- Pajamas Media - http://pajamasmedia.com -
Cooking the Books on Homelessness Stats
Posted By Tom Blumer On July 24, 2008 @ 12:02 am In . Positioning, Health, Lifestyle, Money, US News | 22 Comments
A civil grand jury in San Francisco (which readers should understand served as an advisory group and was not associated with any court case), recently found [1] (PDF) that “The Homeless Have Homes, But They Are Still On the Street.”
In its detailed report [2] (PDF), the grand jury also inadvertently revealed just how wildly overestimated statements made by the media and politicians are about the degree of homelessness in the US.
Among other things, the group found that most of the homeless have a city-funded home. This would mean that they’re not, well, “homeless.”
In a SFGate.com column [3] about the report, C.W. Nevius noted that city officials agree (bold is mine):
The mayor and others are now admitting what the grand jury reported — that a majority of those on the streets are not homeless.
The head of the city’s homeless program, Dariush Kayhan, estimates that 50 to 75 percent of street people live in supportive housing.
“We just warehouse addicts,” said the grand jury’s Stuart Smith. “Granted, it is a nicer place for them, but it doesn’t address the problem.
The grand jury’s detailed report also says that:
… the city is now spending $186 million a year on homelessness, six times what was spent in 1993-94.
That astonishing amount is nowhere near the whole story. The group further noted that the $186 million “excludes the cost of County Adult Assistance Program welfare grants, emergency medical response, hospitalization, jail costs, most city management and overhead functions, and much else.” That is, the true cost, if it could be determined, would come in a lot higher.
A bit of number-crunching shows just how out-of-control the city’s homeless program spending really is:
This is San Francisco we’re talking about, so that question is up in the air.
Before citing the cost figure, Nevius made an amazingly presumptive statement that should not be overlooked:
In short, the jury is reflecting the views of many San Franciscans who made the choice to live here. They understood that housing and taxes would be higher, and so would the cost of a meal in a restaurant. They understand and believe that the city needs to provide for its poorest homeless residents and don’t begrudge (the $186 million cost).
It’s safe to say that many of the nearly 350 commenters at Nevius’s column (as of early Tuesday morning) aren’t as accepting of the city’s high cost structure as the author.
But what’s really important to the discussion of the US homelessness problem is how the grand jury’s report makes the nationwide homeless population figures routinely quoted by homeless advocates look utterly foolish:
Yet the media and policymakers routinely treat advocates’ self-interested nationwide homelessness stats of 1.5 million-3 million as gospel, and base funding decisions on those ridiculous numbers.
It’s long past time to get back to reality-based figures — and to adjust funding and services so that they not only match and address the real degree of need, but also put a stop to the “warehousing” mindset.
Article printed from Pajamas Media: http://pajamasmedia.com
URL to article: http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/cooking-the-books-on-homelessness-stats/
URLs in this post:
[1] recently found: http://cdn.sfgate.com/chronicle/acrobat/2008/07/17/homeless.pdf
[2] detailed report: http://cdn.sfgate.com/chronicle/acrobat/2008/07/17/homeless2.pdf
[3] a SFGate.com column: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/07/17/BABT11PHFJ.DTL&hw=homeless&sn=002&sc=721
[4] its population of 744,000: http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/06/06075.html
[5] homelessness in the US: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homelessness_in_the_United_States#Statistics_and_demographics
[6] about 304 million: http://www.census.gov/
Click here to print.
Copyright © 2008 Pajamas Media. All rights reserved.