May 5, 2024 The Best Source of News, Culture, Lifestyle for Culver City, Mar Vista, Del Rey, Palms and West Los Angeles

SMa.r.t.-Homeless Crisis: Toward Solutions

By Samuel Tolkin for SMa.r.t. (Santa Monica Architects for a Responsible Tomorrow)

Although we all know that the issue of homelessness is a national crisis, we here in Santa Monica and in all of Southern California experience it on a daily basis.

There are now, by some estimates, more than a 100,000 chronically homeless in the United States. Roughly, 6 percent of those live in California, and 900 to 1,000 by some counts are in Santa Monica. (While body counts, such as the Annual Homeless Count scheduled for Jan. 24, are meaningful up to a point; they don’t suggest solutions.)

In 1992, a New York University psychologist, Sam Tsemberis decided to test an unconventional approach to the problem. His idea was to just give the chronically homeless a place to live on a permanent basis, without making them pass any tests, attend any programs and/or fill out any forms. He knew he was perhaps dealing with schizophrenic, alcoholic, traumatized, and even brain damaged individuals. Why not just give them a place to live? Offer them free counseling, therapy, health care and other necessities and let them decide if they want to participate. He and some associates formed Pathways to Housing. Some 242 individuals were given apartments, no questions asked and treated with dignity, and asked only not to bother their neighbors.

After five years 88 percent were still in their apartments and the cost was less than treating them on the street. The concept became known as Housing First and was even embraced by the Bush administration in 2003.

In 2005, Salt Lake City, Utah, which had a significant homeless problem, 2,000 plus individuals, decided to try the Housing First concept. They wanted to run a small test. So with the help of state government and local charitable organizations they achieved equally satisfactory results. They are expanding their programs to provide housing for the remaining homeless.

Santa Clara County, California adopted the same Housing First model and by 2014 they had housed 840 people in apartments and have plans to house the remaining 6,000 homeless.

This may sound like we are just warehousing the problem. It is only then that we can get to the next phase of these experiments which is perhaps the most difficult, and that is the rehabilitation where possible of the individuals involved. That phase takes even longer and the results from the trials I have mentioned are still to be evaluated.

The root causes being what they are will require much concentrated effort by both the public and private sectors to reverse the current trend. The size of the homeless population is expanding and the availability of low cost, i.e. affordable housing, is shrinking jeopardizing the stability of many and forcing still more into homelessness.

Our own Governor Jerry Brown in 2011 slashed redevelopment funds which might have been put to use to bolster the affordable housing stocks.

Prefabricated tiny homes, pod housing, stackable systems of factory built components should be part of the equation to resolve this issue and our state surplus should help with funding. Riverside is home to the largest factory built housing manufacturer in the country. I am sure they would be more than glad to work with the public sector in developing plans that respond to this need.

The City of Santa Monica should consider the Housing First approach. Of course, this should be coordinated with the plans of Los Angeles County and the City of Los Angeles. Also, we should consult with the administrators from those cities with Housing First programs. Our city has underutilized suitable parcels of land it could donate for this use at the airport and elsewhere.

If places as economically, demographically and politically diverse as New York, Salt Lake City, and Santa Clara County can make Housing First work, cannot Santa Monica? To be sure, the return on investment will vary, depending on how you count the benefits of fewer people living in the streets, clogging emergency rooms and crowding jails. “Ironically, ending homelessness this way may be cheaper then continuing to treat the problem in the traditional ways this City has. This would not only benefit the people who are homeless; it would benefit the rest of us to know we live in a more compassionate and just nation.” Tsemberis has said, “It is not a matter of whether we know how to fix the problem. Homelessness is not a disease like cancer or Alzheimer’s where we don’t yet have a cure. We have the cure for homelessness and it is housing.”

Do we in the City of Santa Monica and in the County and State have the political will? I believe we do and we can be in the forefront of the solution.

 

 

 

 

Thane Roberts AIA, Architect, Robert H. Taylor AIA, Ron Goldman FAIA, Architect, Dan Jansenson, Architect, Building and Fire-Life Safety Commission, Samuel Tolkin Architect, Mario Fonda-Bonardi, AIA, Planning Commissioner, Phil Brock, Santa Monica Arts Commission. For previous articles see www.santamonicaarch.wordpress.com/writings.

