Like any city in the United States, Santa Barbara, California, is coping with a burgeoning panhandling problem. But what’s unusual is the city’s way to turn the table on this vexing problem:
Cities have tried many ways to move panhandlers and vagrants out of prime shopping districts, but Santa Barbara believes it has a new angle — 90 degrees.
Using $50,000 in redevelopment funds, the city is planning to turn 14 benches perpendicular to the State Street storefronts they now face. The idea is to make it more difficult for beggars to establish contact with passersby, officials said.
"They’ll be sitting with their backs to half the people coming and going on the sidewalk," said Marck Aguilar, a supervisor for the city’s redevelopment agency. "They’ll have half the potential contacts with the public. It might not be financially beneficial for them."
Steve Chawkins of The Los Angeles Times reports: Link (Photo: Brian van der Brug/LA Times)
Let’s see: $50,000 to move 14 benches. That’s $3,570 a bench. California, this is why you’re broke.

Gimme is a robot/sculpture designed by Chris Eckert that follows people around, asking for money:
My newest art machine, Gimme is an automated panhandler that follows a viewer (or multiple viewers) around the room while relentlessly requesting donations.

This cat begging money was spotted in one of the cities of Belarus. He stays on one place with a note that reads “need money for meat and fish, bless you”. He doesn’t leave his place and protects the money just with his sight. His owner was found nearby. It was an old lady. She told the story that she had rescued the cat from the slaughters, but at that time she had already owned some pets and couldn’t feed them all, so he decided to let the pets earn the money for themselves.
See more pictures at English Russia. Link -via Cynical-C
