CA Spending on Homeless is Never Enough

From the LA Times – Special Report on Homeless

In a few weeks, Los Angeles is expected to report an increase in homelessness — the latest in a string of similarly dire reports from cities and counties across California.

The pressure is on to find ways to get more people indoors quickly and to prevent others from becoming homeless in the first place. To that end, Gov. Gavin Newsom this week announced the leaders of a new statewide homelessness task force.

Newsom also recently sent California lawmakers a revised budget that would provide cities and counties with a one-time infusion of $650 million to open emergency shelters, provide rental assistance to struggling tenants and underwrite the construction of permanent housing, among other uses. Of that funding, $275 million of it would go directly to 13 of California’s largest cities, most of it to Los Angeles.

But if the past is any indication of the future, the millions of dollars — even with a task force to coordinate solutions — probably wouldn’t make much of an immediate dent in the status quo of homelessness.

Last year, for example, former Gov. Jerry Brown signed a bill that provided a similar one-time injection of $500 million under to fight the explosion of homelessness under the Homeless Emergency Aid Program. The state’s 11 largest cities received $150 million of that and their mayors — with L.A.’s Mayor Eric Garcetti front and center — were the ones lobbying the Legislature for it.

For San Jose, $4 million of the $11.3 million the city received was spent on rental subsidies to 400 households. In Sacramento, which received about $6 million, the city put a sizable portion toward a new, 100-bed homeless shelter. Anaheim was able to put the money toward a shelter for 224 people. The funding proved particularly useful for this Orange County city, which was forced to provide 325 shelter beds after a group of homeless residents sued.

Yet, homelessness is still on the rise. (Not surprisingly, since we’ve created a huge magnet for bums and druggies)

Some state-funded projects and programs have been slow to show results by the standards of a frustrated public. And housing in California has become so expensive that it has been hard to feel the impact of the spending because, in many places, people are falling into homelessness as fast as people on the streets can be housed.

In Los Angeles, a recent county report found that 27,000 homeless people had been placed into permanent housing in 18 months. But a renter needs to make $47.52 per hour, which is more than triple the minimum wage, to pay the median monthly rent of $2,471, according to another report by the California Housing Partnership.

In Alameda County, where Newsom launched his task force, the most recent point-in-time count revealed a 43% jump in homelessness since 2017. EveryOne Home, the organization that conducted the count, says that every year, about 1,500 people enter permanent housing in the county, while nearly 3,000 people also become homeless for the first time.

Cities are expected to commit at least half their Homeless Emergency Aid Program, or HEAP, funding to projects and programs by the end of the year, and spend it all by June 30, 2021.

A coalition of big-city mayors issued a report in March that found 53% of the funds had been committed to “capital improvements.” Across the state, cities and counties proposed spending 34% of the $500 million on such projects, including new shelters, according to the California Homeless Coordinating Finance Council, which oversees the program.

Another 38% went to services, while 13% has gone to rental assistance or subsidies. But state officials couldn’t say yet exactly how the money had been spent at the local level. That’s partly because they just finished distributing it in April.

State lawmakers also deliberately created the block-grant program with few strings attached. All cities had to do was declare a shelter emergency and demonstrate “a local collaborative process was conducted prior to application submission.”

Many cities and counties had existing strategic plans to fight homelessness, but didn’t have the money to fully implement them. So when the HEAP money was announced, it was easy to use. Many did what Sacramento did, where officials covered spending holes on capital improvement projects to finish them sooner.

Mayors welcomed the freedom.

“I think it’s critically important that the state have high standards and accountability for outcomes,” said San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo, “but that doesn’t suggest a need to micromanage how the dollars are used.”

The lack of a coordinated plan has frustrated some advocates for the homeless, though. They would’ve liked the state to tie the money to programs and ideas that have a proven track record of working.

“If the state is going to do anything on homelessness, we need to drive best practices,” said Christopher Martin, a legislative advocate at Housing California. “We don’t know what that money went for, and that’s really concerning because we’re giving money to jurisdictions and just trusting they’re doing the right thing.”

Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg, who chairs Newsom’s task force with Los Angeles County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas, said most experts agree that more housing coupled with intensive outreach is the only solution to homelessness. But the HEAP money has been a useful tool in finding shorter-term fixes.

“There has not been nearly enough emphasis, in my opinion, statewide — until now — on actually getting people off the streets,” Steinberg said. “We can’t just wait for all the housing solutions to come to fruition before we get people off the streets.”

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A pedestrian walks past the entrance to a former MTA facility on Sunset Avenue in Venice, a proposed location for a homeless shelter that has been strongly opposed by some nearby residents.
(Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)

As the largest city in California, Los Angeles received the largest share of the HEAP funding, with $85 million going into its coffers. The city hasn’t been able to spend the money as fast as it came in, though.

In April 2018, Garcetti committed to building temporary homeless shelters in each of L.A.’s 15 council districts. At the time, $30 million was committed from the city’s coffers to his “A Bridge Home” program and L.A. was able to augment that with about $50 million from the state, so far.

But through March of this year, just $2.8 million — or about 2.7% — has actually been spent, according to city documents. The challenges of building in Los Angeles along with opposition from residents in some neighborhoods, including Venice, have slowed the process.

Only three shelters have opened so far — one recently. The city is seeking to use some of the state funds to help cover higher-than-expected construction costs and pay to run several shelters, which weren’t totally covered by Measure H, the 2017 sales tax hike. The city has also set aside $20 million of the state money for projects on skid row.

Despite the slow rollout of HEAP money, which the city received in mid-November 2018, Deputy Mayor Christina Miller said that more than half had been obligated nine months before the deadline to do so. She said that while she and the mayor are impatient to see results, the fact that the city had a preexisting plan helped the city figure out what to do with the money fast.

“When the applications came down the pipe, no one was sitting around wondering what to do,” she said. “The ability for this grant to be as flexible as it was was a real game changer. We never had flexibility like this from [the] state.”

benjamin.oreskes@latimes.com

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CA Will Punish Cities If They Don’t Meet Housings Goals

Posted by Jack

California will punish cities and counties that don’t meet their housing goals under a deal Gov. Gavin Newsom and legislative leaders announced Thursday.

If a court finds that a city or county violates a state law that sets targets for how much housing a community must plan to build, the fines could range from $10,000 to $600,000 per month, according to the bill language published Thursday.

Local governments would have a year to comply before the fines kick in after a court finds them in violation of the law. The fines would increase over time if the local government remains out of compliance.

Read more here: https://www.fresnobee.com/news/politics-government/article232023537.html#storylink=cpy
In other news….

Skyrocketing development costs and loss of state and federal subsidies are undermining Los Angeles’ goal of adding 10,000 units of homeless and affordable housing in a decade, officials said Friday.

At the current rate of spending, the $1.2-billion bond authorized by Proposition HHH would fall as much as 4,000 units short, they said in a report to the citizen oversight committee for the bond program.

With about a third of the money already committed, city officials are projecting that fewer than 6,000 units could be built at the current rate of spending before the money runs out.

The 10,000-unit goal for the bond was based on an assumption that the city could spend about $140,000 per unit. The remainder would be made up primarily by state funds and federal tax credits that can be sold on the financial markets.

Edwin Gipson, director of finance and development for the city’s Housing and Community Investment Department, told the committee that the federal tax reform law has lowered the value of those credits by about 25%, reducing the money available to the developers.

At the same time, costs are up in a booming construction market, and builders of permanent supportive housing are competing for labor with much larger projects that offer long-term employment, Gipson said.

A Times analysis of the 29 projects currently approved for funding found their average cost to be more than $476,000 per unit. Two projects will cost more than $650,000 per unit and five more than $550,000.

