Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:Res Ipsa wrote:Who, exactly, is being flippant? People are perfectly capable of understanding the problem and believing strongly the problem should be addressed without believing Markk’s videos tell us anything about the problem or how to solve it. Or are you just virtue signaling and shaming here?
What's your solution?
- Doc
There's not enough hubris in the world to lead me to claim that I have a "solution" to a complex problem like homelessness in general and the specific problems in L.A. today. There are lots of people who are 1) smarter than me and 2) are more informed than me on the problem, and I generally would look to them for suggestions on how to address the problem. Based on the reading I have done, and on the similar experiences with homelessness we've experienced in Seattle, I have some opinions on what is likely to be effective and what is not. But, in my opinion, homelessness is a result of a whole bunch of different factors, and I don't pretend to have a solution that addresses all of those factors.
Markk linked upthread to an article in the L.A. Times. It's actually one of a whole series of articles the paper ran on the homelessness crisis in L.A. It shows how complex the problem is, including the impact of political infighting, zoning, and NIMBYISM. It also provides a broad picture of the main factors that led to the current situation in L.A. One is the bidding up of the price of housing by wealthier citizens. That has pushed significant numbers of folks onto the streets because they simply can't afford to pay rent. The other, somewhat related, is gentrification. Gentrifcation converts what would otherwise be run-down housing available to the poor and converts it into housing they can't afford.
Both of these factors combined to push a relatively large number of folks out onto the street in a relatively short period of time, leading to the recent spike in the homeless population in L.A. But these factors aren't unique to L.A. -- just the speed with which they've recently propelled folks into the streets. The same factors have been at work here in Seattle, with results similar to but not as dramatic as L.A.
Complicating matters further, people are homeless for different reasons, which means there is no one size fits all solution to the problem. People forced out of their homes by rising prices may simply need housing that is affordable. Those who are there because of domestic abuse may need job training and other services. Those who are there because of addiction need still other services. And those who simply are incapable to taking care of themselves have other needs.
In my opinion, the single most important step needed to address the problem is to create a single entity that spans the relevant geographical area and give it the power necessary to implement solutions. Cities and counties have cooperated to create these kinds of entities to address regional problems like sewage disposal and transportation that can't be addressed by a single city or county. Ours is Metro. It looks like the L.A. area did the former but not the latter -- it has an agency, but not the power or independence needed to implement solutions.
As far as what that agency does, I think we know quite a bit about what does and doesn't work. What doesn't work is concentrating the poor into ghettos. See Pruitt-Igoe. When the poor are concentrated in the same area, gangs and other forms of organized crime move in. What seems to work is relatively small, dispersed housing units integrated with support services. The primary obstacle to this is NIMBYism.
LA county has a 130 page report that outlines specific strategies to address the problem. I suspect that's what a "solution" to homelessness would look like. But I think it has to start with something like: 1) Create an entity responsible for addressing the problem; 2) Give that entity the authority and resources needed to address the problem; 3) Hold that entity accountable. It looks to me like LA has taken the first step, but not the next two.