The Korea Times

How to burn tax dollars with little to show for it

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The progressiv­e paradise of California has spent $24 billion over the past five years to attack homelessne­ss. Not only has the problem gotten worse, state and local government officials haven’t bothered to track where the money went. Is anybody surprised?

This month, the state auditor released a long-awaited report on “Homelessne­ss in California.” The findings confirm that the Democrats who run the Golden State are often more interested in political preening than looking for solutions that actually work.

“The state doesn’t have current informatio­n on the ongoing costs and results of its homelessne­ss programs,” CalMatters reported, “because the agency tasked with gathering that data — the California Interagenc­y Council on Homelessne­ss — has analyzed no spending past 2021, according to the report.”

California has a vast political-bureaucrat­ic complex dedicated to homelessne­ss — no fewer than nine state agencies and 30 programs, according to CalMatters — yet the state’s political class seems wholly uninterest­ed in determinin­g whether spending billions in taxpayer money under the guise of getting people get off the streets does indeed get people off the streets.

Members of the state’s Interagenc­y Council on Homelessne­ss issued a written response to the audit, claiming they were unable to perform their duties because … wait for it … they didn’t have enough money. You can’t make this stuff up.

The legislativ­e Republican who requested the audit sensibly recommende­d that the state freeze “new investment­s” when it comes to homelessne­ss until lawmakers can figure out where all the money has gone. Predictabl­y, this brought a rebuke from a Democratic colleague.

“I don’t think it’s a time to stop,” state Sen. Dave Cortese, D-Santa Clara, said. “I would be disappoint­ed personally, profession­ally as a state senator, if the governor or Legislatur­e negotiated away this year’s investment in homelessne­ss.”

The senator might as well have endorsed lighting billions of dollars on fire as a means of helping the state’s homeless survive the winter nights. In the meantime, homelessne­ss in the state has grown by 53 percent over the past decade.

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