Crescent City Times

The Failure Of Trying To House The Homeless

C
Crescent City Times
March 7, 2023 at 06:31 AM
4 years ago
Commentary by Samuel Strait – March 7, 2023 As we have been endlessly told by…
Commentary by Samuel Strait – March 7, 2023 As we have been endlessly told by "Homeless Experts", once you get them housed, then is the time to deal with the issues that found them homeless. So here we are decades later and the problem continues to worsen. Recent "Point and Time" surveys locally have shown inspite of attempting to house a meager few of those homeless, the problem continues to expand at an ever more rapid pace. Our local homeless population's increase appears as a similar problem State wide where California's homeless population has increased to the point where it represents 30% of the entire nation's homeless population. Some sources are saying it is much worse, this after spending billions of dollars trying the obviously failing policies of housing first, before you ask the homeless to address the problems that created their homelessness in the first place. As has appeared in many of the articles appearing in the CCTimes, housing before the homeless address their respective issues, particularly in the form of government funded projects, invariably causes more homelessness. It does; however, appear that one City in California has figured that out. Coronado, California, a city of about 20,000 on the out skirts of San Diego, has elected to change up the way homelessness is handled and in a very short period of time can show but a single homeless person in the city. How did they manage that you might ask when California's record is so abysmal? Quite simply, they have asked the homeless to follow the law or leave. Gone is the attitude that homelessness must be tolerated with all its warts. No more permanent encampments or tent cities on the sidewalks. No longer can you urinate or defecate on the City's streets without consequences. Open drug and alcohol use in public is no longer permitted. Laws of which many of the homeless cannot seem to abide by have become what is expected and enforced. The permissive attitude of if only they are housed at taxpayer expense is gone. There are far too may laws in place already that make homelessness a difficult undertaking, if they were only enforced. So what has changed in Coronado? Those that cannot follow the rules have left for more permissive pastures. About 70% of the previous homeless population have made that move. Those that wish to change their life style, about 30%, are given help with their issues only if they are committed to do so. Nothing like personal investment by the homeless willing to change their destructive life style insures that the assistance they receive will put them on the path to being housed. It is only that individual commitment and correction of destructive behavior, that will make an actual change for the better and allow for them to become housed. Coronado's prescription should be the model nation wide rather than the current process. Something those in our County who wish to see a change might just take note. Homelessness is not something that is of recent origin. It has existed for thousands of years. Historically the homeless were treated poorly and it was in their best interests to change their ways. Some did, many did not. As a result, for the most part homelessness flew below the radar of much of the human population. This resulted in a much more serious effort by those who found themselves in such a state to make a greater effort at correcting their life's pathways. When housing is offered without substantive changes in life style, it simply has "papered over" the issues that each of that population which is homeless without making the changes necessary to return to becoming successfully housed. Something Coronado has learned with great success. Something Del Norte County has yet to learn.

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Article Details

Published March 7, 2023 at 06:31 AM
Reading Time 0 min
Category general