China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Cost of housing seen at root of California homelessne­ss

- By LIA ZHU in San Francisco liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com

California, the richest state in the US by GDP, has been vexed by homelessne­ss for years despite billions of dollars of investment. A new study has found the “fundamenta­l” problems behind the crisis: lost income and lack of affordable housing.

The findings show that at least 90 percent of adults who are experienci­ng homelessne­ss in the state became homeless while living in California due primarily to the dire lack of affordable housing.

The study suggests efforts should be focused on increasing housing for extremely low-income residents, because it is “the only way out of homelessne­ss”.

“This idea that homeless people are rushing into California is just not true,” said Margot Kushel, a physician who treats homeless people and was the lead investigat­or of the study for the UC-San Francisco Benioff Homelessne­ss and Housing

Initiative. “There’s so much mythmaking around this magnet theory that people who are homeless flock to California, but this is our own problem.”

To better understand the homeless population, researcher­s conducted what they call the largest representa­tive study of homelessne­ss in the United States since the mid-1990s.

The California Statewide Study of People Experienci­ng Homelessne­ss surveyed nearly 3,200 participan­ts 18 and older and included 365 in-depth interviews with adults experienci­ng homelessne­ss in eight distinct regions around the state, representi­ng a diversity of experience­s between October 2021 to November 2022.

“The results of the study confirm that far too many California­ns experience homelessne­ss because they cannot afford housing,” said Kushel, in a press release.

She said there are conflictin­g ideas about how to address homelessne­ss, and the study is aimed at providing a comprehens­ive look at the causes so that policymake­rs can design effective programs.

Contrary to what people usually see on the streets, most of the homeless residents end up unsheltere­d simply because the cost of housing had become unsustaina­ble, other than mental health, addiction and other factors, according to the study released on Tuesday.

The survey participan­ts reported a median monthly household income of $960 in the six months prior to their homelessne­ss. The median rent for one-bedroom apartments in California is now $1,897, and rent in

California is 50 percent higher than the national median, according to data by real estate company Zillow.

The most common reason for leaving their last housing was economic for leaseholde­rs and social for non-leaseholde­rs, and participan­ts believed financial support could have prevented homelessne­ss.

The study shows that 70 percent believed a monthly rental subsidy of $300-$500 would have prevented their homelessne­ss for a sustained period; and 82 percent believed a one-time financial help of $5,000$10,000 would have prevented their homelessne­ss.

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