Related Posts

Wise & Healthy Aging Goes Gray on Denim Day

May 3, 2024

May 3, 2024

In observance of April’s Sexual Assault Awareness Month, a nonprofit that advances the dignity and quality of life for older...

Kesha to Headline WeHo Pride Presents Friday Night at OUTLOUD Music Festival

May 3, 2024

May 3, 2024

West Hollywood Gears Up for a Weekend of Electrifying Performances The City of West Hollywood has announced that pop sensation...

An Interview With the Owners of Tito’s Tacos, Lynne Davidson and Wirt Morton

May 3, 2024

May 3, 2024

New Menu Items, This Year’s Fiesta Mexicana and a New Documentary By Dolores Quintana With the new chicken burrito slated...

CDC Investigates E. coli Outbreak Linked to Organic Walnuts Distributed on the Westside

May 3, 2024

May 3, 2024

Walnuts From Gibson Farms Have Sickened Six People in California Health officials from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention...

UCLA Faculty Group Demands Amnesty for Palestine Protesters, Issues Statement of Support

May 3, 2024

May 3, 2024

Faculty Calls for Legal Protection After Violent Crackdown on Campus Demonstration A group of UCLA faculty members have issued a...

Human Rights Play Center Stage with Two Award-Winning Films Opening this Weekend at Laemmle Monica Film Center

May 2, 2024

May 2, 2024

Cinema Libre Studio, a Burbank-based independent distribution company with a focus on social issue films, has two powerful films opening...

UCLA Gaza Solidarity Encampment Dismantled After Night of Counter Protesters’ Violence

May 2, 2024

May 2, 2024

LAPD and Other Agencies Sent in For “Student Safety”, Students Arrested  The UCLA Gaza Solidarity Encampment was removed during the...

UCLA Gaza Solidarity Encampment Attacked by Counter-Protesters During the Night/Early Morning Hours

May 2, 2024

May 2, 2024

Violence Erupts as Demonstrators Face Aggression During Tense Overnight Attacks On the night and early morning of April 30 into...

(Video) Footage of the Violent Counter Protesters at UCLA. TW: For Language and Violence

May 2, 2024

May 2, 2024

This reporter was grabbed and cursed at the end of the video. @culvercitywlanews Footage of the Violent Counter Protesters at...

Reactions From Local Authorities About the Violent Attacks April 30 at UCLA

May 2, 2024

May 2, 2024

Condemnation for the Incident and How it Was Handled Pour In After the terrifying events on the night and early...

New Bakery, Petitgrain Boulangerie, Set to Open in Santa Monica in Broadway Bakery Space

May 1, 2024

May 1, 2024

Industry Veterans Bring Their Expertise to the Wilshire Blvd Location By Dolores Quintana Petitgrain Boulangerie, a new bakery, is taking...

Tensions Rise Again at UCLA Pro-Palestine Encampment After Weekend Chaos

May 1, 2024

May 1, 2024

UCLA Administration and Student Group Issues Statements After Late Night Incident By Dolores Quintana The Pro Palestine Encampment at UCLA...

Westside Man Man Pleads Guilty to Decade-Long $1 Million Tax Evasion Scheme

April 30, 2024

April 30, 2024

Beverly Hills Resident Admits to Concealing Income From IRS Haim Jerry Kohen, a resident of Beverly Hills, California, admitted guilt...

Mayor Karen Bass and Mayor Phil Brock Converge on D.C. to Tackle Homelessness Crisis

April 30, 2024

April 30, 2024

Bipartisan Coalition of Mayors Advocate for National Solutions Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, Chair of the U.S. Conference of Mayors...

Cinespia Returns to Hollywood Forever Cemetery with Fan Favorite Lineup

April 29, 2024

April 29, 2024

Experience Movie Magic Under the Stars Starting Memorial Day Weekend Cinespia, LA’s beloved outdoor cinematic experience, will kick off Memorial...