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It’s a Right to Have Shelter, says Sacramento Mayor

Posted by Jack

SACRAMENTO (CBS13) — Mayor Darrell Steinberg wants to make it a right for every homeless person in the state to have shelter.

“Think about what your life, anyone’s life would be living out in the elements for a long time without protection and without a roof over your head. We gotta do different and better,” said Mayor Steinberg.

He is proposing enough shelters for all the homeless people living on the streets of California.

“Would you be willing to spend a billion five a year from the state including some local resources to clean up our streets and to bring people indoors in a more humane way?” Mayor Steinberg asked.

He went on to say he believes the majority of people would say yes.

Once enough shelters are built, anyone who is still living on the streets could be fined or cited. While the details are still being worked out, some homeless advocates say more still needs to be done.  END

Liberal Mayor Steinberg believes it would [only] cost 1.5B a year to house all the homeless in CA, estimated to be about 90,000 by some, seems a bit low to me.   That is $16,666 per individual homeless…just for housing, then there is medical and rehab costs, police costs, etc.   And what happens if they don’t want to living in a State provided shelter?  Steinberg says we will just have to force them.  

We’ve already spent billions on this problem and all it’s done is attracted more homeless. When will we learn the lessons from the past?  

  

 

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Why I am Critical of California

by Jack

It’s been said that I am critical of my home state of California….ha, like I am the only one.  Ok, here’s the way I see it and feel free to disagree or throw rocks at me, whatever.

I grew up in CA and for my first 40 years I never had a problem with this state, then the liberals started taking over and things started to slip.  My list of grievances began right there and it just kept growing and growing.  It is not my state that I have problems with, its what the crazy liberals have done to it…that’s my gripe!

Liberals in CA are like vandals, wreaking havoc and destruction over everything they control.  Need I point out some of the obvious problems we face?  Yes, I think I do, but just for our liberals:

  • CA has slipped from #1 in education to around 47th.
    We have the highest concentrations of so-called homeless and it’s costing us dearly.

    We struggle to save jobs under the yoke of oppressive anti-business regulations, unfair wage regulations and high taxes.

    The middle class is hardest hit by the highest taxes in nation and yet we get nothing for it.

    CA’s version of criminal reform is to go soft on criminals while ignoring the victims.  (we’ve been there before and here we are again)

    Our infrastructure is falling apart, our freeways are too crowded and they all show dangerous signs of wear.The State of CA is our largest employer – that’s socialism!
    College education is outrageously expensive due to over-paid, top heavy bureaucracy with their lavish benefits.

    CA gun laws focus on lawful gun owners – not criminals who use guns to commit crime.

    CA endorses sanctuary cities in defiance of federal law and the Constitution.

    Recent legislation, AB392, makes it harder for police to defend themselves in a shooting and easier for criminals to kill cops.  Officers will now have to argue that killing was necessary and not just say they had a fear they were in danger.

    CA ammunition law makes it more costly to buy ammo and does nothing to prevent crime.

    CA diverts billions of dollars to accommodate illegal aliens…education, healthcare, housing and other safety nets created for legal citizens in need.

    Our environmental and water restrictions have made farming in CA the most expensive in USA.

    CA is chasing away jobs, job-creators and skilled wage earners in favor of non-productive, non-taxpaying, non-contributing tax takers!

    Many large neighborhoods are in decay resulting in crime and gangs, especially in LA, Fresno, Oakland, Stockton, even Fresno!

    Criminals enjoy more rights than victims once again…we repeat the mistakes of the past. 

    Health insurance companies in CA must provide contracts written in 16 language and serve notice of language availability to every customer (cost passed on to me). 

    Prop 47 – voters’ decision to reduce penalties for drug and property crimes contributed to a jump in car burglaries, shoplifting and other theft.  Shoplifting might as well not even be a crime.

There’s plenty more, but I am out of time.  Now you know why I am concerned about the state I grew up in.  It was so much different back in my day, when I was in school, than the  state we have now.  It’s poorer, it’s so much more costly to live in… it makes me sad to see what we have lost.   Our wealth is being squandered by the crazy people that have taken over plain and simple.   Now we have Gov. Gavin Newsom intent on providing full benefits to illegal aliens.  This guy’s thinking is all wrong, he’s insane.

