Today, the Camp & Julia Coalition is an association of neighborhood residents, business owners, property owners, and interested persons in the Arts, Museum, Lafayette Square, and Warehouse Districts of the American Sector of New Orleans. We live in New Orleans -- we work in New Orleans -- we own property in New Orleans -- we love New Orleans -- and we're not leaving our City.
We will do whatever it takes to improve New Orleans and the quality of all of our lives, including helping rehabilitate the innocent homeless and training the working poor. The Camp & Julia Coalition is committed to providing assistance to the innocent homeless, the helpless, and the working poor. We will work to help them enter appropriate vocational training programs and to obtain necessary health care, including detoxification, twelve-step sobriety, and mental health treatment. Further we are committed to a Common Ground type housing program that provides decent, well managed, affordable private housing.
Alternatively, we strongly oppose and will eradicate all so-called "Homeless Shelter" and
"Soup Kitchen" programs in our neighborhood that actively enable and support hardened criminals and
other serious social deviates. We oppose all programs that lure criminals into our neighborhood with "free food,"
give them a place to hide out, allow them to use and deal drugs in our neighborhood, to panhandle tourists, visitors,
and neighbors, or to harm us in any way.
We will not be terrorized by these criminals anymore.
Unfortunately, the Ozanam Inn is such a place and program. It must be closed or move. For more information
regarding the Downtown Developoment District (DDD) and recent homelessness studies, go to
DDD Studies.
When the Saint Vincent de Paul Society, the
Archdiocese of New Orleans,
and the Ozanam Inn,
opened its doors on Camp Street almost fifty years ago, it was a courageous and spiritual
attempt to serve the denizens of Skid Row. Our once grand residential neighborhood had fallen into neglect
and disrepair, abandoned by the city’s civic and business leadership.
The Church brought its services and ministry to the needy – where the alcoholics, derelicts and drifters lived
and died on the streets and in the shabby flophouses. The Ozanam Inn established itself as a beacon
in an otherwise utterly desolate landscape.
(See Monsignor Bezou,
Pastor of Saint Patrick's Church in the 1950's).
That was fifty years ago. The cityscape has changed drastically with the construction of the Civic Center, the Superdome and the Convention Center, the widening of Poydras Street, the construction and renovation of office buildings, hotels, and warehouses. Whereas, the residential nature of the French Quarter has given way to tourism, the Arts, Museum, Lafayette Square, and Warehouse districts of the “American Sector,” have been reclaimed, redeveloped and restored for the kind of vibrant residential and commercial use that once existed in this neighborhood. The transformation has been a slow, but steady, process spanning the same half century.
Ozanam Inn makes the unsupportable claim that "the Ozanam Inn was here first." Again, read about Monsignor Bezou, founder of the Ozanam Inn in 1955, to understand why this claim is not true. According to Carl Howat, their Executive Director, OZ will remain in our neighborhood despite the fact that the people they "pretend" to serve no longer live in our neighborhood. Ozanam Inn's beacon no longer illuminates. Using this fallacious logic, OZ perpetuates and justifies the politically useful Great Homelessness Myth that a large homeless population will always congregate in the CBD.
We will close the Ozanam Inn . The OZ Soup Kitchen stops
tourism and economic development cold!
This squalid, archaic facility operates a soup kitchen, a transient emergency shelter, a criminal half-way house,
and an illegal "day labor" pool. Most of the people fed at the Ozanam Inn are not the innocent homeless or the needy
working poor;
they are serious social deviants . OZ's clients are responsible for
most of the crimes committed in our neighborhood.


The tempature this morning, 12/11/03, was 42 degrees at 7:00 a.m. About sixty (60) men huddled, shivering in the cold side yard. OZ refuses to let them go inside, into the dinning room, where they could sit in warmth and comfort, watch TV or play cards. Why does the manager, Biaggio DiGiovanni, force the clients to sit outside in the cold with the trash?

Instead, listen to the people who have actually helped the homeless, read objective homelessness studies and legitimate shelter reports. All explain that the truly homeless and the working poor need much more than a soup kitchen; they need real homes and real help, not just a bologna sandwich. OZ keeps its clients on the streets. It perpetuates and justifies the politically useful myth that a "large homeless population" will always congregate in the CBD. The "homeless myth" is used to hold citizens hostage and to leverage more funding for "homeless" shelters and more service providers.
All the while, OZ squanders precious donated resources by maintaining a focus on "emergency services." As the staff from New York's premier shelter program, Common Ground, pointed out on their visits to New Orleans, there is no return on an investment in "3 hots and a cot."
In spite of his lengthy criminal record, including convictions for cocaine possession, carrying a concealed weapon, simple escape, and arrests for the robbery and assault of a tourist, "Shorty," seen sitting near the brick fence in this picture, was always welcome to eat and hang out at the OZ.
If Oz acted responsibly, using any kind of records or background check, perhaps more tourists would be alive today. Oz's soup kitchen lures criminals into our neighborhood. OZ enables, feeds and supports them, giving them a place to hide out while planning and committing serious crimes.
![]()
![]()

Our members, the business owners, property owners, residents, employees, and citizens in this neighborhood, are working actively to solve the problems caused by OZ. Unlike most of the local "homeless" bureaucrats, who live primarily in Metairie, we live in New Orleans -- we work in New Orleans -- we own property in New Orleans -- we love New Orleans -- and we're not leaving our City. We are presenting the solution equation regarding homeless shelters, soup kitchens, police, and crime in our neighborhood.
Advocates of Responsible Urban Policy is a private, non-partisan, non-profit corporation of the State of Louisiana, exempt from Federal income tax under Section 501(a) of the Internal Revenue Code, as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3). Grantors and contributors may rely on this determination, made by the IRS on November 9, 1992. Our exempt status is retroactive to Advocates' inception on February 24, 1989.
Board of Directors: L. E. Madere, Jr., President; Jerrelyn J. Madere, Secretary-Treasurer; John F. Leyens, Jr., Donald McNabb, Cassandra Sharpe, and George Schmidt.
Advocates is supported by dues and subscriptions paid by our members and gifts from supporters. We enhance urban life in New Orleans through thoughtful, non-partisan analysis of local governmental practices, programs and policies.
Advocates of Responsible Urban Policy
A New Orleans, Louisiana, Non-Profit Corporation
842 Camp Street
New Orleans, Louisiana 70130