USA TODAY International Edition

Housing First plan is failing the homeless

We must instead focus on people, accountabi­lity

- Michele Steeb Michele Steeb, a senior fellow with the Texas Public Policy Foundation, oversees the foundation’s initiative to transform homelessne­ss policy. She is author of “Answers Behind the Red Door: Battling the Homelessne­ss Epidemic.“

“All In” – the Biden administra­tion’s new blueprint to reduce homelessne­ss – is all wrong.

Housing First, a policy experiment instituted by the Obama- Biden administra­tion in 2013, grounds the plan. This approach defunded treatment services, prophesyin­g that the provision of permanent housing would end homelessne­ss in 10 years.

A decade later, homelessne­ss has reached unpreceden­ted levels. While the global pandemic contribute­d slightly to the overall escalation, this road was paved well before it struck.

Pre- pandemic data from the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t revealed a 15.6% increase in the nation’s homeless population. In California – which in 2016 became the only state to fully adopt Housing First – prepandemi­c data unveiled a 33.8% rise in homelessne­ss.

Homelessne­ss still increased

Not only is the blueprint grounded in a failed experiment, it also proposes a doubling down on the annual budget for it – from $ 4.1 billion to $ 8.7 billion.

Never mind that this proposal will be dead on arrival in the new Congress, President Joe Biden seems to have forgotten that despite increases in federal spending under Housing First, the number of homeless Americans rose.

Thus, the “All In” assertion that by 2025, the United States will achieve a 25% reduction in homelessne­ss is capricious­ly absurd.

The blueprint also declares that “housing is health care,” and that every American has a right to housing.

This claim is patently false. A 2018 study by the National Academies of Sciences – the federal government’s premiere research institute – showed that housing does not improve health outcomes: “Overall, except for some evidence that ( permanent supportive housing) improves health outcomes among individual­s with HIV/ AIDS, the committee finds that there is no substantia­l published evidence as yet to demonstrat­e that PSH improves health outcomes or reduces health care costs.”

The blueprint’s most outrageous proclamati­on might be that the rise in homelessne­ss is due to “growing economic inequality exacerbate­d by a global pandemic, soaring housing costs, and housing supply shortfalls. It is further exacerbate­d by inequitabl­e access to health care, including mental health and/ or substance use disorder treatment; discrimina­tion and exclusion of people of color, LGBTQI+ people, people with disabiliti­es and older adults; as well as the consequenc­es of mass incarcerat­ion.”

We know that three- quarters of the homeless are overwhelme­d with the diseases of mental illness and addiction, whether a precursor to or a result of their homelessne­ss.

Policy must put people first

The U. S. surgeon general describes addiction as a complex brain disorder disease. Well- supported scientific evidence shows that brain disruption­s reduce brain function, which inhibits the ability to make decisions and regulate one’s actions, emotions and impulses.

Yet treatment services were not only not prioritize­d under Housing First, the homeless have the choice of whether to engage in sobriety and treatment services – despite their reduced ability to come to such conclusion­s.

Instead, the United States must employ a human first policy that insists on the guardrail of personal accountabi­lity – including sobriety – to support healing, growth and liberty.

As homeless people begin to heal, we must provide additional services such as employment training and life skills instructio­n to ensure that once they obtain housing, they can independen­tly maintain it.

Human first, not Housing First, is the best way to reverse this national crisis.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Pre- pandemic data from the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t revealed a 15.6% increase in the nation’s homeless population.
SPENCER PLATT/ GETTY IMAGES Pre- pandemic data from the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t revealed a 15.6% increase in the nation’s homeless population.
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