Does Miami Have the Answer to Homelessness?
There may not be a perfect solution to ending homelessness, but there are some clear principles to reduce the friction for those working to do so.

When Gov. Ron DeSantis needed a place to host a signing ceremony for a bill banning homeless people from sleeping in public, the Florida Republican chose Miami Beach. It wasn't picked just for its iconic beach and breakers.
Last September, Miami Beach enacted a similar prohibition on public sleeping, which DeSantis praised at the March ceremony as a compassionate measure that would also keep the streets "clean" and "safe."
It's been a selling point for South Florida. Republican Miami Mayor Francis Suarez bragged last year, during his brief presidential campaign, that because of the city's "different approach" to the issue of homelessness, there were only about 600 unsheltered people in Miami. Oh, you can see homeless people here. Plenty of them if you want to, in downtown, near the beaches, and around popular tourist spots like the Wynwood neighborhood. But it's not like walking through Washington, D.C., or Portland, Oregon, where underpasses and public parks are stuffed with tents.
This is partly a shell game played by local authorities. The Miami Police Department has an ominously named "Homeless Empowerment Assistance Team" (HEAT) that clears tent camps, and the city recently paid a $300,000 settlement to end a lawsuit over improperly trashing homeless people's property, including an urn containing the ashes of a woman's mother. There are local and county ordinances to make life tougher for people living on the street, and at one time the county was considering a grotesque proposal to move them onto a small island next to a wastewater treatment plant.
But Miami has managed to avoid large-scale chronic homelessness—and Ron Book, the chair of the Miami-Dade County Homeless Trust, will tell you with a straight face that if a few things break his way, he will end homelessness altogether in the county in under two years.
In addition to chairing the trust—the government agency that coordinates funding and delivery of homeless aid in the county—Book is a prominent lobbyist and attorney, so he has a lot of practice in the field of confident speaking. But he also says he has the numbers to back his claim up.
In the early 1990s, more than 8,000 people were camping on the streets and sidewalks of Miami-Dade County.
"When I started 32 years ago, we were in a similar place to Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Denver, Houston, Dallas, New Orleans, Atlanta, Chicago, Detroit, Boston, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, New York City, Washington, D.C.," Book says. "We all had between 8,000 and 11,000 unsheltered individuals."
According to the trust's January headcount, there were 1,032 unsheltered people in Miami-Dade County. "Too many," Book says, "but I don't have 60,000 unsheltered like they do in San Francisco, and I don't have 79,000 the way they do in L.A."
Book's claim of being able to bring that number down to zero in Miami is stunning—maybe even scoff-worthy—because in so many other parts of the country homelessness seems intractable no matter how much money politicians throw at it. And they've thrown a lot.
Los Angeles voters approved a $1.2 billion bond in 2016 to build 10,000 units of permanent supportive housing. Three years later, the city had finished only 1 percent of the promised units. In 2018, California voters passed a $2 billion bondmeasure that promised 20,000 new housing units. CalMatters reported earlier this year that fewer than 2,000 have been finished.
New York City recently spent tens of millions of dollars on "intensive mobile treatment" teams to provide homeless people with medication and connect them with services. So far, the program has delivered lackluster results: The New York Times reported in February that the city's Department of Health and Mental Hygiene "had not set clear standards to measure its effectiveness despite spending more than $37 million on the initiative last year alone." In one case, a team lost track of a man prone to psychotic episodes; that man later pushed a 92-year-old woman, causing her to hit her head on a fire hydrant.
Despite all that money, homelessness in the U.S. surged to a record high in 2023, driven by rising rents, tight housing markets, and the end of pandemic-era financial relief and eviction bans. An annual one-night headcount in January 2023 by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) found more than 650,000 people were living in shelters, tents, or cars—up 12 percent over the previous year.
