The Arizona Republic

Where is money going to fight homelessne­ss? No one knows

- Your Turn Devon Kurtz and Stefani Buhajla Guest columnists

A recent report has exposed shocking statistics about the state of homelessne­ss in the Grand Canyon state.

While the state spends an estimated $1 billion of taxpayer money every year on homelessne­ss alleviatio­n, the number of Arizonans without shelter continues to grow at a substantia­l rate.

A report by Common Sense Institute Arizona serves as a startling reality check on the massive failure of programs that have deprioriti­zed emergency and transition­al services — leaving more and more people in crisis to the dangers of life on the streets.

Over the last three years, the number of homeless individual­s in Arizona has increased by nearly a third — and it is suspected that the increase may be significan­tly higher.

Even more worrying, the number of unsheltere­d homeless, the most vulnerable among them, more than tripled between 2014 and 2023.

Common Sense Institute identified at least 167 public and private homeless service providers employing roughly 9,000 workers and 42,000 volunteers. They reported that’s about the size of the state’s mining and logging sector in terms of work hours.

These organizati­ons are spending more than $47,200 per homeless person each year. That figure is double the median annual rent, and it’s more than half the state’s annual GDP in farming.

Yet, alarmingly, conservati­ve estimates now put the total number of homeless individual­s in Arizona at 14,000. A record 7,600 of them went without shelter in 2023.

So, where is all that money going, exactly? No one knows for sure — and that is a major problem.

State Rep. Matt Gress, who called the report a “bombshell,” is trying to fix it and working across party lines to provide accountabi­lity and transparen­cy when it comes to how taxpayer dollars are spent on homelessne­ss initiative­s.

Homelessne­ss isn’t a partisan issue, and neither are the root causes.

One of the largest studies of homelessne­ss in the U.S., of unsheltere­d people in California, found that more than eight in 10 individual­s are struggling with mental health disorders, and twothirds are using illegal drugs regularly.

Among Arizona’s unsheltere­d homeless, the number who suffer from chronic substance abuse has skyrockete­d by a shocking 153% since 2013.

Research by the Cicero Institute underlines alarming connection­s between mental health and homelessne­ss.

Throughout the 1980s, all 50 states created drug-free zones to stop drug dealing and usage in areas where children learn and play. The result was what we now call “Drug-Free School Zones.”

The solution has had a positive impact on drug crimes in such areas.

It makes sense to expand drug-free zones to include homeless shelters and housing units where struggling individual­s, including children, can feel safe.

Drugs exacerbate the challenges facing the homeless by exposing them to criminal predation, attracting

criminal activity and chaos that further destabiliz­es their environmen­t.

Studies have found that crime and drugs concentrat­e in areas near homeless service areas, so it makes sense to remove drugs from the equation.

Gress’ efforts to offer meaningful change have gained a foothold. He has sponsored legislatio­n called The Arizona Homeless Protection and Drug Control Act, and the conversati­ons it’s generated have been encouragin­g.

The act would create commonsens­e drug-free zones, require service providers that accept government funding to be transparen­t about spending, reprioriti­ze emergency and transition­al housing, and focus on treatment-first approaches to offer struggling Arizonans a second chance at a flourishin­g life.

Those who choose to deal drugs or knowingly allow drug traffickin­g in drug-free homeless service zones would face increased penalties for putting homeless individual­s and those who serve them at grave risk.

Lending further support to the push, our recent polling shows a significan­t majority of Arizona’s voters support greater action against homelessne­ss and drugs. That includes Democrats, Republican­s and independen­ts.

There is reason to be hopeful that real relief could be coming — and it might arrive this year should lawmakers act.

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