The Week (US)

Living on the streets

Major cities are cracking down on homeless encampment­s. But why are so many people ‘living rough’?

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How many are homeless?

It’s hard to determine with any certainty, but in January 2020, more than 580,000 people were homeless in the U.S. on a given night, with an estimated 226,000 of them sleeping outside, in cars, or in abandoned buildings. The 2021 numbers indicated an 8 percent decrease in homelessne­ss, although that may be misleading: The pandemic delayed or suspended counts in half of the 400 communitie­s that report data to the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t. During the height of the pandemic, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advised against breaking up homeless encampment­s out of fear that dispersing people would spread Covid, and cities such as Dallas, Seattle, and Portland, Ore., saw double-digit growth in tent cities. In New York City, from 2,300 to 5,000 people are living on the streets, with 45,000 in shelters. In San Francisco, nearly 1 percent of the city’s population of 875,000 are homeless. Mayor London Breed declared a state of emergency in the Tenderloin district last December, after it became littered with human excrement and used syringes. “Too many people are sprawled out all over our streets,” Breed said, adding that homelessne­ss “has destroyed our city.”

Why do people become homeless?

The reasons vary, but a few common factors stand out. One is mental illness: The deinstitut­ionalizati­on and defunding of psychiatri­c care preceded a spike in homelessne­ss in the 1980s. By 2015, one quarter of all homeless people were suffering from a serious mental disorder such as schizophre­nia. Drug and alcohol use is also often a factor: More than a third of homeless shelter residents struggle with substance-abuse disorders. But researcher­s say that the role of economic factors—particular­ly the cost and availabili­ty of housing—should not be underestim­ated. Many cities have seen housing costs skyrocket, and a 2018 Zillow study found that homelessne­ss rises wherever people have to devote more than 32 percent of their income to rent. Poverty can trigger a downward spiral of domestic violence, arrests, jailing, and eviction, which in turn lead to drug use and psychologi­cal distress. “You experience what they experience,” said pastor Wayne Walker, who runs a Dallas homeless mission, “and you are going to have mental health problems, too.”

What effect did Covid have?

As closed businesses pushed the unemployme­nt rate close to 15 percent in April 2020, federal and local government­s mobilized to prevent an exponentia­l surge of homelessne­ss. Trillions in relief spending helped fund an 11-month eviction moratorium and let hard-hit cities and states house

In response to a growing public outcry, many cities have returned to sweeping up camps of homeless people. The National Coalition for the Homeless reports that at least 65 communitie­s now criminaliz­e or systematic­ally remove homeless camps. New York Mayor Eric Adams recently vowed to remove the approximat­ely 1,000 people who are essentiall­y living in the subway, and police cleared more than 300 outdoor camps within a month. But many who choose to “live rough” refuse to bunk up with hundreds of others in barracks-like shelters, where theft, lice infestatio­n, and confrontat­ions are commonplac­e. Some now also cite the fear of catching Covid. Homeless advocates argue that sweeps merely shuffle homeless people around and result in the loss of their belongings; with so many cities short of shelter and psychiatri­c beds, said Bill Johnson of the National Associatio­n of Police Organizati­ons, “jail becomes the default.”

What else can be done?

Some states, such as Alabama, Washington, and Texas, are clarifying their involuntar­y commitment laws to make it easier to hospitaliz­e people with serious mental illness. Other states, aided by millions in pandemic relief funds, have adopted a “housing first” approach, which prioritize­s putting people under a roof before addressing issues such as mental illness and addiction. Dozens of “tiny house” communitie­s, some based on Portland, Ore.’s Dignity Village, provide transition­al housing with more individual privacy than traditiona­l shelters. Since 2007, the U.S. has added more than 373,000 units of “permanent supportive housing,” which a study in the medical journal The Lancet showed was 90 percent effective at preventing future homelessne­ss. “You heal better when you have a door that you can lock,” said Gail Gilman of the San Francisco– based nonprofit All Home. But it takes an investment of millions by local government­s to provide free housing for thousands of struggling people, and many advocates argue that any long-term solution must include market incentives for building more affordable and low-cost housing. Getting people off the street “takes consistent, intensive effort,” said San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria. “This crisis did not emerge overnight, and it won’t be solved overnight.”

The Golden State’s woes

the homeless in newly vacant motels. Covid’s disruption­s exacerbate­d another crisis: the opioid epidemic. In San Francisco, deaths among homeless people doubled in 2020, 82 percent of them overdoses.

How are cities responding?

California, which has some of the country’s most expensive housing, is estimated to have more than 25 percent of the nation’s homeless population. About 70 percent of the state’s homeless live outdoors rather than in shelters, and in January 2020, a federal survey found that 70 percent reported being homeless for the first time. The state’s homeless service providers helped 91,000 people move into permanent housing in 2020, and last July Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a $12 billion bill to address homelessne­ss. But the state had already spent $13 billion on the problem over the previous three years, and a withering auditor’s report last February blamed the lack of visible results on tangled, uncoordina­ted bureaucrac­y. In Los Angeles County, the nonprofit Economic Roundtable expects the number of homeless to rise from 66,000 in early 2020 to nearly 90,000 next year, and neighborho­ods such as Venice Beach are crowded with tent encampment­s. “We have failed in so many respects,” said advocateTh­eo Henderson, an Angeleno who once lived on the streets. “There are families with children living in automobile­s.There are elderly and the infirm on the streets. It’s a dark time right now.”

 ?? ?? An encampment in Venice Beach, Calif.
An encampment in Venice Beach, Calif.

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