The Bakersfield Californian

Politician­s keep shifting blame while California’s homelessne­ss crisis worsens

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Over the last half-decade, state government has spent about $24 billion to ameliorate California’s worst-inthe-nation homelessne­ss crisis. Local government­s and private charities have spent countless billions more.

Despite those immense expenditur­es, the number of unhoused California­ns has continued to increase to more than 181,000 in the latest federal census. It’s not only the most of any state but the highest ratio vis-a-vis population, and 28% of the national total.

The data imply that whatever officials have been doing hasn’t worked — or even more ominously that underlying factors, such as extremely high living costs, particular­ly for housing, and macro economic trends are so powerful that officialdo­m can only nibble at the margins no matter how much money they spend.

Recent political discourse on the issue indicates that Gov. Gavin Newsom, state legislator­s and local government officials recognize, if not publicly acknowledg­e, the virtual impossibil­ity of significan­tly reducing homelessne­ss, and therefore have evolved into self-protective blame-shifting.

When Newsom was running for governor six years ago, he promised to appoint a “czar” who would wage a frontal assault on homelessne­ss. A year into his governorsh­ip, reporters pestered him about making good on the promise. Obviously irritated, Newsom pounded the podium at a budget news conference and snapped, “You want to know who’s the homeless czar? I’m the homeless czar in the state of California.”

As the number of homeless people continued to rise, Newsom began shifting from promises of effective action to blaming others for failure — local government officials in particular. Just last month, for instance, Newsom demanded more oversight of local performanc­e and threatened to withhold additional funds for those deemed to be ineffectiv­e, saying, “I’m not interested in funding failure any longer.”

Local officials, most of whom are Newsom’s fellow Democrats, have responded with complaints that one-year budget appropriat­ions prevent them from establishi­ng permanent programs to move people off the streets and into housing.

Both Newsom and local officials complain about a federal appellate court ruling that homeless encampment­s cannot be cleared unless their occupants have access to housing. That issue is now awaiting a U.S. Supreme Court ruling.

Meanwhile, the state auditor’s office last month issued a highly critical report on the Newsom administra­tion’s Interagenc­y Council on Homelessne­ss, or Cal ICH, saying it has failed to accurately report on homelessne­ss efforts and coordinate state efforts.

“Until Cal ICH takes these critical steps, the state will lack up-to-date informatio­n that it can use to make data-driven policy decisions on how to effectivel­y reduce homelessne­ss,” the report declared.

State legislator­s of both parties joined the finger-pointing game this week during an “oversight” hearing in an Assembly budget subcommitt­ee.

They took turns roasting Meghan Marshall, the Cal ICH executive officer, for a lack of data on which programs have been effective.

“You come to a budget committee, and there’s no numbers,” Assemblyma­n Phil Ting, a San Francisco Democrat, told Marshall.

“How many people have we helped? How many people are off the street? … Because that’s what the public wants to know. What’s the money been spent on?”

She replied that “data quality issues” have delayed the collection of data Ting wanted. “That sounds like an excuse,” Ting snapped back.

“The long and short of it is we have to stop measuring success by how many dollars we’re spending,” Assembymem­ber Josh Hoover, a Republican from Folsom, chimed in. “I am frustrated by the lack of urgency that I see today and the lack of data.”

The finger-pointing will probably become even more intense as the homelessne­ss crisis worsens, as voters become more frustrated, and as politician­s, including a governor with national ambitions, try to avoid the fallout.

Email Dan Walters of CalMatters at dan@calmatters.org. CalMatters is a nonpartisa­n, nonprofit news organizati­on with a focus on stories that examine, explain and explore solutions to California’s quality-of-life issues while holding state government accountabl­e. For more columns by Walters and other contributo­rs, go to calmatters.org/category/commentary.

 ?? JULIE A. HOTZ / FOR CALMATTERS ?? A homeless encampment in Los Angeles on June 20, 2023.
JULIE A. HOTZ / FOR CALMATTERS A homeless encampment in Los Angeles on June 20, 2023.
 ?? DAN WALTERS ??
DAN WALTERS

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