Monday, June 10, 2019
Homelessness, Just a Symptom or More
“[When Ronald] Reagan was elected President in
1980, he discarded a law proposed by his predecessor that would
have continued funding federal community mental health centers. This basically
eliminated services for people struggling with mental illness… He made similar
decisions while he was the governor of California, releasing more than half of
the state’s mental hospital patients and passing a law that abolished involuntary
hospitalization of people
struggling with mental illness. This started a national trend of de-institutionalization.
“In other words, if you are struggling with
mental illness, we can only help you if you ask for it… But, wait. Isn’t one of
the characteristics of severe mental illness not having an accurate sense of
reality? Doesn’t that mean a person may not even realize he or she is mentally
ill?
“There certainly seems to be a correlation between the
de-institutionalization of mental health patients in the 1970s and early 1980s
and the significant number of homelessness agencies created in the mid-to-late
1980s.” Joel John Roberts writing for PovertyInsights.org, 10/14/13.
Dumping
the mentally ill onto the streets, many winding up behind bars in prisons
dramatically underequipped to handle them (30% of those in jails and prisons
have serious mental issues), may have seemed like a good idea in the 1970s and
80s, but we are definitely paying for that today.
States with the largest concentrations of
homeless people relative to the total population are also often those with the
highest cost of housing, states like New York and California. The problem with
dealing with homelessness is the variety of causes combined with the fact that
building housing takes years and NIMBY reactions make dealing with the issue
horribly difficult.
Looking at the U.S. as a whole: “A total of
552,830 people were experiencing homelessness on a single night in 2018. This
number represents 17 out of every 10,000 people in the United States. HUD’s Annual
Point-in-Time Count, the only
nation-wide survey of homeless people, provides this data and other useful
statistics.
“Most people experiencing homelessness are
individuals (67 percent). The remainder (33 percent) are people in families
with children. Public policy has put a focus on additional subpopulations.
“One of the subpopulations is youth who are
under the age of 25 and living on their own (without parents or children). This
group is 7 percent of the total homeless population. In recent years,
coordinated efforts at all levels of government have also targeted veterans (7
percent of the total homeless population) and chronically homeless people (18
percent). This last group consists of people with disabilities who have been
homeless for an extended period of time or repeatedly.” EndHomelessness.org.
California’s struggles with its vast homeless
population (130 thousand or 33 out of a thousand) are drawing headlines across
the United States, particularly Los Angeles County where in November of 2016
voters authorized the
creation of a $1.2-billion fund to finance as many as 10,000 units of housing
for chronically homeless people in the city of L.A. But to date, the resistance
to allowing such housing “in my neighborhood” has resulted in not one new unit
of such housing being built to date.
Good weather and liberal attitudes
mix with the high cost of living: “California’s wealth, in a way, is driving
its poverty. The coastal-city empires of commerce can’t function without the
support of those who teach our children, take our blood pressure, deliver our
mail and fix our cars, but those hardworking folks are barely hanging on in
this housing market while tech execs count bonuses and drive the cost of shacks
into the millions.
“One-third of the county’s residents
are paying half or more of their household income on rent as the distance
between an apartment and a tent continues to narrow. And we can’t pass a
housing bill or deliver more protection to renters?” Steven Lopez writing for
the June 6th Los Angeles Times.
Cadres of homeless people set up
their tents under bridges and overpasses all over LA County. Lacking bathrooms
and sanitary facilities, these amalgamations of homeless people often generate
the stench of that reality, compounded by rats and insects that propagate and
migrate to neighboring houses and apartments. The “not in my backyard” cry is
stronger here. Crime and drug use is high.
Local vagrancy ordinances, bans on
sleeping in public places and angry neighbors fighting back make a bad problem
much worse. Police used to drive the homeless out of these haphazard
communities, confiscating the dregs of property of the hapless residents, but
courts continually step in to try and instill some level of protection for
human beings in dire straits. Still the ordinances are passed and enforced.
