
And, inthebox, this is the second thread you've mentioned separation of church and state. This is the second time I'll ask you - what does this have to do with separation of church and state?