CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MAY 21, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“IS PERMANENT HOUSING THE REAL
HOMELESS SOLUTION?”
The
ultimate goal of city and county agencies trying to solve California’s homeless
problem is to get this transient populace into permanent housing.
But it
turns out many of the homeless don’t want the kind of permanent units that are
becoming more available as local, state and federal governments devote ever
more money to getting them off the streets.
No one
knows precisely how many of the state’s approximately 161,000 homeless prefer
to keep sleeping in tents and under tarps, as about two-thirds of the
California homeless do each night. But dealing with the encampments so common
along sidewalks and beneath freeway bridges can often seem like playing with
silly putty: When authorities squeeze encampments by shooing occupants away and
cleaning up messes they leave, the camps often reappear somewhere else within
days, like silly putty oozing through the gaps between a child’s fingers.
Meanwhile,
homeless-aid agencies keep building, buying and renting more housing aimed for
the homeless. Short-term housing has arisen in several parts of Los Angeles,
San Francisco, Sacramento and other cities. Permanent housing is becoming more
available.
The
mayors of California’s 13 largest cities demanded $20 billion the other day to
create more of each.
But much
of the permanent housing – some in older buildings and hotels bought up by
governments – can go begging. In San Francisco, for one prominent example, 70
percent of homeless persons offered permanent spots in refurbished quarters
were reportedly turning them down, as of mid-April.
As a
local newspaper reported, that was also the rate of declines at a former hotel
purchased by a San Francisco city agency for $45 million and converted into 232
units. This building features communal bathrooms. Homeless individuals pay 30
percent of their income as rent.
The cause
may be the shared facilities or the rent, but most of those offered these
quarters chose instead to stay in shelter-in-place hotels open for the duration
of the COVID-19 pandemic. Rooms there often have private baths and provide
meals, but it’s temporary.
Meanwhile,
some other programs are free only for those over 65 and Covid-negative.
Some
homeless advocates lament the alleged poor quality of permanent housing
offered, saying bad ventilation plus lack of Wi-Fi and other amenities explain
many move-in refusals.
Still,
homeless agencies appear flummoxed by the rejection rate for permanent housing
they’re now able to offer, something only recently available. Did they expect a
population plagued by instability and a high component (about 20 percent) of
serious mental illness to turn overnight into planners interested in delayed
gratification?
Said
Abigail Stewart-Kahn, the interim director of San Francisco’s anti-homelessness
agency, when reporting to the city’s board of supervisors, “We have never had
shelter in many ways that’s nicer” than the available permanent housing.
In some
places, homeless persons moving into new interim or permanent housing must
undergo psychological counseling and adhere to drug-free lifestyles, rather
than the free-wheeling, sometimes criminal life of the streets, where stolen
goods are often fenced in homeless encampments and 16 percent of the homeless
suffer from substance abuse.
Meanwhile,
thousands of brand-new permanent units with many amenities are in the pipeline.
These
cost an average of more than $400,000 per unit, paid for mostly with local bond
money. But when money from one of those bonds, a $1.2 billion local Los Angeles
measure passed in 2016, is gone, odds are it will be difficult to pass new
bonds.
For
authorities have alienated many thousands of local voters who never expected
housing for the homeless to appear near them. Plus, this problem seems never to
shrink, no matter how much new housing is built, with arrivals from other states
joining families newly afflicted by financial woes to replenish the homeless
population.
If
there’s a solution, it may be to deal with underlying psychological and
economic factors leading to homelessness, rather than putting more and more
money into housing development.
Is the
answer to reopen or rebuild mental health facilities shut down by then-Gov.
Ronald Reagan in the 1970s? Is it to erect new towns in presently vacant desert
parts of the state? Maybe both? So far, no one has a solution that pleases
everyone.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at
tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising
Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now
available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
No comments:
Post a Comment