More than one homeless person has purposely and openly committed a crime in
plain sight of the cops… to get a bed, medical attention and three meals in the
local jail.
It’s not as if LA County is ignoring
the problem, even as it gets worse. “In L.A. city and county, [local residents]
taxed [themselves] to do something about it, and last year alone $619 million
was poured into housing and services… But statistics released Tuesday [6/4]
show that the number of homeless only grew — a 16% increase in the city and a
12% jump in the county — to a staggering total of nearly 60,000 people without
homes.
“It’s fair to wonder what happened,
and how it’s possible to spend all that money only to see the misery multiply
and extend deeper into the Westside and the San Fernando and San Gabriel
valleys… More than 20,000 people were brought indoors, so it’s not like we got
nothing for our investment. But tens of thousands more spilled onto the streets
or took up residence in vehicles, shelters and parks.” Los Angeles Times, June
6th.
The numbers throughout Southern
California, granted in a area with some of the worst homeless statistics in the
nation, are downright depressing: “‘Overall, the service portion of the effort
on mental health, substance use, the issue of housing, rent subsidies, those
are important and we should stay the course,’ [LA County Supervisor Mark] Ridley-Thomas
said. ‘Where we have to work much harder is in the area of affordable housing.’
“Without the flow of new dollars for
services, [Peter Lynn, executive director of the Los Angeles Homeless Services
Authority] said, the point-in-time count would have been worse and more closely
resembled the dramatic jumps in neighboring Southern California counties and in
the San Francisco Bay Area.
“Orange County changed the way it
conducted its count and recorded a 43% increase from its last count in 2017.
Ventura, San Bernardino and Kern counties reported increases of 20% or more… Lynn
pointed to two vulnerable groups as proof that resources work. Even though
nearly 3,000 more veterans were reported homeless last year, there was no
noticeable change in the number of homeless veterans on the street. Families
experiencing homelessness grew by 8% with nearly 8,000 families being provided
homes.
“One of the largest increases,
however, was among people 18 to 24 years old. Lynn said a 24% jump was partly
the result of a change in the methodology of the count. But still, he said, ‘there
was a significant increase, many more unsheltered. We were able to house more
youth this year than last year, but this is an overflow population.’
“Also exceeding the county average
was a 17% increase of the chronically homeless population — people with a
mental or physical impairment who have been on the street or in shelter for
more than a year… Lynn said the dent made in that population by transitioning
nearly 5,000 people into permanent housing was overshadowed by the phenomenon
of people ‘aging in’ — those who were counted last year but, at that point
weren’t ‘chronic’ because they had been homeless less than a year.
“The growth of homelessness was also
uneven across L.A. County. The Westside experienced the largest increase at
19%, following a year in which its numbers were down by even more. The San
Gabriel Valley was close behind with a 17% increase, marking the second
consecutive year its homeless population had grown.” LA Times. But even as the
California State Legislature mandates local governments to allow great
concentrations of people per dwelling, particularly in areas near local
transportation hubs, local communities resist. They see their home values
dropping and their taxes rising.
The United States really hasn’t
experienced this level of economic dislocation since the Great Depression of
the 1930s. It is the clearest evidence of the worst income inequality in the
entire developed world. Not only is income inequality widening, as we pass tax
cuts and deregulate to the virtual exclusive benefit of the richest in the
land, but the bottom end of that polarized reality is living a life that would
seem more appropriate to the favelas of Rio de Janeiro or the slums in Mumbai…
not an area in the immediate vicinity of Beverly Hills. We just cannot continue
to exist with this widening gap… and expect to survive as a nation. How is
homelessness impacting the community where you live? What do you think you can
do to help?
I’m
Peter Dekom, and when we think that solving this problem is charity to others,
perhaps we need to remember that our entire society will inevitably collapse
from the same problems giving rise to homelessness.
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