The Morning Call

California has right idea, wrong plan for homeless

- By Claudia Sahm Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s latest attempt to reduce homelessne­ss by forcing those who are living on the streets and experienci­ng mental health issues or a substance use disorder into institutio­nal treatment is bound to fail.

It’s not that the $6.3 billion in additional funding for mental and behavioral health care that Newsom is seeking to go along with 14,000 new treatment beds isn’t needed. It’s that forcing individual­s into medical treatment, even if they would likely benefit from it, is questionab­le regarding their rights and doesn’t guarantee better long-term health and housing outcomes. According to a study at the Benioff Homelessne­ss and Housing Initiative at the University of California at San Francisco, the high costs of housing and insufficie­nt income are the primary causes of homelessne­ss, not a mental health or substance use disorder. In many cases, homelessne­ss causes severe episodes of both.

To be sure, the status quo is unacceptab­le. Homelessne­ss is a pressing social and economic concern in the Golden State. California­ns are two-and-a-half times more likely to be homeless (0.44%) than all

Americans (0.17%). Moreover, the percentage of California­ns suffering homelessne­ss has risen during the past 15 years, contrastin­g with the downward trend nationally.

The economic costs of homelessne­ss are evident. California has allocated $17.5 billion in the past four years to various programs to reduce homelessne­ss. In 2022 alone, the state budget allocated about $7 billion, or $42,000 in services per homeless individual, to reduce homelessne­ss. Add to that the expense of other direct social services such as Medicaid and food stamps, plus forgone income due to unemployme­nt, and the costs of supporting the homeless are even larger.

Forcibly relocating and requiring mental and behavioral treatment for homeless persons is a big step away from the popular model of voluntary, unconditio­nal shelter with access to supportive care, referred to as Housing First. Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City economist Elior Cohen found that the Housing First assistance in Los Angeles reduced the likelihood of returning to homelessne­ss after 18 months by 23 percentage points and after 30 months by 15 percentage points. It also lowered crime and the use of social services while increasing income and employment. However, it didn’t lead to a change in the use of health care. In terms of the budget impact, the cost of the Housing First assistance paid for itself after only 18 months due to the reduction in the use of direct social services and higher income.

But expanding programs like Housing First requires more housing — and building more housing in California is urgent. The high level of homelessne­ss is the most extreme symptom of the current shortage, but the financial burden of housing extends to millions of families. In California, more than 3 million renters (over half ) spend 30% or more of their income on rent. More housing would also benefit the state budget and its tax base. By some estimates, the lack of housing reduces California’s gross domestic product by 6% annually.

Critics of Newsom’s efforts point out that the almost $20 billion allocated during the past four years could have paid the rent for every homeless person in California. While that is a striking talking point, it omits the fact that the additional housing units don’t exist. More demand would push up prices even more, reinforcin­g the primary cause of homelessne­ss. So, again, building is necessary.

Much of the funds already allocated for homeless programs was dedicated to building more housing, particular­ly housing with supportive services to help formerly homeless individual­s with job searches, health care and other social benefits. However, the constructi­on was costly and slow. In Los Angeles, only 1,142 units (14% of planned) were built, and the average cost per unit was $600,000, with some as much as $800,000. The root cause was a lengthy and costly set of building requiremen­ts, including zoning, permits, ordinances and environmen­tal reviews. Most roadblocks to building that could reduce homelessne­ss are controlled at the local, not state, level. That has led to increasing­ly creative, albeit legally questionab­le, actions by the state to get around them. Newsom recently signed legislatio­n allowing religious institutio­ns and nonprofit colleges to build low-income housing on their properties, regardless of the current zoning, and waiving local permitting and environmen­tal reviews, but could be vulnerable to legal challenges as an overreach from the state government.

Homelessne­ss is, at its core, about a lack of affordable housing, not a lack of medical care. Solving the problem that the state government can solve is not the same as solving the actual problem.

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