How does one measure a society’s greatness? By its military might? By its wealth? By its natural beauty, architecture or founding documents? Here’s a yardstick that came to mind recently: how it treats its most vulnerable members.
As the United States enters the third year of the COVID-19 pandemic, the nation’s more than half-million homeless people certain qualify as among the most vulnerable. The group is disproportionately made up of people of color who are more likely to have dealt with disability, addiction, mental health issues and incarceration. They are usually individuals, but there are often families in these circumstances as well — their misfortune tied, above all else, to the chronic lack of affordable housing.
Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott recently announced that the city will be spending $90.3 million, most of it in federal COVID relief funds, to assist the city’s homeless population, with the centerpiece of the plan being to convert two yet-to-be-identified city hotels into emergency housing. The proposal drew predictable reactions. Those who have been laboring for years to find better opportunities for the estimated 2,200 people who find themselves living on the streets of Baltimore on any given night cheered. Those who see almost any social safety net spending, at least from government sources, as an indulgence and a drag on productivity voiced their displeasure. “Does that include room service?” asked one Twitter user.
It’s much easier to look down uncaringly at homeless people if one has viewed them only from afar and never witnessed firsthand the hardships they face each day, their health worsened and life often shortened by their unhappy conditions. To judge them merely as a nuisance, as an impediment to commerce — their tents an eyesore, their existence primarily a public safety threat — is to deny our own humanity. The question is not whether to help homeless people, it’s how best to help them to get on their feet. Converting hotels to help them get in from the cold makes a lot of sense given that a traditional homeless shelter’s congregate living design is not only often fraught, it’s especially dangerous during a pandemic. Better to provide individual living space.
There are, however, at least two significant challenges here. The first is to overcome traditional government inefficiency and red tape. Mayor Scott’s intent is right, but will City Hall be able to award contracts, meet the requirements of the American Rescue Plan and the U.S. Department of Housing, and get the money out the door in a timely fashion — and with appropriate transparency and oversight? Promising to spend millions is one thing, following through is often another. This can’t be yet another project that is loudly trumpeted today but quietly still pending years hence. Lives are literally at stake.
The second, and perhaps even more difficult, issue is simply this: Will Baltimore stand alone in this serious effort to address homelessness? Maryland needs a regional approach to this problem. If Baltimore’s initiative relieves Baltimore, Howard, Anne Arundel, Harford and Carroll counties of their own obligations toward homeless people, as individuals in crisis simply leave Towson, Glen Burnie, Bel Air and beyond to find help in the city, then the problem of homelessness isn’t being solved so much as transferred. That’s just another form of redlining (or perhaps reverse-urban flight-ing). The counties have American Rescue Plan dollars sitting around as well. Where are their plans to help the less fortunate? Baltimore County has pitched a $16 million “Affordable Housing Opportunity Fund,” but it is slated to go to at least a half-dozen purposes from preserving existing affordable housing to making existing shelters more accessible to the disabled.
Granted, maybe helping homeless people isn’t good politics outside Baltimore, and this is, after all, an election year. But shouldn’t it be? Aren’t communities with fewer people living on the street better communities for all? Critics are correct in at least one regard: The issue is complicated with many underlying factors, among them the worsening shortage of decent, affordable housing. That’s a problem that can be corrected through responsible public investment. And it’s why Mayor Scott’s approach is a reasonable one — if done responsibly, promptly and not in isolation.
Politics turned Parody from within a Conservative Bastion inside the People's Republic of Maryland
Tuesday, March 1, 2022
Baltimore City Laying Out Red Carpet for Homelessness
Baltimore Sun Editorial Board, "Baltimore gets serious about helping homeless people"
Yougov.America: "sleeping on the streets should be illegal". Democrats: 2%, Independants: 5%, Republicans: 8%. These numbers have remained steady since YouGov began measuring partisan opinion on homelessness in 2016. 7/8/2019.
ReplyDeleteBeamish and Minus both are in the minority re their hatred of homeless people.
