Los Angeles, California spent $67 million on an initiative to house the 46,000 homeless people in the city. However, one year later, only 255 homeless people have been housed through the program, resulting in a rate of $263k per person. In San Francisco, concerns about homelessness persist, with individuals and organizations highlighting the failure of policies and the impact of capitalism on the issue. Despite these challenges, Mayor London Breed has reported that City programs have helped over 13,000 people exit homelessness, with a 70% increase in the number of people helped in the last year alone.
BEYOND STUPID: Democrat Official in San Francisco Blames City’s Homeless Problem on… Capitalism https://t.co/KC5lPFnJCP
Homelessness in San Francisco: Mayor Hails ‘Huge Success’ Mayor London Breed argued that the city’s homelessness response is working. https://t.co/bb27rBYOIW
BEYOND STUPID: Democrat Official in San Francisco Blames City’s Homeless Problem on… Capitalism via @gatewaypundit https://t.co/n31VpUXW08
Homelessness in San Francisco is a policy failure. Full stop.
WATCH: Dem Mayor HUMILIATED By Homeless Population Despite Major Policy Push https://t.co/3UCxolQdSD
Since I took office, City programs have helped over 13,000 people exit homelessness. That doesn't include the thousands we shelter annually. This last year alone we helped 3,600 people exit homelessness – a 70% increase over the year before I took office. https://t.co/grctSPMNeK
https://t.co/3LHCjN2Uin The SF Supervisor who blames capitalism for homelessness is a capitalist who makes well over six figures a year due to capitalism, is living large in a house worth millions, and can set his children up for generational success. He’s not homeless! Maybe…
https://t.co/3LHCjN2Uin The mayor who blames capitalism for homelessness is a capitalist who makes well over six figures a year due to capitalism, is living large in a house worth millions, and can set his children up for generational success. He’s not homeless! Maybe he…
Liberal San Francisco Supervisor Dean Preston blames capitalism for city's sprawling homeless problem https://t.co/fJ5a0qWBQN https://t.co/OcsczRScvr
San Francisco Supervisor Acknowledges Homeless Problem, Blames Capitalism https://t.co/EELmtMVYVq
U.S. cities need to engage in short- and long-term policymaking targeted at the structural challenges associated with homelessness, rather than crafting reactive policies rooted in perceptions, stereotypes, and fear, @hannamlove and @lohplaces write. https://t.co/lPzrKdr1i0
San Francisco Democrat says homelessness crisis in his district is ‘absolutely the result of capitalism’
To meaningfully reduce homelessness and achieve economic recovery in America’s downtowns, local leaders must utilize evidence-based policies that address where, why, and how homelessness actually occurs within cities, @hannamlove and @lohplaces emphasize. https://t.co/lPzrKdr1i0
.@KarenBassLA vowed to get 17,000 homeless individuals into shelters in her first year. @MayorOfLA says they've brought inside 21,000 people. "We found the system was broken in so many areas." More: https://t.co/9nF2i3wRtz https://t.co/N5p8BjygmV
Housing crises create or worsen other social ills — from food insecurity to homelessness. The more people have to pay for shelter, the less they have to spend on everything else. https://t.co/5NSIcYo04e
Despite perceptions of rising homelessness in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, homelessness rates in New York, Philadelphia, and Chicago declined over the past decade, including through the pandemic. https://t.co/lPzrKdr1i0
Nearly 22,000 people experiencing homelessness moved into temporary housing in 2023. Here's what we found when we analyzed the data https://t.co/YoYK5c5es1
“A large, unsheltered homeless population is not an inevitable part of human or urban life, and there is real harm and risk involved when solutions are not implemented early or are underfunded,” @hannamlove and @lohplaces write. https://t.co/lPzrKdr1i0
‘The invisible population’: How San Francisco is failing its homeless families https://t.co/iA0K0UNxi4
“I would say that Mayor Bass has accomplished more on the problem of homelessness in her first year than any mayor in the last 40 years,” said Gary Blasi, former president for the National Coalition for the Homeless. @DavidZahniser https://t.co/GT8O7sZJHg
“I've been in San Francisco 32 years ... I built my career there,” says @MarkESackett, owner of The Box SF. "If I tumble over this cliff and I lose my building and my business, I'm not going to be any value to anybody. I want us all to work together to get the city back." https://t.co/roXuUVszp2
“I've been in San Francisco 32 years ... I built my career there,” says @MarkESackett , owner of The Box SF. "If I tumble over this cliff and I lose my building and my business, I'm not going to be any value to anybody. I want us all to work together to get the city back." https://t.co/ufk4HM8cW5
Los Angeles, California spent $67 million on an initiative to house the 46,000 homeless people in the city. One year later, only 255 homeless people have been housed through the program. A rate of $263k per person. Government efficiency in a nutshell.
Los Angeles, California spent $67 million on an initiative to house homeless people. One year later, only 255 homeless people have been housed through the program. There are 46k homeless people in LA. Government efficiency in a nutshell.