 

 

 

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Mexico Doesn’t Want Illegal Immigrants in Mexico!

by Juan Gringo

MEXICO CITY — Mexicans are deeply frustrated with immigrants after a year of heightened migration from Central America through the country, according to a survey conducted by The Washington Post and Mexico’s Reforma newspaper.

More than 6 in 10 Mexicans say migrants are a burden on their country because they take jobs and benefits that should belong to Mexicans. A 55 percent majority supports deporting migrants who travel through Mexico to reach the United States.

Those findings defy the perception that Mexico — a country that has sent millions of its own migrants to the United States, sending billions of dollars in remittances — is sympathetic to the surge of Central Americans. Instead, the data suggests Mexicans have turned against the migrants transiting through their own country, expressing antipathy that would be familiar to many supporters of President Trump north of the border.  END

I would like to point out a small matter of bias:   “…expressing antipathy that would be familiar to many supporters of President Trump.”  The bias is that only Trump supporters hold this opinion.  Not true… over 60% of Americans feel illegal immigration is bad for America.  Ironically, this pretty much mirrors what Mexico is saying about illegals in their country.  Do you think Mexico is worried about the browning of Mexico?  Do you think Mexicans are racists because they oppose illegal immigration into their country?

America is a generous nation that opens it’s door to millions of immigrants…legal immigrants…every year.  Over 12% of our population are 1st generation Americans.  Rather than call us names, some day the liberals will be forced to deal the legitimate issues surrounding illegal immigration, right?  Nah…brainwashed  liberals will always be focused on chasing unicorns.  It’s what they do best.

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Two Quakes Hit East Bay

by Jack

A couple of small quakes hit the east bay area about 1 pm today.   While small quakes are not unusual it is a little unnerving when they come right after a 7.2 to the south.  The two small quakes were about 15 minutes apart, the largest was about a 4.2.  It could be felt pretty much throughout the bay area.

This should remind folks to have a plan.  Know where to meet up if you can’t get home.  Have extra water handy.  Remember to shut off the gas if a large quake hits, etc.,… the Red Cross can give you a check list of the stuff you should include in your earthquake plan.  Be ready.

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IMPEACH NEWSOM – HE’S THE MOST DESTRUCTIVE GOVERNOR IN HISTORY

by Jack

https://www.change.org/p/reform-california-impeach-gavin-newsom

Click here to help out and impeach this idiot.    I gave them money, won’t you please help too?

More info at https://www.facebook.com/Impeach-Gavin-Newsom-239602650275762/

 

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U.A.E. Ship Disappears in the Strait of Hormuz – Iranian Hijacking Suspected

Posted by Jack

Connecting the dots this was likely a response to the seizure of an Iranian tanker that was attempting to illegally deliver its cargo to a prohibited port.   However, the UAE and other Sunni nations are fed up with Iran’s aggression and things could escalate quickly.  Sure glad we’re not dependent on Arab oil anymore.

It is not clear what happened to the Panamanian-flagged oil tanker – which is based in the United Arab Emirates – on Saturday night as it traveled through the Strait of Hormuz, its apparent disappearance has raised concerns amid heightened tensions between Iran and several Western nations.

The Riah, a 190-foot oil tanker, typically made trips from Dubai and Sharjah on the UAE’s west coast before going through the strait and heading to Fujairah on the UAE’s east coast.

However, something happened to the vessel after 11 p.m. on Saturday when it stopped transmitting its location with tracking data shows its last position pointing toward Iran.

Capt. Ranjith Raja of the data firm Refinitiv told The Associated Press on Tuesday that the tanker hadn’t switched off its tracking in three months of trips around the UAE.

“That is a red flag,” Raja said.

