โDo you have a dollar?โ
โA dollar?โ
โYeah, they sell soup inside. I need something warm.โ
โYou can get soup for a dollar?โ
โYeah, they sell it inside. Really, they do.โ
Inside the Greyhound Bus Station on Stevenson Street a few blocks from downtown Reno, Styrofoam tubs of dry Ramen noodle soup are sold. The woman adds water and cooks her soup in a microwave oven. Then she eats up.
When I meet Mildred โMillieโ Bonilla, 35, sheโs been in Reno for just a couple of days. She came on the bus from Seattle, where she says she was looking for her sister.
โBut I didnโt find her,โ Bonilla says.
In Reno, she hasnโt slept much.
โI stay up all night,โ she says. โThen I sleep in here.โ
Half a dozen individuals are sleeping in the bus station. Itโs about 9 a.m.
Bonilla says that before she started hopping on buses and traveling around the West, she lived at an adult foster care facility in a rural area outside of Minneapolis, Minn.
โI was supposed to be staying there for six months,โ she says. โAnd I like the country, but there was nothing to do but smoke cigarettes and sit outside. I wasnโt being very patient. Not patient. Thereโs a word for that. How do you say it?โ
โImpatient?โ
โYeah, impatient. Thatโs what I was being. Plus I have some mentally ill problems.โ
In Reno, nice people have been buying her beer at the Eldorado Hotel Casino. Bonilla says that last night she enjoyed listening to a band at Brew Brothers. She even signed up for a casino card, which she enjoys having. โItโs kind of neat, donโt you think?โ
When well-intentioned individuals give Bonilla money, it actually keeps her from getting back to her social worker and support system in Minneapolis. Now, with assistance from Renoโs Homeless Evaluation Liaison Program, Bonillaโs trying to get homeโback to Minnesotaโagain. The police officers who run HELP out of an office inside the Greyhound station have contacted Bonillaโs social worker, who controls the womanโs money. Theyโre confident that Bonilla could get homeโif sheโd just stay on the bus to Minneapolis. Bonilla looks a bit tired and disoriented as she eats her soup. Itโs pretty likely that sheโs been wearing the same clothes for several days. She keeps a few papers and her casino card in a lime green pouch buckled around her waist.
โYou have lovely purple sunglasses,โ I tell her.
โThey match your coat,โ says RN&R photo editor David Robert.
โDo you want them?โ she asks, taking them off and handing them over.
Officer Jeff McCutcheon of the Reno Police Department interviews dozens of needy individuals every week. He helps many get a ride home.
Photo By David Robert

Bonilla is as generous as the nice people who give her money. When she gets back to Minnesota, sheโs going to tell people there that Nevada is โa really beautiful state.โ
โI met a few nice people who gave me money, then I said my goodbyes.โ
Half a dozen folk stand outside the Greyhound Bus Station, huddled together in the doorway. Some smoke cigarettes. Some sit down on the sidewalk with their backs against the wall under just enough of the roof to protect them from the leaking sky, the drizzling wetness. Some of these travelers have tickets to their destinations. Phoenix, maybe, or New York City. Others hang out at the bus station to stay warm and dry. This is a story, mostly, about the latter group.
Inside the bus station, it is warm and dry. Inside the HELP officeโnot far from Greyhoundโs customer service deskโa U2 song plays on the radio. Reminders are written on an erasable marker board, dates for meetings with the Reno Alliance for the Homeless and the upcoming homeless count on Nov. 20. A small photo of Mother Teresa is taped almost out of sight behind a desk.
โMust be that time of year,โ Officer Jeff McCutcheon of the Reno Police Department tells me. โEverybodyโs doing stories about the homeless.โ
โItโs cold.โ
โYes, itโs cold and people want to know what weโre doing about the homeless. People like to feel good about themselves, I guess.โ
Maybe youโve heard about HELP. The Washoe County Sheriffโs Department and the Reno Police Department team up to buy bus tickets for homeless individuals who want to go back to the places they call home. The program started in 1994, when law enforcement officials decided that incarceration wasnโt the best or most cost effective solution to the homeless problem. Putting a homeless person up in the Washoe County Jail costs about $75 per night. The average bus ticket costs $68.
In October, the cops bought bus tickets for 71 individualsโeach had a family member or friend waiting to take care of her in another place.
