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Lost Vegas (People living in storm drains)
The UK Sun ^ | September 23, 2009 | Pete Samson

Posted on 09/23/2009 6:53:13 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

LOVEBIRDS Steven and Kathryn share a well-organised home in bustling Las Vegas. They have a neat, if compact kitchen, a furnished living area, and a bedroom complete with double bed, wardrobe and bookshelf featuring a wide selection including a Frank Sinatra biography and Spanish phrase book.

And they make their money in some of the biggest casinos in the world.

But their life is far from the ordinary.

Because, along with hundreds of others, the couple are part of a secret community living in the dark and dirty underground flood tunnels below the famous strip.

Rather than working in the bars or kitchens they "credit hustle", prowling the casinos searching the fruit machines for money or credits left by drunken gamblers.

Despite the risks from disease, highly venomous spiders and flooding washing them away, many of the tunnel people have put together elaborate camps with furniture, ornaments and shelves filled with belongings.

Steven and girlfriend Kathryn's base - under Caesar's Palace casino - is one of the most elaborate. They even have a kettle and a makeshift shower fabricated out of an office drinking water dispenser.

But their bed and many of their belongings are on crates to keep them off the damp floor.

Despite it being hot and dry outside, their tunnel is wet from water being sent down from nearby construction work.

As he gives a guided tour of home, Steven Dommermuth explains: "We use our imagination a lot.

"Our bed came from a skip outside an apartment complex. It's mainly stuff people dump that we pick up. One man's junk is another man's gold.

"We get the stuff late at night so people don't see us because it's kind of embarrassing."

He later gives directions to the tunnels' own art gallery, a collection of graffiti by local artists and some by the underground residents.

Steven moved into the tunnels two years ago after he lost his hotel front-desk job due to a heroin problem he claims he kicked in January.

He now works the same hotels credit-hustling, and his life retains other similarities with the one he left behind.

He says: "We work our way down the strip. The most I've ever found is 997 dollars (£609) on one machine. I've found about $500 a few times. But normally $20 or so is enough to call it a night.

"We buy food and supplies like shampoo and soap. Last night I went and watched the new Quentin Tarantino movie Inglourious Basterds up at the Palms Hotel."

Despite his established set-up, Steven claims he eventually wants to leave the tunnels but can't because of two outstanding arrest warrants from drug possession charges two years ago.

It is estimated the population of the underground community could be as many as 700. As well as credit-hustling, they earn their money off the wildly excessive city above by begging and "dumpster diving" - raiding bins and skips.

There are around 350 miles of flood channels running under Las Vegas. Most inhabitants are in the area under the city's strip.

Another couple, Amy and JR, have lived in the tunnels for two years, having moved to Las Vegas in search of work, wealth and a slice of the famous Sin City action.

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Putting down the Twilight vampire book she is reading for the third time, Amy, 33, explains: "My husband and I have been down here two years this week.

"We were living with my mom in California but the house was full and we had to leave.

"I heard Las Vegas was a good place for jobs. It's the city that never sleeps, with all the bright lights, and I'd always wanted to come.

"But it was tough and we started living under the staircase outside the MGM casino. Then we met a guy who lived in the tunnels. We've been down here ever since.

"I have my books, my CD player, crossword puzzles, some clothes and my picture of our son Brady, who was killed 11 years ago at four months old. The main dangers are the floods and the Black Widow spiders. But it's not a terrible place to be if you're homeless.

"It's much cooler than on the streets, we get a breeze coming through and the cops don't really bother you. It's quiet and everyone helps each other out down here.

"I hope to get out one day. But I want to stay in Las Vegas - I love it here."

Amy and JR met 13 years ago and even got married in one of the city's popular wedding chapels on Valentine's Day last year.

Their wedding had some similarities with the 110,000 other couples who get hitched in the city each year.

JR, 36, explains: "We got married in the Shalimar Chapel.

"We went to watch a show, then to McDonald's for dinner. We got a little bit drunk and did the other normal wedding day things - only we had to come back down here rather than go to a hotel room."

Some of those living there have been forced into the network of tunnels by the recession and difficult job market.

Food The economic downturn has hit the underground residents in their pockets too.