Oil tankers have previously been targeted as the Persian Gulf region took center stage in a crisis over Iran’s unraveling nuclear deal with world powers.

Recently, Iran has inched its uranium production and enrichment over the limits of its 2015 nuclear deal, trying to put more pressure on Europe to offer it better terms and allow it to sell its crude oil abroad.

However, those tensions also have seen the U.S. send thousands of additional troops, nuclear-capable B-52 bombers and advanced fighter jets into the Mideast. Mysterious attacks on oil tankers and Iran shooting down a U.S. military surveillance drone has added to the fears of an armed conflict breaking out.

Iranian officials have not said anything publicly about the ship, nor have officials in the UAE. The U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet, which oversees Mideast waters, declined to immediately comment.

The ship’s registered owner, Dubai-based Prime Tankers LLC, told the AP it had sold the ship to another company called Mouj Al-Bahar. A man who answered a telephone number registered to the firm told the AP it didn’t own any ships.

Separately, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Tuesday his country will retaliate over the seizure of an Iranian supertanker carrying 2.1 million barrels of light crude oil. The vessel was seized with the help of British Royal Marines earlier this month off Gibraltar.

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20 Million Rats Taking Over Lost Angeles – They’re Moving North Too

by Jack

“Rats! They fought the dogs and killed the cats,
And bit the babies in the cradles,
And ate the cheeses out of the vats,
And licked the soup from the cooks’ own ladle’s,
Split open the kegs of salted sprats,
Made nests inside men’s Sunday hats,
And even spoiled the women’s chats
By drowning their speaking
With shrieking and squeaking
In fifty different sharps and flats.“  Robert Browning

Excerpt from the Los Angeles Times, by Steve Lopez

The LAPD station on skid row was cited by the state for a rodent infestation and other unsanitary conditions, and one employee there was infected with the strain of bacteria that causes typhoid fever.

We’ve got thousands of people huddled on the streets, many of them withering away with physical and mental disease. Sidewalks have disappeared, hidden by tents and the kinds of makeshift shanties you see in Third World places. Typhoid and typhus are in the news, and an army of rodents is on the move.

On Thursday I saw a county health inspector on rat patrol between 7th and 8th streets on skid row. He was carrying a clipboard and said he had found droppings and other evidence of rodents, and I asked where:

Everywhere,” he said.

The city of Los Angeles has become a giant trash receptacle. It used to be that illegal dumpers were a little more discreet, tossing their refuse in fields and gullies and remote outposts.

Now city streets are treated like dumpsters, or even toilets — on Thursday, the 1600 block of Santee Street was cordoned off after someone dumped a fat load of poop in the street. I’m not sure when any of this became the norm, but it must have something to do with the knowledge that you can get away with it. Every time sanitation crews knock down one mess, another dumpsite springs up nearby.

You wanna take a tour with me of how things looked Wednesday and Thursday?

OK, the shovels were still out on Crocker Street, which was looking pretty good, so I went over to East 10th Street and Naomi Avenue, several blocks away, near the Coca-Cola distribution center.

The north side of 10th Street looked like a landfill. Trash was scattered in the street and on the sidewalk, and there was a little bit of everything. Splintered lumber, metal poles, soiled blankets and clothing, a sofa, buckets, boxes.

Trucks come by and run over the trash,” said Ron Riego, 60, who lives under a tarp on the corner and pointed out where some of the debris has been flattened by traffic.   END, but its not really, its just the beginning.

By Jack:  In CA we’re taking in over one quarter of the entire nation’s population of drug addicts, burnouts, crazies, and bums and every year this number swells.  That massive concentration of human misery is absolutely unmanageable for one state and sooner or later the legislators in Sacramento are going to figure that out.  But, in the meanwhile they are going to spend billions of tax dollars chasing a solution that can’t be found here.

Our dear comrade legislators in Sacratomato are promoting the idea that if we could just build enough affordable housing, (transitional housing they call it) then we could bring this crisis under control!