In response, state legislatures and city councils across the country have passed bills to crack down on homelessness, including putting homeless people in government-run camps. Homeless advocacy groups argue that cities can't criminalize their way out of the problem, but conservatives and a vocal bloc of disillusioned liberals say they are done tolerating open-air drug use and unsanitary tent camps.
Meanwhile, the Supreme Court has taken up a case on whether cities can ban homeless people from sleeping in public even if there's no available shelter space, potentially setting the stage for a huge shift in the civil rights of homeless people in the United States.
"It's been a series of 5- to 10-year plans at the state, federal, and city level in California to end homelessness, and every time it's 'Oh, we just didn't quite build enough housing' or 'We just didn't quite do enough of this, didn't quite spend enough money,'" says Devon Kurtz, public safety policy director at the Cicero Institute. "It's starting to look really, really foolish."
But is there a way for homeless policy to thread the needle between feckless progressivism and reactionary overcorrection, and does Miami really have a different approach? What has worked in Miami-Dade County has not been the most punitive measures or a one-size-fits-all solution but a flexible variety of aid, a friendly housing market, and rules against police harassment. Unfortunately, the political tide has turned against the latter two.
The Housing-Industrial Complex
If you want to trace how the political backlash to San Francisco's homelessness problem has moved through the rest of the country, the Cicero Institute is an instructive place to start.
The Cicero Institute was founded by Joe Lonsdale, an ex–San Francisco venture capitalist and co-founder of Palantir Technologies. Since 2021, the institute—now based in Austin, Texas—has been drafting model legislation for statehouses. The goal is to break the current model restricting how homeless grant funding is used across the country and expand the boundaries of how municipal governments can police homelessness. So far it has seen versions of its model bills passed in Texas, Missouri, Kentucky, Georgia, and Florida.
The think tank opposes what it calls the "homeless-industrial complex" and specifically the "Housing First" approach that currently dominates federal and state responses to the problem.
Housing First prioritizes getting people into permanent supportive housing without preconditions on sobriety, treatment, employment, or other factors. It inverted the traditional model of homeless services, which moved people from shelters to transitional programs and treatment and then finally to housing. The idea is that stable housing is the biggest contributor to getting homeless people back on their feet, and everything else will flow easier from there.
Housing First gained momentum under the George W. Bush administration. Since 2009, the federal government has prioritized permanent supportive housing and rapid rehousing programs for federal HUD grants. In 2016 California enacted legislation requiring all housing programs to adopt this model, which ruled out common reasons for rejecting applications, including criminal history and lack of rental history. Nor can a tenant be required to be in treatment or evicted for substance abuse in and of itself.
"We know, and studies have shown, that when people have housing that meets their needs and have supportive services that meet their needs, they do really well," says Jesse Rabinowitz, campaign and communications director for the National Homelessness Law Center. "In D.C., 95 percent of people in permanent supportive housing stay housed after their first year. This is an incredible success story. It's just that we don't have enough of it."
The Trump administration originally supported Housing First—former HUD Secretary Ben Carson wrote in 2017 that there was a "mountain of evidence" supporting it—but soured on the policy when progressive cities like Portland and San Francisco became useful punching bags. The bipartisan consensus on Housing First crumbled.
The Cicero Institute, the libertarian Cato Institute, and the conservative Manhattan Institute argue that Housing First has been costly and ineffective in many states, especially California, and that the research supporting it elides worrying data about poor behavioral health outcomes. In D.C., landlords and residents say the city's supportive housing program has moved people with mental health issues and drug addiction into buildings without providing enough security or support, leading to violence and dysfunction.
What's beyond dispute is that the funding prioritization for Housing First has led to a predictable squeeze in other types of shelter. In California, for example, the number of transitional housing beds dropped by 50 percent between 2013 and 2019.
"We're seeing this pattern over and over again where when you over-invest in permanent supportive housing, you actually take resources away from what works for different types of clients," Kurtz says. "And a lot of what we're trying to do at Cicero is just say, let's have a multifaceted approach for a very complex and heterogeneous population."