Amy and JR's neighbour Jamie, showing off a wristband he found that gives him free food all day at a hotel buffet, explains: "I've been down here since May.

"I've worked at a lot of the hotels, mainly in building and construction, but not for a couple of years. The jobs are harder to come by now.

"Now I credit hustle but there are lots more people doing it these days. Hundreds and hundreds. You see little old ladies doing it."

As for other entertainment in the tunnels, the 45-year-old adds: "We're big talk radio fans. And a few of us are accomplished musicians and have instruments here.

"One guy down here has a full-time job. I don't think gambling is the cause of many people being down here. It's more alcohol and drugs. We all gamble a bit - we're in Vegas."

Local writer Matthew O'Brien, who has had a book published about the tunnel people, called Beneath The Neon, has been working with Steven and others to help get people housed. He recently founded the Shine A Light foundation to aid them.

He explains: "I guide social workers into the tunnels, show them the terrain and introduce them to people.

"They offer these people services like health and drug counselling.

"We have got 12 to 15 people into houses in the last six months.

"But a lot of the people are very resistant to help. Many don't want to give up their addictions.

"They like their freedom and that no one is telling them what to do.

"They are scared of what's out there.

"To come out of the tunnel and face the world is intimidating for some of the people. Some are very much entrenched down in that tunnel and comfortable. That's why the charity doesn't like to give out too much food, water and clothing.

"We don't want them to get too comfortable because it is really an illusion. It can be extremely dangerous.

"It doesn't rain much in Nevada but when it does the tunnels can fill very quickly. There have been 20 drownings in the last 20 years and a lot of those were people who were living in the tunnels.

"Steve and Kathryn can say they feel like they have a home. But when it pours down three inches of rain in two hours it's clear it's not a home. It's a flood channel."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: Nevada
KEYWORDS: bhoeconomy; dumpsterdiving; economy; homeless; jobless; lasvegas; obama; recession; unemployment
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

for some reason i read this and thought of that t.v. show beauty and the beast. tunnel people hmmm. any of them look like lion men who love poetry?


41 posted on 09/23/2009 9:37:46 PM PDT by madamemayhem (defeat isn't getting knocked down, it's not getting back up)
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To: Vigilanteman
What, exactly, is credit hustling? Is it a fancy term for panhandling?

It's prowling the slot machines in the casinos, looking for credits that were left unclaimed and cashing them.

All the casinos -- at least on the south end of the strip -- have gone electronic. There are no coins. You put bills in the reader, and it maintains your balance until you cash out.

And when you cash out, you get a printed voucher. You can put it into another machine, or convert it to cash at one of the ATMs in the casino.

42 posted on 09/23/2009 9:47:24 PM PDT by justlurking (The only remedy for a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Maybe. Maybe not.

It may or may not be the fault of the man in the White House.

These people also have to be held accountable for their own actions and lives.

In fact, none of them sound either mentally disturbed or physically incapable--to me at least.

Therefore, we find the dilemma.

"Homeless"?

OR

"Prideless"?

If there is a job in the Las Vegas Sentinal calling for a ditch digger or an ambulance driver or a roadway flagman, even if it pays only enough to get a fleabag apartment above ground, will any of these people recover their HUMAN PRIDE, knock off the dumpster diving and pan handling, and go do an honest day's work for pay and get out of their situation?

Sorry. I hear nothing but lame excuses here.

And I cannot lay that all on Obama's doorstep, as much as I dislike HIM, too--and believe me, there is enough to be made about him these days.

In fact, I wish that the article would have ended with the reporter showing them four current job openings in Las Vegas and see what their reaction would be to going to an interview for them...

43 posted on 09/23/2009 11:19:57 PM PDT by AmericanInTokyo (That cracking-type noise? Oh, don't pay no never mind. That's just ACORN's nuts getting crushed.)
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To: Vigilanteman

[What, exactly, is credit hustling? Is it a fancy term for panhandling?]

No, I think it refers to people who get various freebie coupons and promotions from the casinos, as well as looking for unplayed slot credits, etc. I met some couple who was doing that once, but I can’t remember the details.


44 posted on 09/23/2009 11:42:44 PM PDT by FastCoyote (I am intolerant of the intolerable.)
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