Marin Independent Journal

Homeless numbers grow despite massive spending

Experts urge state to reverse affordable housing shortage

- By Ethan Varian

California's homeless population grew 6% this year to more than 181,000 people — by far the largest estimate of any state, accounting for nearly three in 10 unhoused people nationwide, according to new federal data.

The increase comes as public frustratio­n is mounting over California's struggle to curb homelessne­ss despite unpreceden­ted billions spent in recent years to get people off the street.

Experts and advocates say that while drugs and mental health play a significan­t role, the homelessne­ss crisis will persist until the state can reverse its intensifyi­ng affordable housing shortage. Between 2000 and 2021, California's typical rent swelled 38% while renter income rose only 7%, according to researcher­s with the nonprofit California Housing Partnershi­p.

“California's homelessne­ss crisis is being driven by the same factors that are driving the crisis in the rest of the country, but driven to the extreme,” said Alex Visotzky, a California policy fellow with the nonprofit National Alliance to End Homelessne­ss.

The U.S. homeless population increased by 12% between 2022 and 2023 to more than 650,000 people — the highest total since the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t began collecting

the data in 2007. The spike in the state and nationwide numbers followed rising housing costs across the country and the expiration of pandemic emergency programs, including expanded unemployme­nt assistance, rental aid and eviction moratorium­s.

In the Bay Area, homelessne­ss increased 1% in Santa Clara County and 4% in Contra Costa County and declined 4% in San Francisco, according to previously released local data. Officials there said building more affordable and supportive

 ?? PHOTOS BY ALAN DEP — MARIN INDEPENDEN­T JOURNAL, FILE ?? Ronald Tanga counts some coins inside his tent at the camp along the Mahon Creek Path in San Rafael in September. California's homeless population grew 6% this year, the largest of any state.
PHOTOS BY ALAN DEP — MARIN INDEPENDEN­T JOURNAL, FILE Ronald Tanga counts some coins inside his tent at the camp along the Mahon Creek Path in San Rafael in September. California's homeless population grew 6% this year, the largest of any state.
 ?? ?? A small encampment of people live in tents along the Mahon Creek Path in San Rafael.
A small encampment of people live in tents along the Mahon Creek Path in San Rafael.

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