But the Cicero Institute's reasonable critiques of Housing First policy are only an appetizer course for a menu that also includes a large number of measures to create and raise criminal penalties.
Among the Cicero Institute's proposals is creating drug-free zones around homeless services. The Cicero Institute claims drug-free zones have a "proven record of success" in all 50 states, but in reality they have little deterrence effect, are rarely if ever used to prosecute their intended targets, and blanket whole neighborhoods in enhanced sentencing zones. A 2017 Reason investigation found that 38 percent of Memphis, Tennessee, was covered in drug-free zones. Those zones dramatically increased criminal charges for drug offenders, many of whom were often driving through zones or in private residences, turning petty drug crimes into mandatory minimum sentences that rivaled those for second-degree murder and rape.
Government-Run Tent Camps
The statewide public camping ban that DeSantis signed into law in Miami Beach was also inspired by the Cicero Institute. It bans homeless people from sleeping or camping in public and preempts local governments from allowing it.
One of the bill's most controversial provisions also requires local governments to construct encampments with adequate sanitation and security to place homeless people if shelters are over capacity.
The bill drew widespread condemnation from homeless advocacy groups. Book takes a more hard-line stance than others in his field; he doesn't support policies that make it easier for people to live on the streets or maintain an addiction, and he's cautiously optimistic about the bill. But even he is leery about the camp requirements.
"Our approach has always been a measured outcome—performance, evidence-based solutions to ending homelessness—and encampments don't do it," he says.
Gainesville, Florida, opened a government-sanctioned tent camp in 2014. But without a plan to move people out of it, it devolved into violence and drug abuse until it was closed. Government-run tent camps have also been surprisingly expensive in other jurisdictions. The average per-tent operating cost of a safe camping site in San Francisco, Portland, and San Diego was $61,000, $34,000, and $28,750, respectively.
"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," Reason's Christian Britschgi reported.
Still, Book is encouraged that the Florida Legislature is actually paying attention to homelessness for once. And despite the bill's flaws, he thinks it will force counties and cities to come up with real, concrete plans to address homelessness.
"In 32 years of leading our efforts into homelessness, there has never been a time where there has been legislative leadership and executive branch leadership prepared to even talk about homelessness, let alone do anything," he says.
Another provision in the law creates a private right of action for Floridians to sue local governments that fail to enforce the ban on public camping. This type of mechanism has appeared in several of Florida's other recent culture war bills, and critics worry it will lead to a barrage of lawsuits.
"One of two things will happen. The cities and counties will need to arrest everyone on the street—which is currently considered unconstitutional unless there is space in local homeless shelters, which there isn't, thus leaving the cities and counties vulnerable to civil-rights lawsuits," Martha Are, executive director of the Homeless Services Network of Central Florida, wrote in an Orlando Sentinel op-ed. "Or the cities and counties will ignore the statute, and so they'll face lawsuits from residents and businesses upset over the public presence of people who are homeless. In fact, jurisdictions are likely to face both types of lawsuits."
Although supporters of the Florida law and camping bans in general have framed them as a compassionate measure to direct homeless people to services, the laws ultimately rely on police to enforce them. And police are not a gentle, guiding hand. Their job is to arrest people breaking the law.
From 1992 to 2019, Miami was prohibited under the terms of an American Civil Liberties Union lawsuit settlement from arresting homeless people for sleeping, bathing, or other activities.
David Peery was homeless in Miami from 2008 to 2018. He was also the class representative for homeless plaintiffs in the resulting consent decree. He says Miami complied with the agreement "sporadically." Miami police still harassed homeless people downtown. He remembers one instance where police continually bothered him over three nights, with one officer trying to tell him that where he was sleeping was excluded from the terms of the consent decree.
