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READ:
Part 1: Why Ending Homelessness Is Political Poison
Part 2: Go Directly to Jail: Punishing the Homeless for Being Homeless
Part 3: Helping the Homeless in the Face of GOP’s Brutal Funding Cuts
It may be a coincidence, but a few days after Truthdig finished running my three-part series of columns on homelessness, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti and seven of the 15 City Council members announced they would declare a state of emergency and try to find $100 million to cure what has become a municipal curse.
The public officials, of course, didn’t need our Website to alert them to the situation. All they had to do was look down the street, or better yet walk a few blocks to see the tents and tarpaulins of the homeless’ encampments on Skid Row sidewalks, or drive around and check them out in parks and under freeways throughout the city. There is hardly any place in this rich city without women, men and children living on the streets or in cars and recreational vehicles.
I talked to Garcetti about the homeless while reporting for my series.
“A lot of people say ‘Don’t talk about homelessness, and don’t talk about ending homelessness, because there is no political upside; the problem is intractable even if somebody cares about it,” he said as we chatted one afternoon in his City Hall office. “But I have worked on this issue ever since I was 14 or 15; when I was in junior high school I used to come down and volunteer on Skid Row. In New York, when I was in college, (I worked in) Harlem with my extracurricular time. That’s one of the reasons I’m mayor.”
Garcetti is going to unveil a long-awaited homelessness program, hopefully soon. As he outlined it to me, it will be ambitious, finding housing for 10,000 people, with “hundreds of outreach workers” to talk to the homeless and persuade them to move into housing and accept the mental and physical help that so many need. This will take money, much more than is in the city treasury. Federal programs to provide such housing have been slashed by the Republican Congress. And many neighborhoods, afflicted with “Not in my backyard” syndrome, will resist.
It will be a tough job, but at least someone is finally paying attention.
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