Aug 14, 2023 02:10 AM
https://youtu.be/gcZhmUfDePE
VIDEO EXCERPTS: Homelessness has been rising in America's West Coast cities for more than a decade. [...] the problem is concentrated in a handful of cities. While nationwide, the homeless population has been shrinking for a decade.
To figure out why some places are so much more successful than others, we took a trip to Texas, where the homeless population declined almost 30% over the last decade as it grew by more than 40% in California.
Not only does Texas have vastly different politics and policies from the West Coast, but it's also home to three large cities with three very different approaches to homelessness. Austin, San Antonio, and Houston.
[...] What we found in Texas was [do it yourself] innovation. But the federal government doesn't fund innovation. For decades, it's committed to a one-size-fits-all approach known as Housing First. States like California have followed suit, leaving many charities with a choice to either fall in line or turn down millions in federal funding and state grants.
The result? More people living and dying on the streets as governors and big city mayors promise that the much awaited free permanent housing is just around the corner.
[...] Our first stop was the city of Austin, where progressive activism exists in the shadow of a conservative statehouse. It's a boom and bust town, a magnet for business and tech innovation, which has learned some of Silicon Valley's top performers.
When the ultra-rich moved in, housing prices [in Austin] started to resemble San Francisco's and the homeless population has climbed. Policy wise, Austin has a lot in common with West Coast cities, which helps explain the huge encampments here.
But Austin has an advantage that San Francisco and Los Angeles don't. When you walk over the city line, you're in a more typical Texas municipality, where light touch regulation allows innovative approaches to thrive.
The outskirts of Austin are home to Community First Village, a 51-acre community of tiny homes. The project doesn't rely on federal money and therefore isn't bound by rules imposed by Washington.
[...] The single greatest cause of homelessness is a profound, catastrophic loss of family. The homes are intentionally designed with large front porches within a walkable community to encourage socialization among neighbors.
To live here, residents have to respect the law and follow rules like keeping pets leashed, junk off their driveways and drug use out of the common areas. But behind closed doors, that's their business....
Why homelessness is worse in California than Texas
https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/gcZhmUfDePE
VIDEO EXCERPTS: Homelessness has been rising in America's West Coast cities for more than a decade. [...] the problem is concentrated in a handful of cities. While nationwide, the homeless population has been shrinking for a decade.
To figure out why some places are so much more successful than others, we took a trip to Texas, where the homeless population declined almost 30% over the last decade as it grew by more than 40% in California.
Not only does Texas have vastly different politics and policies from the West Coast, but it's also home to three large cities with three very different approaches to homelessness. Austin, San Antonio, and Houston.
[...] What we found in Texas was [do it yourself] innovation. But the federal government doesn't fund innovation. For decades, it's committed to a one-size-fits-all approach known as Housing First. States like California have followed suit, leaving many charities with a choice to either fall in line or turn down millions in federal funding and state grants.
The result? More people living and dying on the streets as governors and big city mayors promise that the much awaited free permanent housing is just around the corner.
[...] Our first stop was the city of Austin, where progressive activism exists in the shadow of a conservative statehouse. It's a boom and bust town, a magnet for business and tech innovation, which has learned some of Silicon Valley's top performers.
When the ultra-rich moved in, housing prices [in Austin] started to resemble San Francisco's and the homeless population has climbed. Policy wise, Austin has a lot in common with West Coast cities, which helps explain the huge encampments here.
But Austin has an advantage that San Francisco and Los Angeles don't. When you walk over the city line, you're in a more typical Texas municipality, where light touch regulation allows innovative approaches to thrive.
The outskirts of Austin are home to Community First Village, a 51-acre community of tiny homes. The project doesn't rely on federal money and therefore isn't bound by rules imposed by Washington.
[...] The single greatest cause of homelessness is a profound, catastrophic loss of family. The homes are intentionally designed with large front porches within a walkable community to encourage socialization among neighbors.
To live here, residents have to respect the law and follow rules like keeping pets leashed, junk off their driveways and drug use out of the common areas. But behind closed doors, that's their business....
Why homelessness is worse in California than Texas