"He didn't know that I was actually in the federal court litigation, and I knew the agreement backwards and forward," Peery says. "They did this type of harassment for about three days in a row. And I'm at the point where I'm literally hallucinating from sleep deprivation because I can't get more than 90 minutes worth of sleep at a time."
In 2019, a federal judge terminated the consent decree after ruling that "overwhelming evidence supports the finding that City police will not revert to arresting [homeless] individuals."
A Miami Herald review of arrests made after Miami Beach's public sleeping ban was enacted found Miami Beach police officers asked "only vague questions about whether homeless people want shelter or other assistance before detaining them. Officers do not appear to discuss the availability of beds in specific shelters, offer transportation to the shelters or explain that declining services will result in their immediate arrest."
Human Whac-a-Mole
Looming over all of this is a pending Supreme Court case that could upend the legal standard for how cities can police homelessness.
Late last year, the Supreme Court agreed to hear Johnson v. Grants Pass, a case concerning the current precedent in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit.
A 2021 National Homelessness Law Center study on laws criminalizing homelessness found that 48 states have implemented at least one law prohibiting or restricting the conduct of homeless people. But the 9th Circuit put a limit on those laws in the 2018 case Martin v. City of Boise, ruling that it violates the Eighth Amendment's ban on cruel and unusual punishment to arrest or fine people for sleeping outside if there is no available shelter space.
"As long as there is no option of sleeping indoors, the government cannot criminalize indigent, homeless people for sleeping outdoors, on public property, on the false premise they had a choice in the matter," a 9th Circuit panel wrote.
Shortly after, several homeless individuals filed a lawsuit challenging a public camping ban in Grants Pass, a small town in southern Oregon. The 9th Circuit blocked Grants Pass from enforcing the ordinance, Grants Pass petitioned the Supreme Court, and now the majority-conservative Court will have a say on whether it's constitutional to arrest someone for being involuntarily unsheltered.
The city of Grants Pass, the Cicero Institute, and others argue that the 9th Circuit precedent ties the hands of local governments.
"It just ends up being kind of a mess and I think that it puts too much burden on small towns in particular," Kurtz says. "It misunderstands the level of involvement that local government has in the construction of shelters, since all of this is being run primarily through the Continuum of Care, which are unelected nonprofits that control all federal money going into a state for homelessness and otherwise keep their finger on the scales of how they respond."
Continuum of Care is a term of art for local or regional programs, such as the Miami-Dade County Homeless Trust, that administer homeless assistance funding. Kurtz is correct that small towns have limited control over how that money is spent.
But Rabinowitz argues that Grants Pass is trying to have it both ways, refusing to provide housing and intentionally trying to drive homeless people out through criminalization. He notes that the town's housing has a 1 percent vacancy rate and precious little shelter space.
"There's a gospel rescue mission that requires you to go to church services twice a day, work for the mission six hours a day, six days a week, and pay $100 a month to stay there," Rabinowitz says. "If you're too old or too sick to meet the work requirements, you can't stay there at all, which really means people have no other choice."
Oregon Public Broadcasting reviewed city meeting minutes and found that in 2013, Grants Pass hosted a community roundtable "to identify solutions to the current vagrancy problems." At the meeting, a "question was raised about [literally] driving repeat offenders out of town and leaving them there." A city council member "stated the point is to make it uncomfortable enough for them in our city so they will want to move on down the road."
Advocates worry that if the Supreme Court overturns the 9th Circuit precedent, it will lead to an arms race between cities trying to craft the most punitive and unwelcoming anti-homeless laws. "That's not a solution that actually ends homelessness," Rabinowitz says. "That's just a solution to play human Whac-a-Mole."
Is a Miami Miracle Possible?
So what makes Miami a relative success story? After peaking in the 1990s, homelessness in Miami-Dade began declining over the next decade after several new shelters opened. The county funded a large chunk of its homeless services through a 1 percent tax levied on restaurant checks.
