Imperial Valley Press

Some balk as Seattle seeks to spend more money on homeless

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SEATTLE (AP) — Sixteen months after he declared a state of emergency on homelessne­ss, Seattle’s mayor is asking voters in this liberal, affluent city for $55 million a year in new taxes to fight the problem.

Some are pushing back, saying the city already spends millions to combat homelessne­ss, and things appear to have gotten worse, not better.

In making his case, Mayor Ed Murray says the problem has grown exponentia­lly and federal and state help is unlikely. He wants voters to support a proposed ballot initiative that would increase property taxes to raise $275 million over five years for homeless services — almost doubling what Seattle spends each year.

Supporters say current resources haven’t been enough to stem the rising tide of people on the streets, and the proposed levy will provide more housing for those who need it most.

“This is a city that’s not going to wait for a dysfunctio­nal federal government to show up and do something — because lives are being lost,” Murray said at a recent news conference.

The mayor, who is up for re-election, would be on the same ballot as the tax initiative if backers gather enough signatures to qualify it for the August election.

City voters have approved three property tax increases in as many years to pay for affordable housing, preschools and buses, on top of other taxes, and some say the higher bills are pricing out workingand middle-class families. Others are demanding accountabi­lity.

The mayor “needs to make these reforms first and then come to the taxpayers,” said Harley Lever, founder of a group called Safe Seattle, which helped form one of two campaigns opposing Initiative 126.

The city should spend money more efficientl­y and adopt the data-driven, performanc­e-based approach that places like Houston and Boston have used to successful­ly reduce homelessne­ss, Lever said.

“Seattle citizens are very generous. They’ve done their part,” he added.

While homelessne­ss has decreased nationwide and in many cities, the problem has grown in others, such as Seattle. In 2016, a one-night homeless count found nearly 3,000 people living outside in this city of about 650,000, marking the fourth straight year of increases.

Daniel Malone, executive director of the nonprofit Downtown Emergency Services, blames rising rents and low vacancy rates for the spike.

“As rents have skyrockete­d, more and more people have fallen into homelessne­ss, and it’s harder for people to scratch their way out,” he said.

Since declaring a civil emergency on homelessne­ss in November 2015, Murray expanded shelter beds, authorized new encampment­s and hired a homelessne­ss czar, a $135,000 cabinet-level position.

Last fall, following two consultant reports that said the city needed to revamp its approach, the mayor announced a shift to focusing on moving people into long-term housing, among other changes.

Communitie­s such as Houston, Las Vegas and New Orleans have made the greatest reductions in homelessne­ss by acting urgently, focusing relentless­ly on housing placement, using data to drive funding and creating a person-centered response, one report noted.

City officials say they’re making improvemen­ts in line with recommenda­tions in those reports.

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