Homeless Encampments Cost These Cities Tens of Thousands of Dollars Per Tent
L.A., Portland, and other cities are spending millions to house homeless people in outdoor "safe sleeping" sites.

When Los Angeles officials were looking to set up a new homeless shelter where residents could have their own space, they decided speed was the priority. For that reason, they declined to build the typical tiny home village in favor of an easier-to-assemble "safe sleeping" tent encampment. At a price of $44,000 per tent, one would hope the site went up pretty fast.
All told, Los Angeles' East Hollywood encampment, complete with showers, fencing, and staff facilities, cost $4 million to build. The city-contracted nonprofit Urban Alchemy spends another $3 million operating the site each year—with most of the operating expenses going toward 24/7 staffing and catering.
Other cities' "safe sleeping" sites are similarly expensive.
Supporters of safe camping sites stress the quick set-up times and improved safety, hygiene, and independence they provide occupants compared to unmanaged tent encampments. Nevertheless, delivering some of the benefits of sleeping inside to an open-air parking lot is an inescapably expensive endeavor. Actual buildings are more cost-effective. In all of the aforementioned cities, the yearly costs of renting an average-priced apartment are cheaper than the per-tent costs of a safe camping site.
- $61,000
San Francisco's yearly per-tent cost of "safe sleeping villages"
- $34,000
Portland, Oregon's estimated yearly per-tent cost of running yet-to-be-established, city-sanctioned tent encampments
- $28,750
San Diego's high-end per-tent -operating cost estimate for a 400-tent safe sleeping site
"What we found in the early iterations of safe sleep is that some people preferred tents because it gave them a sense of ownership." —Kirkpatrick Tyler, Urban Alchemy's chief of government-community affairs, in the Los Angeles Times
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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If you want a sense of ownership, maybe quit the drugs and go to work.
Or, am I just sick and tired of the masses of addicts who are making public spaces untenable, so grouchy?
Maybe both.
Weak managers, politicians like lazy people.
Lazy people contribute nothing but as long as they keep getting something for nothing their expectations are low. They are the ONLY people who praise these weak managers, politicians.
The middle class carry the load, paying for everything whether they are satisfied or not. They are the group targeted by propaganda.
The elites are above mundane things like politics. They take far more than they need and fund weak politicians to ensure their entitlements. They pull the strings of weak puppet managers and politicians.
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9th circuit just issued a ruling so bad forcing states to allow homeless urban camping the USSC decided to take the case. Ruling disallowing urban camping as cruel and unusual was such a stretch of that amendment it forced the USSC to take notice. Basically the 9th has now ruled not allowing homeless to take over public spaces is cruel and unusual.
Which is insane. I can see how the baseline of "disallowing all camping makes being homeless simply illegal" but I don't see how that translates to "so you have to let them do it literally anywhere they want to". I mean, other than "Ninth Circus".
“disallowing all camping makes being homeless simply illegal”
Good idea.
I feel like a lot of the recent homeless (at least in Albuquerque) were at least marginally housable, but the massive influx of illegal immigrants has bid up the price of rental housing locally and driven a lot of people who used to be marginally employed and housed into the streets. Certainly, rents are a lot higher (like, double) than less than five years ago.
Am guessing that these outdoor safe sleeping sites do not meet the enforced building and habitation codes applied to a land owning citizen.
Most certainly they do not.
Law and code enforcement is determined by your intersectional score.
how much are the homeless consultants like kirkpatrick tyler and urban alchemy getting paid? ... well over $100k/year
Now you're talking. How many Public Sector Union employees are used to "administer" these programs and how much of their Union dues are kicked back to Democrat politicians?
Welcome to the latest edition of....Reaping the consequences of dumb policies like 'Sanctuary City'. Look, they advertised it. Now live with it, and pay up.
We got this same issue in NJ. We are a 'Sanctuary State' according to Phailing Phil Murphy, our incompetent governor.
Hey Christian... will KMW let you write about the costs if illegal immigration?
But if you do that you must also include the benefits of all the broken windows from the invasion of illegal aliens or a government agency will need to be created to addend your comments with such.
Actual reporting 101:
1. Trace the political connections of the companies who get the contracts in such uneconomical projects.
2. Find out how much the 'non-profit' pays to it's employees, especially the higherups.
3. Include that information in the article.
Reason will not debase itself by committing journalism.
Exactly.
I would also like to see a photograph of that same tent after two months occupancy.
It will probably have to be burned.
Or sold for drugs
What is the annual cost of putting them in jail?
That would probably save about 10k per person.
Umm, who makes money off of that? You gotta think bigger than this and double up on fleecing taxpayers.
Umm, who makes money off of that?
Prison worker unions.
Why put them in jail?
Edit: When my drunk ass is sitting at the bar at 1:45am and they flash the lights and say, "You don't have to go home, but you can't stay here" I don't automatically go to jail, nor is it cruel and unusual.
"some people preferred tents because it gave them a sense of ownership."
It would be interesting to see some before and after photos of those tents, after say, 6 months.
I want photos of the Portland tents next January.
(if they ever get out up)
I think that the City of San Francisco should start renting out $4k per month units and placing the homeless in them, at taxpayer expense. The subsequent massive decline in available units and rise in price is pretty much exactly what the taxpayers of San Francisco deserve.
Instead of pooping on the sidewalks, they would poop in the hallways of the apartment buildings.
Like they'll be pooping in the tents.
put them up at the hyatt courtesy of the pritzkers
"Homeless get a taste of the good life by glamping"
Tired: Safe injection sites
Wired: Safe sleeping villages
Given that one of the local champions of safe injection sites was Reason's own Scott "Don't Say Gay" Shackford, there may be a question about whether these sites are government-funded monkeypox GOF zoonotic origin sites.
We have a solution here in flyover country (Iowa). It's called weather.
Most of the homeless I know have arrangements with others to allow housing for work. They won't survive outside these days.
Bernie has lots of empty rooms, and he's a socialist, so just call him up and let him know they are on the way.
I think it's just nice of these "cities" to provide free housing for the homeless folks. By the way, where do these cities get the money to pay for this charitable program?
Immigrants running food trucks.
The money comes from evil rich people, so I have been told.
Homelessness exists because of the corporate grift feeding from the government trough.
Chronic homelessness exists primarily because of the atrocious behavior of homeless people.
Hey look at that! CA got it’s socialist utopia! yeah! /s
So why the F are they leaving now?
The only people leaving are those with money.
The rest is stuck in the socialist hell of their own making.
And this is a major reason why non-socialists no longer live in high-density urban areas.