Los Angeles Times

Heed the people’s will

- GEORGE SKELTON in sacramento

The main reason California politician­s are moving swiftly to remove homeless people from the streets is simple: Homelessne­ss has become the public’s No. 1 state concern.

That’s the way it’s supposed to work, after all. It’s how the Founders set it up. It’s in the best interests of politician­s protecting their job security to represent the interests of voters who elected them.

A poll released Wednesday by the Public Policy Institute of California shows that homelessne­ss has become the top state issue for voters. This subject used to register only a low-level blip on the public’s list of concerns.

Because homelessne­ss has become such a hot topic, politician­s are being inspired to confront the issue more aggressive­ly than ever before.

All this week, Gov. Gavin Newsom has stumped the state promoting a sweeping homelessne­ss plan he unveiled in his proposed new state budget.

That’s precisely what a governor should do: announce a major proposal in the Capitol, then venture out and try to sell it to the public around the state, lighting a fire under the Legislatur­e as the voters are under the politician­s.

Meanwhile, a homelessne­ss advisory task force created by the governor

unveiled its separate substantiv­e plan Monday. Its main feature is a proposed state constituti­onal amendment that would require local government­s to hop to it on homelessne­ss. No longer would confrontin­g the problem be an option. It would be mandatory.

“We’ve tried moral persuasion. We’ve tried economic incentives,” said Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg, who co-chairs the task force along with L.A. County Supervisor Mark Ridley Thomas. “But all of it’s optional. Why should this be optional? It shouldn’t be. It mustn’t be. Thousands of people are dying on the streets and people are telling us this is a priority.”

Yes, they emphatical­ly are.

The nonpartisa­n PPIC asked likely voters which one issue they thought was “the most important for the governor and state Legislatur­e to work on in 2020.” The top choice was homelessne­ss. Nothing else came close.

The results: homelessne­ss 23%, housing costs and availabili­ty 11%, environmen­t and climate change 9%, immigratio­n 8%, jobs and the economy 7%. And K-12 schools — a traditiona­l concern — didn’t even register.

L.A. County residents in particular desired a push on homelessne­ss.

Public frustratio­n over homelessne­ss has flared in the last year. Last January, only 7% of likely voters in a PPIC poll named homelessne­ss as the state’s most important issue. Back then, the biggest concern was immigratio­n, followed by education.

PPIC President Mark Baldassare pointed to another survey result that illustrate­s the demand by voters that politician­s focus on homelessne­ss. Asked which program “should have the highest priority” for state spending, health and human services edged out K-12 schools 40% to 38%. That was previously unimaginab­le.

Baldassare theorizes that voters now equate health and human services with helping people living on the street.

Last January, just 30% of likely voters favored making HHS the top spending priority. And in 2015, only 19% did.

So what has happened to propel homelessne­ss into the No. 1 California concern?

“Every place that people go, they’re seeing homelessne­ss now,” Baldassare says. “It’s not just something in Los Angeles or San Francisco. It’s very evident across the state. It’s maybe the most disturbing element of the housing crisis.

“People don’t like to see other people suffering,” the pollster continues. “On some level, people think everyone who lives in California should have shelter, a roof over their heads.

“There’s an element of shock and it’s disturbing. Some of these people are scary. It can be threatenin­g and frightenin­g. It can be sad and depressing. Many California­ns feel like they can’t look the other way any longer.”

Steinberg, a former state Senate leader, is one politician who didn’t need poll results to motivate him to fight homelessne­ss, particular­ly when it results from mental illness. He has been a mental health crusader for decades.

In 2004, Steinberg wrote the “millionair­es’ tax” ballot initiative that added a 1% income tax rate for people with million-dollar earnings. The money was designated for mental health treatment. Now he and Newsom want to overhaul that law to spend more of the tax revenue on treating mentally ill homeless people.

Steinberg says homelessne­ss “is the most visible and terrible manifestat­ion, other than suicide, of mental suffering. And people are seeing the suffering.”

“It has taken a long time to bring this into public consciousn­ess,” Steinberg continues. “But the seeds have always been there because everyone can tell a story about a family member or friend who has suffered. People can relate. They’re frustrated and tired of it.”

People also want back their sidewalks and parks freed of homeless encampment­s.

“The public is fed up — completely fed up,” says Ridley-Thomas, who’s termed out as supervisor and is running for L.A. City Council. “It’s variously motivated: self interest. Disgust and anger. Altruism and high mindedness…. People on the streets are unsafe, unhealthy and uncivil.

“And the public is saying, ‘Wait a minute. This is America. This is L.A. This is California, the fifth-largest economy in the world. And it’s defined by squalor.’ ”

Credit the governor and his task force for proposing plans that don’t just call for more tax money.

Newsom wants to spend an additional $1.4 billion for shelters and healthcare, but he also insists on improving how the services are delivered and the money is spent.

One encouragin­g thing: This is not a polarizing, partisan issue among voters. Democrats, independen­ts and — especially — Republican­s all agree it’s the No. 1 issue facing California.

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? GOV. GAVIN NEWSOM, left, visits the Lone Star Board and Care home in L.A. on Tuesday. A new poll shows homelessne­ss has become state voters’ top concern.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times GOV. GAVIN NEWSOM, left, visits the Lone Star Board and Care home in L.A. on Tuesday. A new poll shows homelessne­ss has become state voters’ top concern.
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 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? KENNETH KENNEDY washes his socks with a fire hydrant in downtown L.A. Across California, public frustratio­n over homelessne­ss has f lared in the last year.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times KENNETH KENNEDY washes his socks with a fire hydrant in downtown L.A. Across California, public frustratio­n over homelessne­ss has f lared in the last year.

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