King Tamanend (who signed the Treaty with William Penn on 6/23/1683) granted all Americans the right to hunt public lands and fish public waters in perpetuity. He didn't give them the right to squat on private lands wherever they wanted. "Kawanio che Keeteru" (such is my right, I will defend it)!
ReplyDeleteDervish Sanders just hates private property.
In other words, "Tell Robin's Merry Men to move to Sherwood Forest. King John owns not THAT land."
ReplyDeleteQuote: "Curators of the Philadelphia History Museum at Atwater Kent claim that a wampum belt in their possession serves as authentication that such a meeting did indeed take place. However, the wampum belt cannot prove or disprove whether the Lenni Lenape and the colony came to a formal agreement, and if so, what the provisions of such an agreement entailed".
ReplyDeleteHomeless people aren't going to move onto public property and live off the land. Firstly, "all hunters on public lands must have the required state license(s)" and secondly you can camp on public lands, you can't set up a permanent residence.
QED you haven't solved America's homeless problem.
Homeless people can't buy State hunting or fishing licenses? Who knew? Renters can't become permanent residents either? Wow, who knew that rental properties were also part of the homelessness problem?
ReplyDeletebtw - Ever camp in a National Forest? They don't make you take you tent down every night, either.
ReplyDeleteIn fact, tents and camping there are ENCOURAGED!
ReplyDeleteSo you HAVE solved the homeless problem? Homeless people just need rides to national forests, camping gear, and hunting and fishing licenses? And camping, hunting and fishing cures mental illness? Who knew?
ReplyDeleteMental illness is a myth used to marginalize Napoleon cosplayers.
ReplyDeleteWhy aren't the homeless living in forests? Because they can't get free government money to buy drugs and alcohol with there.
ReplyDeleteYour kind of "Campers" in Philly yesterday....
ReplyDeleteHow many charities outfit homeless people with camping, hunting and fishing gear, buy them licenses and drive them to national forests? My guess is zero. Maybe you should start one.
ReplyDeleteMany American cities have vibrant ethnic centers. Chinatown, Koreatown, and so on. Why are you picking on Africatown? Look at the mountains of trash and medical waste in Africa. Let them have a little Africa here. Celebrate the diversity, man.
ReplyDeleteBeamish celebrates being racist.
ReplyDeleteRacist? What's racist about letting Philadelphia's blacks decorate their streets with traditional Nairobian landscaping?
ReplyDeleteWhy would anyone go live in the forest when Dervy will keep them supplied with heroin laced with fentanyl?
ReplyDeleteI blame the failure of horsewhip technology to keep up with the demand for faster cotton gins.
ReplyDeleteDon't have to administer laudinum painkillers to someone not whipped enough to keep pace with a cotton gin. So the not working = more painkillers cycle found a niche elsewhere.
ReplyDeleteThe industrialization of labor pretty much ended promising research into pain-induced production efficiency.
ReplyDeleteOne of Dervy's urban campers.
ReplyDeleteLife in an urban campsite (Kennsington Philadephia PA).
ReplyDeleteI don't have (or know how to acquire) any heroin laced with fentanyl to supply anyone with.
ReplyDeleteYou supply the tax dollars that subsidize the users, Dervy. You've left the rest to their hands.
ReplyDeletePretty sure Derpy only voted for the politicians that use OUR tax dollars for that. Derpy gets an earned income tax credit and a refund from it.
ReplyDeleteNo.
ReplyDeleteFair enough. You either don't make enough money or you don't make too little money to be income tax free. So you're one of us, obstensibly You can't make Donald Trump buy crack for Tyrone Biggums, why do you want us to? We, your fellow taxpayers.
ReplyDeleteBuying or selling crack is illegal.
ReplyDeleteIf its' "illegal" then that's that. There is no problem of drug addiction or overdose deaths in America. Best classify those deaths as "Covid" related, eh, dervy? Keeping the Big Scare alive so that Democrats can stuff voter drop boxes is what REALLY matters.
ReplyDeleteHow many people in prison for buying / selling crack were funded by welfare checks?
ReplyDeleteNone (see the comment above yours).
ReplyDelete