The Philippine Star

Homelessne­ss surges up and down US West Coast

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Homelessne­ss is not a new issue to America’s West Coast. But it’s getting worse — much worse.

On any given night, more than 105,000 people are sleeping unsheltere­d in some of the country’s biggest and trendiest metropolis­es, driven there by soaring housing costs, rental vacancy rates that rival those in Manhattan and a booming tech economy that’s leaving thousands behind.

Another 63,000 are sleeping in shelters or transition­al housing with no safety net.

The rising numbers have pushed abject poverty into the open like never before.

San Diego now scrubs its sidewalks with bleach to counter a deadly hepatitis A outbreak that has spread to other cities and forced California to declare a state of emergency.

In Anaheim, home to Disneyland, 400 people sleep along a bike path in the shadow of Angel Stadium. Organizers in Portland, Oregon, lit incense at a recent outdoor food festival to mask the stench of urine in a parking lot where vendors set up shop.

All along the coast, elected officials are scrambling for solutions.

“It’s a sea of humanity crashing against services, and services at this point are overwhelme­d, literally overwhelme­d,” said Jeremy Lemoine, who works for a Seattle nonprofit that provides various forms of assistance to the homeless. “It’s catastroph­ic.”

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