From the Washington Examiner
President Joe Biden came into office promising to use California, a state people are literally fleeing because of its high taxes and deteriorating quality of life, as his policy model for the nation. But even he probably didn't expect other cities and states to take the very worst aspects of California and adopt them voluntarily.
In Maryland, Del. Sheila Ruth, a Democrat, has proposed a state law that would result in homeless tent cities springing up throughout Maryland, making it impossible for municipalities to shut them down.
Surely, Marylanders have already seen the deleterious effects of massive homeless encampments in so many West Coast communities. The crime they spawn and the disease they spread are a blight upon formerly attractive downtown areas such as Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. Over the last decade, these cities' inability to enforce rules against encampments has caused an explosion in the homeless population.
The West Coast's homeless disaster began, of all places, in Idaho. The city of Boise, which has the misfortune of being subject to the whims of the left-wing federal 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, was sued for ticketing people who appropriated public land by camping on city sidewalks and under overpasses. The city was ultimately enjoined from enforcing laws that had deterred vagrancy unless it could provide shelter beds to every single homeless person. After a protracted appeals process, the Supreme Court refused to take up the case in 2019, leaving cities throughout Idaho, Nevada, Montana, California, Oregon, Arizona, and Washington unable to enforce such laws.
Boise's weather is harsh enough that its homeless population was always relatively small, so it had the option of funding a few additional shelter beds and then building a skateboard park over the site of the homeless encampment. But larger cities with milder weather cannot possibly hope to do such a thing, leading to homeless populations that are far too large — in Los Angeles, the homeless population is greater than the entire population of Annapolis, Maryland.
Most people, both liberal and conservative, would like to avoid tent cities in their communities. As a recent poll shows, even residents of Washington, D.C., a city arguably more left-wing than San Francisco, believe that the police should shut down its homeless encampments yesterday.
The crisis of mass homelessness is not a function of housing being too expensive or unavailable. If that were the issue, then the homeless would just improve their situation by moving to any of the thousands of cities that currently have extremely cheap housing and abundant job opportunities. South Dakota, for example, is typical in that its unemployment rate is 2.6% and half of the places for rent cost less than $747 per month. But most long-term homeless cannot take advantage of this. They literally cannot hold down a job, no matter how many jobs are available, nor make regular payments, no matter what sort of income they could hypothetically gain access to. That's because three-quarters of long-term homelessness is the result of untreated mental illness, substance abuse, or both.
Some liberal jurisdictions have chosen to deal with this reality in a compassionate way, diverting those homeless who get arrested after petty crimes into treatment programs that will help them approach self-sufficiency. Others, such as California, are just throwing their money down the drain on useless, expensive home-building projects. Los Angeles's $1.2 billion initiative is costing as much as $837,000 to build each new housing unit — more than twice what was promised when voters approved it six years ago. That's enough to buy multiple houses for each L.A. homeless person in most midsized U.S. cities. And in six years, the program has produced only about 12% of the housing units it promised. To add insult to injury, the homeless population in L.A. has exploded since it was adopted.
Unfortunately, the Biden administration is making it harder to fight homelessness by conditioning all federal funding on adherence to its own version of the debunked "housing first" ideology, effectively defunding any program that has expectations about sobriety or work requirements. This is making it hard enough for cities everywhere to deal with their problems. But things can always get worse.
Maryland and other states and cities should at least avoid replicating the problems that liberal judges imposed upon West Coast cities. Baltimore has enough trouble already — it doesn't need to become the epicenter of East Coast homelessness on top of everything else.
Apparently you've been able to hold a job despite your mental illness.
ReplyDeleteI'm just crazy enough to pass for "mainstream". lol!
ReplyDeleteOne day Mars will have a homelessness problem.
ReplyDelete...and it will have been caused by a Democrat.
ReplyDelete"caused" = not pretending the homelessness problem can be solved by outlawing it.
ReplyDeleteWhy not make homelessness illegal? Prison construction company stocks need a boost.
ReplyDeleteThat would cure homelessness...
ReplyDelete...nothing beats 3 hots and a cot.
ReplyDeleteaka Minus thinks homeless people should be grateful to be arrested and incarcerated. I doubt a majority of homeless people would agree.
ReplyDeleteMy guess is that you never read George Orwell's classic short story, "The Spike". Not only would they be grateful. They'd voluntarily participate in the process on a routinized basis.
ReplyDeleteYou could only stay at shelters for one night at a time at a spike, and if you went to two or more spikes in London more than once in a single month, there was a possibility of being confined for a week... so the "tramps" moved in a great "circuit" around London to avoid repeating a stay in the same shelter within a month's time.
from Orwell's "Down and Out in Paris and London" (Ch XXIV)
ReplyDeleteAt three I went back to the spike. The tramps had been sitting there
since eight, with hardly room to move an elbow, and they were now half mad
with boredom. Even smoking was at an end, for a tramp's tobacco is
picked-up cigarette ends, and he starves if he is more than a few hours
away from the pavement. Most of the men were too bored even to talk; they
just sat packed on the benches, staring at nothing, their scrubby faces
split in two by enormous yawns. The room stank of ENNUI.
Paddy, his backside aching from the hard bench, was in a whimpering
mood, and to pass the time away I talked with a rather superior tramp, a
young carpenter who wore a collar and tie and was on the road, he said, for
lack of a set of tools. He kept a little aloof from the other tramps, and
held himself more like a free man than a casual. He had literary tastes,
too, and carried a copy of QUENTIN DURWARD in his pocket. He told me that
he never went into a spike unless driven there by hunger, sleeping under
hedges and behind ricks in preference. Along the south coast he had begged
by day and slept in bathing-huts for weeks at a time.
We talked of life on the road. He criticized the system that makes a
tramp spend fourteen hours a day in the spike, and the other ten in walking
and dodging the police. He spoke of his own case--six months at the
public charge for want of a few pounds' worth of tools. It was idiotic, he
said.
Then I told him about the wastage of food in the workhouse kitchen,
and what I thought of it. And at that he changed his tone instantly. I saw
that I had awakened the pew-renter who sleeps in every English workman.
Though he had been famished along with the others, he at once saw reasons
why the food should have been thrown away rather that given to the tramps.
He admonished me quite severely.
'They have to do it,' he said. 'If they made these places too
comfortable, you'd have all the scum of the country flocking into them.
It's only the bad food as keeps all that scum away. These here tramps are
too lazy to work, that's all that's wrong with them. You don't want to go
encouraging of them. They're scum.'
Dervish has never heard of the concept of "deserving/undeserving poor". His is "The Tragedy of American Compassion".
ReplyDeleteIt's why America has so many useless drunks and drhg addicts.
I read it the last time you brought it up. A character wrongly concluded "they're scum". That wasn't Orwell's conclusion. Orwell was a Democratic Socialist. FYI, it's heartless people like you who are scum. Participating because you have no choice doesn't equal gratitude.
ReplyDeleteThe drunks and drug addicts ARE scum. They had a choice, which you chose to "enable".
ReplyDeleteMy politics can be summed up as "do whatever you like, on your own dime." I've moved a little off a general libertarian view of methheads though. People should get tax breaks for killing methheads.
ReplyDeleteYou're scum.
ReplyDeleteNo, my mother was killed by a methhead.
ReplyDeleteSo innocent methheads who would never kill anyone should be subject to extrajudicial execution?
ReplyDelete