Book also cites the trust's use of outreach teams to keep contact with people on the street. Every day, 365 days a year, a team of medical professionals drives around Miami-Dade County doing welfare checks on homeless people.
The program was started in 2014 by Lazaro Trueba, a now-retired Miami-Dade Homeless Trust administrator who noticed that people with mental health issues were being picked up by police, temporarily committed to psychiatric hospitals, and then dumped back on the street before their psychotropic medications had time to take effect. Other local nonprofits that coordinate with the trust also run street teams.
Over the 2010s, more low-income and supportive housing projects were finished, creating more space for people to move into permanent housing. Book also says the trust works to identify people at risk of homelessness through eviction or foreclosure. These tools mean there are multiple points of potential intervention, including before someone is homeless.
Did it work? Well, the number of people on the street in Miami-Dade county is roughly the same now as it was in 2015. But that's still better than many metropolitan areas have been doing.
To finish the job, Book says he needs more housing.
The trust plans to bring the number of homeless down to zero by aggressively expanding the county's supply of permanent supportive housing and affordable rentals. Book's been working on identifying buildings suitable for adaptive reuse, such as old hotels and mothballed government facilities. One of the trust's first targets was a 107-room La Quinta hotel in Cutler Bay that it wanted to convert into affordable rental units for senior citizens and veterans ready to leave shelters. The trust is aiming to purchase the hotel for $14 million. The estimated cost to retrofit the rooms is $650,000, which, according to an April status report from the Miami-Dade mayor, results in a per-unit estimated cost of $136,915. Book says he also wants to experiment with building less-expensive tiny houses.
The Miami-Dade Homeless Trust has a roughly $90 million operating budget, about two-thirds of which is spent on permanent housing. Book is trying to pass two new restaurant taxes to fund the additional housing he says he needs.
But the trust has been running into a problem: Despite the extreme housing shortage, local politicians and residents don't want any affordable housing near them, nor do they want to see homeless people or acknowledge the relationship between the lack of the former and the prevalence of the latter.
This is a familiar issue: Around the country, cities have used zoning ordinances, code enforcement, and lengthy permitting processes to stop churches and charities from operating shelters and soup kitchens. The Cutler Bay project has been on ice since December due to local opposition.
"I got a county commissioner who previously supported it, and then when 12 people showed up opposing it in her district, she got cold feet on me," Book says. "I'm fighting for approval to acquire that, but NIMBYism is alive and well."
There may not be a perfect solution to ending homelessness, but there are some clear principles to reduce the friction for those working to do so.
First, localities should radically liberalize housing policy and ease zoning regulations. There's a clear correlation between housing supply and homelessness; the states in which housing is most expensive and least abundant are, by and large, the states with the biggest homeless populations. Even if Housing First works, it works only when housing is readily available or easily constructed. In places determined to keep housing supply and density low, like California, Housing First has been wildly expensive for what it delivers.
Second, governments should allow for a broad and flexible range of aid and services, instead of mandating one-size-fits-all solutions. Sometimes a town needs an emergency shelter more than an apartment block, and vice versa. Let motivated problem-solvers figure out the details instead of relying on sclerotic bureaucracies. Let people experiment with tiny houses, with RV hookups, and with other nontraditional housing. Repeal occupancy caps and prohibitions on multifamily housing.
Third, government entities running programs intended to reduce homelessness should audit the performance of the programs in order to avoid the sorts of boondoggles we've seen in New York City and Los Angeles. Programs that don't work should be shut down or reformed. Peery, now the founder and executive director of the Miami Coalition to Advance Racial Equity, reports that the city's shelter system is "middling," still demeaning and inadequate for the city's chronically homeless, and that there still needs to be more housing stock.
At the same time, local authorities should closely monitor enforcement to ensure that tools like involuntary commitment are not being used inappropriately or inhumanely. The condition of being homeless is not a crime, and it does not negate anyone's civil rights or necessitate being shunted into a government-run camp on the edge of town.
