The Signal

Patience Wearing Thin on Homelessne­ss

- Dan WALTERS COMMENTARY Dan Walters’ commentary is distribute­d by Calmatters, a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters.

Last week, a viral video showed the owner of a San Francisco art gallery using a water hose to spray a homeless woman camped outside the doorway of his business.

The gallery owner, Collier Gwin, semi-apologized later, telling a television interviewe­r, “I totally understand what an awful thing that is to do, but I also understand what an awful thing it is to leave her on the streets.”

Gwin said he and other business owners complained to police about her blocking the sidewalks and business entrances. Efforts had been made to help her get off the streets, but nothing has worked.

“We called the police. There must be at least 25 calls to police,” Gwin said. “It’s two days in a homeless shelter, it’s two days in jail, and then they drop them right back on the street.”

Finally, after the woman once again refused to move, in frustratio­n Gwin sprayed her down.

Gwin obviously did the wrong thing, but the incident dramatized the frustratio­n that millions of California­ns feel about the squalid encampment­s of homeless people that have become the defining feature of urban California.

Gov. Gavin Newsom acknowledg­ed the growing resentment as he introduced his new state budget last week. “People have just had it,” he told reporters. “They want the encampment­s cleaned up.”

“People are dying on the streets all across this state,” Newsom said. “The encampment­s, we’ve got to clean them up, we’ve got to take ownership, we’ve got to take responsibi­lity.”

In the last two state budgets, Newsom and the Legislatur­e have committed $17.5 billion for housing and services to the estimated 170,000 homeless California­ns – about $100,000 each. However, as Newsom’s new budget acknowledg­es, “Despite unpreceden­ted resources from the state and record numbers of people being served by the homelessne­ss response system, the population of unhoused individual­s grows faster than the population exiting homelessne­ss.”

The new budget adds several more billion dollars, but suggests that local government­s are still not doing enough – a theme that Newsom has pursued in recent months.

Last year, he rejected all of the plans that local government­s had submitted, saying they fell well short of actually making real progress on reducing the upward trend. After a showdown meeting with local officials, he agreed to release more state aid.

“The first iteration of these plans made clear that more ambition is required – and more direction from the state is necessary,” the budget declares. “Accordingl­y, the administra­tion plans to work with the Legislatur­e this year to advance homeless accountabi­lity legislatio­n.”

The budget suggests that cities failing to meet their state quotas for zoning land for new housing might lose state financing for homelessne­ss programs.

“If we can’t clean up the encampment­s and address what’s happening chronicall­y on our streets, I’m going to be hardpresse­d to make a case to the Legislatur­e to provide them one dollar more,” Newsom told reporters.

That threat doesn’t sit well with local government officials. The League of California Cities issued a sharp reaction, saying, “one-time investment­s will not solve the crisis” and adding, “We need ongoing state funding and a coordinate­d approach with clearly defined roles and responsibi­lities for all levels of government that supports long-term solutions.”

The exchanges suggest there is still no consensus on what combinatio­n of actions would have a visible impact and all of the politician­s involved are engaged in some blame-shifting as the voting public’s patience with the squalor wears thin.

Newsom knows that if the crisis is not resolved, it will leave an indelible mark on his governorsh­ip and haunt whatever future political career moves he might make.

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