Reno Is Beating the Odds in Solving Homelessness
Number of unsheltered dropped by more than half in this Nevada city after large tent to house its homeless was built
The “Biggest Little City in the World” is earning a new distinction: one of the few cities in the West to get large numbers of homeless off its streets.
The city teamed with Sparks, a neighboring city, and surrounding Washoe County to build a Nevada Cares Campus in 2021 that could accommodate more than 600 people in a giant tent and satellite sleeping pods. Since that year, the number of homeless living on the street has plummeted to 329 this year from 780, according to annual point-in-time counts.
The 58% drop is striking when compared with many other Western cities which have seen their unsheltered homeless populations grow or stagnate since the pandemic, amid soaring drug addiction and a federal appeals-court order that prevents cities in the region from clearing streets without providing enough beds. California has spent about $20 billion over the last five years to combat the problem, yet still has half the nation’s unsheltered homeless.
Once people are off the street and in the tent, the other part of Reno’s approach kicks in: helping them find a job, access other services and move them into permanent housing. Other cities are taking notice.
Crazy how much money we spend on shit like space exploration when we can't even take care of our people at home.
I guess it's cause space exploration funnels more money to the ruling class faster than affordable housing.
We can do both. The problem is the people that believe certain people don't "deserve" help.
Some people do not deserve help. Some people continuously make bad decision. I've seen such people turn their life around - but only after every friend gave up giving them free beds and meals. These people got straight A's in school until they figured out they could cheat society to get everything for nothing.
The problem is that is a tiny minority of homeless. Most homeless either are trying but things are set against them, or don't have the ability to fix their problems. Bay area housing is horribly expensive, and so there are a lot of homeless who would like to have a house but they can't afford anything on the income they can earn (long term the solution is fix zoning so cheap housing can be built, but best case this is 20 years to make a difference). There are a lot of disabled people who cannot work a good job - often the disability is mental, and thus they will never be able get a good job and support themselves.
How do we turn the "folks standing around in a welfare line" conversations to reminding people that those exist but are a minority and most homeless have problems that we should help them with? don't attack the message of lazy people - it is a real issue, just reminding people that we are looking at those who are not lazy.
I don't think we can do both, considering both endeavors don't have enough funding.
The money is there though, it's just not allotted to the right places.
It's not allotted to the right places because we funnel as much money as possible to whatever makes rich people richer the fastest.
That's space exploration, not housing.
That's private equity, not space exploration.
I agree with you but space is far from being the most heavily subsidized sector. It's not even close.
That's some of the worst logical thinking I've seen on Lemmy.
2023 NASA spending: $30.92B
2023 DoD spending: $1.52T ($152,000B)
Absolute miss. The problem has nothing to do with "running out of money".
Yeah, it's that money being spent in the wrong place to make rich people richer faster.
🤡
Wrong again. Go for 3?
The issue is misappropriation of funds, and lack of political will to make substantive developments for the homeless. A nimby issue largely.
Why are you attacking nasa of all things instead of all the other things?