CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 2024 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“THE TIGHT LINK BETWEEN DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AND
HOMELESSNESS”
One of the quickest and least controversial ways to reduce
homelessness has now become clear: Eliminate as much domestic violence as
possible.
That’s made plain in a new study from researchers at the
University of California-San Francisco Medical Center which concluded that
intimate partner violence contributes greatly to persons becoming unhoused –
and that these victims of violence are far from universally female.
The new report from UCSF’s Benioff Homelessness and Housing
Initiative says physical violence during the six months before becoming
homeless was a major reason for almost one-tenth of all homelessness in
California.
And yet, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s order that homeless encampments
on state land be shut down forthwith never mentions domestic violence.
The new study found that 8
percent of the unhoused in the largest ever survey of California’s homeless
experienced intimate partner violence, a more formal term for much domestic
violence. That included 17 percent – almost one-fifth – of all women living on
the streets or in homeless shelters.
This makes domestic violence a lesser cause of homelessness
than escalating rents or mental illness of various types, but still a major
contributor. The finding is based on in-depth interviews with more than 100
homeless persons who experienced domestic violence before leaving their former
residences.
As
might be expected, intimate partner violence does not occur in a vacuum.
Most of those made homeless after such episodes are also poor, with median
monthly income about $1,000, often too little for groceries, let alone rent.
Of those naming physical violence as a reason for leaving
their prior homes, almost half told the UCSF researchers the violence was a
large reason for leaving. In short, they would rather chance living in gutters,
tents or temporary shelters than stay and get beaten. Fully 40 percent of them
said the physical abuse was their main reason for leaving.
For these folks, about two-thirds of them women, leaving was
a survival strategy; they believed their lives were threatened.
Before leaving their last previous “permanent” housing, about
20 percent had government rent subsidies.
Other barriers also drive many to the streets and keep them
there. These include not knowing about specialized domestic violence programs,
child care responsibilities, fears their intimate partner would find them if
they got government help and pandemic-related problems including increased time
at home with their predators. Male victims of intimate partner violence, many
of them gay, indicated reluctance in seeking help to avoid becoming homeless
because they feared discrimination and stigma.
But simply leaving home often can’t remove the threat of
violence, it turns out.
“Many who experienced intimate partner violence in the six
months prior to homelessness also experienced (it) during homelessness,” says
the report, published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Interpersonal Violence.
Because the newly homeless can be tracked down by former
housemates with relative ease, the report says, many described to researchers
how they change locations frequently and constantly “remain vigilant of their
surroundings.”
Their situations are especially perilous because fully 81
percent of the surveyed homeless persons fleeing domestic violence spend most
nights completely unsheltered, not even in tents.
Many with these woes lack money to seek apartment rentals,
especially in coastal counties where both rents and housing are higher than
inland.
That’s why 73 percent of the UCSF sample believe a small
monthly housing subsidy could help them a lot. Even more said a lump-sum
payment that might cover first and last month’s rent would help even more.
Almost all those surveyed (92 percent) said a housing voucher limiting their
need to pay most rent would have kept them housed for at least two additional
years.
Instability while unhoused also contributes to extended
homelessness, the research showed, because without easy access to domestic
violence services and shelters, intimate partner violence can continue or
worsen while people remain homeless.
The bottom line: Domestic violence causes and prolongs a
healthy share of California’s homelessness. But the state’s healthcare system
“does not provide substantial support” for people who become homeless due to
violence.
In short, the more Californians can do to lower or prevent
domestic violence, the less homelessness citizens will encounter and the better
off those already homeless will be.
-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
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