โWe wonโt send a homeless person to be homeless in another community,โ McCutcheon says. โAnd this program is not meant for those who are able to help themselves by working and saving to buy their own bus ticket.โ
A stack of applications with Polaroid photos attached shows the kinds of people that McCutcheon and his Sheriffโs Department counterpart Deputy J. Cox help. Some are women with substance abuse problems and mental health issues. Some have been battered. Some have children pictured with them. One young man is listed with the note: โBi-polar, seems self-destructive.โ
More than 90 percent of these individuals donโt return to Reno.
The cops canโt help everyone. Some young people come to Reno looking for work, or hoping to win a big jackpot. They have delusions of grandeur about the city, McCutcheon says. When they canโt find work or lose all their money, they come looking for an easy ride home.
โThey say, โYou mean you wonโt get me a ticket because Iโm not an alcoholic and I donโt have mental health problems?โ But this is not free bus tickets for anybody whoโs trying to leave Reno.โ
The HELP program does, however, give these young people a hook-up with a local employment agency. And the officers can also help set up shelter, so that an individual can actually save his earned money for the needed bus ticket.
Not that every person stranded in Reno is willing to do this.
โSome of our younger generation donโt want to work,โ McCutcheon says.
The bushy-haired woman in sweatpants looks distraught to say the least. Her face is a bit red. Her eyes are puffy. She sits down in a chair in front of Officer McCutcheonโs desk and begins her story.
Six weeks ago, Shelley, a single mother of three, lost her Reno apartment. Not because sheโd forgotten to pay rent, but because of a โmisunderstanding over a dog.โ When the landlord served her with a five-day eviction notice, she says she didnโt get it. The police came to her door one afternoon while she was cooking dinner for the kids. They told her that she had five minutes to vacate the house.
The 48-year-old now has nothing. She and her three kids have been living in the familyโs uninsured, unregistered car and staying with friends whenever possible. Because her two young teenage sons are over 12, they canโt stay together at a shelter.
For the first few weeks, she had a plan. When she received her welfare and social security checks, sheโd register and insure her car, then head to her best friendโs house in San Diego. She could live there while she got back on her feet.
A Greyhound patron gets some shut-eye at the bus station.
Photo By David Robert

The plan half worked. With her social security check, she registered and insured her car. But there was no money left for gas or food. She waited for her welfare check, but it never came. Her case had been assigned to a new social worker who sent the check to Shelleyโs old address. It ended up lost in the mail.
โIt takes six weeks for them to cut a replacement check,โ she says. โI canโt live in the car for another six weeks.โ
I watch the woman, suspecting sheโs come to the wrong place. HELP does bus tickets. Unless this woman wants to sell her car โฆ
โIโm not going to give you a tank of gas so you can get stranded somewhere else,โ McCutcheon tells the woman.
โI need two tanks of gas.โ
McCutcheon says he deals with a gas station that takes HELP vouchers. But that wonโt help Shelley. She needs money to buy gas on the road.
โWhatโs your friendโs name? Whatโs her phone number?โ
McCutcheon dials the San Diego number. He talks with a woman who has no money to help her friend out, but who can offer a place to liveโtwo and a half tanks of gas away.
He then hands the phone across the desk and lets Shelley talk to her friend.
โI canโt do it,โ Shelley says, sobbing. โIโm tired.โ
McCutcheon makes more phone calls then, and by the time Shelley leaves, heโs arranged gas for the trip and a package of food from the Reno-Sparks Gospel Mission.
After receiving her tearful thanks, he turns to me and asks what a reporter can possibly criticize about his program.
Iโll be darned if I can think of a thing.
โYouโre too soft, maybe?โ I say, knowing my co-workers would find this funny coming from a person who always gives panhandlers a buck or two.
โSheโs got three kids. Theyโre living in their car. Mom comes in here broken down and crying, not knowing where to turn. Her car is outside, loaded with three kids, and sheโs leaving here with money to complete her trip, food for the kidsโyou heard her say sheโs hungry?โand a light at the end of the tunnel, her friend in San Diego.โ
Outside the bus station, Dean Anderson smokes a hand-rolled tobacco cigarette and sucks on an orange lollipop. He wants me to know he has a bus ticket, an unlimited ride pass for November. He shows it to me. Heโs careful with this rectangle of paper. If he loses it, Greyhound wonโt issue him a new one. And this pass, in a way, doubles as his monthโs rent.
Since 1997, he says heโs always had a ticket.