In our little town of Chico, the council is determined to do its part to cure the homeless problem by what else. . . building tiny houses!  But, then our council is dominated by liberal idiots, so what else could you expect.  Certainly nothing rational.   Affordable housing is not the answer for what is causing our so-called homeless crisis.  I say so-called because these people are beyond beingly merely homeless.  These people are largely a mix of dysfunctional people done in by mental problems, alcohol and drugs and they will never be employable.  They’re brains are fried.  There is no way they will ever be able to contribute to their own care.

Consider, that the highest percentage of illegal aliens reside in Los Angeles and they find housing, is our legislature indirectly blaming the lack of affordable housing on illegal aliens?  That would be rich.

Sometimes the stuff coming out of Sacramento is just beyond belief and more recently what’s coming out of the Chico City Council is too.  XXX

 

 

Note this bi-partisan bill so frequently misquoted by liberals-

The Lanterman-Petris-Short (LPS) Act (Cal. Welf & Inst. Code, sec. 5000 et seq.) regulates involuntary civil commitment to a mental health institution in the state of California. The act set the precedent for modern mental health commitment procedures in the United States. The bipartisan bill was co-authored by California State Assemblyman Frank D. Lanterman (R) and California State Senators Nicholas C. Petris (D) and Alan Short (D), and signed into law in 1967 by Governor Ronald Reagan. The Act went into full effect on July 1, 1972. It cited seven articles of intent:

  • To end the inappropriate, indefinite, and involuntary commitment of mentally disordered persons, people with developmental disabilities, and persons impaired by chronic alcoholism, and to eliminate legal disabilities;
  • To provide prompt evaluation and treatment of persons with serious mental disorders or impaired by chronic alcoholism;
  • To guarantee and protect public safety;
  • To safeguard individual rights through judicial review;
  • To provide individualized treatment, supervision, and placement services by a conservatorship program for gravely disabled persons;
  • To encourage the full use of all existing agencies, professional personnel and public funds to accomplish these objectives and to prevent duplication of services and unnecessary expenditures;
  • To protect mentally disordered persons and developmentally disabled persons from criminal acts.

The Act in effect ended all hospital commitments by the judiciary system, except in the case of criminal sentencing, e.g., convicted sexual offenders, and those who were “gravely disabled”, defined as unable to obtain food, clothing, or housing.[1] It did not, however, impede the right of voluntary commitments. It expanded the evaluative power of psychiatrists and created provisions and criteria for holds.

Prior to 1987 it was assumed that the Act allowed involuntary treatment for those who were detained under an initial three-day hold (for evaluation and treatment) and a subsequent fourteen-day hospitalization (for those patients declared after the three-day hold to be dangerous to themselves or others or gravely disabled). However, in the 1987 case of Riese v. St. Mary’s Hospital and Medical Center, the California Court of Appeal declared that these patients had the right to exercise informed consent regarding the use of antipsychotic drugs, except in an emergency, and if they rejected medication “a judicial determination of their incapacity to make treatment decisions” was required before they could be involuntarily treated.[2][3] This case was a class action suit brought in the name of patient Eleanor Riese by the California ACLU.[2] Eleanor Riese’s story is depicted in the movie 55 Steps.[4]

 

 

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Dr. Drew Tells Truth About LA Homeless

Posted by Jack

Do yourself a favor and spend 8 minutes listening, really listening to what Dr. Drew has to say.   He is talking about a serious state health problem that could emerge into a full blown health crisis at any time.  All the ingredients are there for people to begin dying on the streets in mass.

Chris, Libby, before you say a word… this is not about a transitional houses shortage (tiny houses), its far more complicated than that, as most massive problems are, so I hope you two will pay particular attention to this message:

Highlights…

“It’s not a housing problem, that’s a hoax, it’s a mental health crisis.”

“Why am I so concerned about it now? One word…rats.”  It is almost ineveitable that we will have an epidemic because of the enormous rat population living among the homeless camps, fed by a steady supply of garbage.

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