Itโs a brilliant idea, if you stop to think about it. Anderson, 55, gets a $975 social security check each month. He spends about $400โless in the off-season, more during the summer rushโon an all-you-can-ride Greyhound bus ticket for the month. And he travels. Last week, he was in Dallas. Now heโs in Reno, but by the time this comes out in print, Anderson plans to be in New York City. His check didnโt come this month, and New York City is the best place to go if you want to get an emergency check cut in a short time.
โIโll get there, hang around the bus station for a few days and theyโll make me an emergency check.โ
Usually Andersonโs check comes to his post office box in Reno. He considers Reno his home base, in a sense, though heโs lived and worked in cities across the country. When asked where he lives, he motions with his hand.
โThere and there and there.โ
Dean Anderson
Photo By David Robert

The first time he came to Reno was in 1962โin his fatherโs car. Itโs not that he exactly fell in love with the town.
โAs a child, I didnโt know what I was looking at.โ
As a young man, after leaving the military, Anderson went to college to study journalism, he tells me. โThat was my first love.โ But thing fell apart. Anderson worked many jobs. Most of them were janitorial. He describes these gigs by leaning over subserviently and making the motions of a person sweeping up.
โExcuse me, sir, โscuse me,โ he says, mockingly. Then he starts to chuckle. โHeh, heh, heh, heh, heh, heh, heh, heh.โ Itโs a deep, throaty, contagious laugh.
Anderson is full of stories. He tells of working at the World Trade Center and meeting Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal reporter who was killed by terrorists in Pakistan. He talks of his four ex-wives and episodes of domestic abuse. When Anderson loses his temper, it seems he also loses women and jobs. Heโs worked as a ticket agent and in the baggage claim at Miami International Airport. But he lost that job when he hit his wife. He lost another job right here at the Greyhound Bus Station in Reno.
โI struck the [man who is] now general manager. I hit him in the โ70s. Heh, heh, heh, heh, heh, heh, heh. He got on my nerves real bad. Thatโs why they donโt like me hanging around here. โฆ I refused to play by their rules.โ
These days, even his mother wonโt talk to him. Thatโs OK, though. His family, ex-wives and children will all change their tune when he wins a million dollars in the casinos.
โI invested $300 in the machines [during this trip to Reno],โ he says. โI didnโt win. The best Iโve done is when I played seven nickels and won $1,500. I was just lucky that day.โ
That day was back in 1997. Thatโs the year Anderson started buying bus tickets.
โI sleep on the bus; I eat on the bus,โ he says. In between bus rides, he has enough money for cheap motel rooms. And when that moneyโs gone?
โI sleep at the mission; I eat at the mission.โ
Itโs easy to see that McCutcheon loves his job. Interviewing five or six people a dayโand helping about half of themโis as rewarding a career as youโd find in law enforcement, he says.
Heโs been in the office for five years. Before then, he was a beat cop. A staunch Catholic, heโd been bragging about Mother Teresa to a fellow officer who served as a deacon in a local Southern Baptist church. Then, when the job at the bus station came open, he cracked a joke about it.
โI said, โGosh, can you imagine being the homeless officer full time?โ And he said to me, โWhat about this Mother Teresa youโre always talking about?โ Then I felt guilty, and I thought I should put in for it. โฆ No one else applied.โ
When I tell him Andersonโs story about bus tickets, McCutcheon smiles in appreciation of the manโs intriguing plan.
โI wish we could help everybody,โ he says.
Itโs especially hard to help an individual who isnโt looking for help.
One of his most memorable clients was a man with mental health problems whose family had been searching for him for eight or nine years.
โThey didnโt know he was alive. They didnโt sell the family home or change the family phone number in case he tried to call home. โฆ We were able to get him back, and that year, the family was all able to get together for Christmas for the first time in years. When youโre able to reconnect a family like that, thereโs nothing more rewarding that I can think of doing.โ
Of course, he agrees that buying a bus ticket for an addicted or ill individual wonโt solve many underlying problems. There have to be programs to help an individual once he gets back to his support system.
โWithout programs, weโre just shuffling them along,โ he says.
Without a permanent homeless shelter in Reno, itโs kind of hard to reach people with needed programs here.
โBut darn it, weโre working on that, too,โ McCutcheon says. โOur cityโs very serious about that now. A shelter doesnโt solve problems either, though.โ
If he were a homeless man thousands of miles from home and faced with the choice of starting recovery programs here in Reno or back โhomeโ where friends and families can help with recovery, heโd take the bus ticket.
โSend me home, any day,” he says, “where people are surrounding me and caring for me.”