Book likes to say that he created his own luck in life, as if he can will things into being just by declaring it will be so. "We will reach an end to homelessness in my community," he promises.
But that will require the political will to create abundant, affordable housing and treat the homeless as individuals with rights, not problems to be swept away.
"No one voluntarily…leaves four walls and a locked door and a roof over their head to live unsheltered on the streets, vulnerable to theft, violence, sleep deprivation, and constant attacks on your privacy," Peery says. "What sense does that make? Why would anybody subject themselves to that type of constant pain?"
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Gimme Shelter."
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The idea is that stable housing is the biggest contributor to getting homeless people back on their feet, and everything else will flow easier from there.
Anyone who believes that doesn't know these people. The vast majority of them have repeatedly rejected housing opportunities, or have been repeatedly thrown out of provided housing, because they are unwilling to curb their anti-social behavior. Any type of housing provided will involve the recipient following rules and showing consideration for others like normal people. If the chronically homeless were able and willing to do that, most would not be homeless in the first place.
I'll second that. I lived next to a church whose pastor was big on the appearance of helping the homeless, feeding them breakfast at 5 in the morning so they lined up earlier and disrupted all the neighbors. Way too many of them bragged about being homeless, shitting on doorsteps, keying cars and store windows, being as loud as possible. They actually refused to use a homeless shelter because they deserved their own individual homes, free. They all looked healthy enough to work for a living. None of them wanted to.
If there were any in that crowd who were truly needy, they sure kept themselves hidden. I'm willing to believe any like that went elsewhere to get away from that crowd of bums.
When the do-gooders admit most of them are just plain bums, I'll pay attention to their suggestions for the rest.
I say that the fedgov could solve the homelessness problem pretty easily by providing campgrounds and transportation to them. Military aircraft could be used, and we have plenty of empty space in Alaska. Voila, they have a place to stay, and lots of room in which to hunt and forage.
Sure, we’ll lose some to moose and grizzly, but it’s a price I’m willing to pay.
We can even provide them with basically the entire stash of stuff confiscated by the DEA. Just in a great big pile in the middle of the camp.
Is there any empirical evidence to support this?
I would be happy to write a research paper about it for you. Is $400 an hour OK?
the false premise they had a choice in the matter
Most of them have repeatedly made that choice, and have chosen to continue their drug abuse and obnoxious behavior rather than conform to the necessary rules and restrictions that potential housing providers must impose.
Hey, just because people make repeated stupid, self-destructive decisions doesn't mean they aren't entitled to live better than you!
So, the problem exists. Snarky comments resolve nothing.
"No one voluntarily…leaves four walls and a locked door and a roof over their head to live unsheltered on the streets, vulnerable to theft, violence, sleep deprivation, and constant attacks on your privacy"
Bullshit.
" . . . driven by rising rents, tight housing markets, and the end of pandemic-era financial relief and eviction bans . . . "
Well, at least we don't have to deal with mental illness, drugs, and alcohol.
The three pillars of modern Libertarianism
No, those are Mexicans, butt sex, and weed.
Finally, proof of sentient life
Adding multiple millions (2.5, or 5 or 8 or 10M depending on who's numbers you use) of illegal aliens in sucks up a lot of housing. Not to mention all the benefits being showered upon them not available to homeless citizens.
"But that will require the political will to create abundant, affordable housing and treat the homeless as individuals with rights, not problems to be swept away."
Is this Vox or Reason?
They're interchangeable at this point.
WHY DO LIBERTARIANS PRETEND THAT ANYBODY WANTS TO FIX HOMELESSNESS?
Once you get paid to "deal" with the problem, fixing it is the last thing you want to do.
Are y'all fucking naive?
No politician or bureaucrat ever wants to solve the problems they are working on. Private sector bureaucrats don't either, but markets force them to. Government doesn't have to, so they never do.
This is a very interesting article that surveys many of the available options for funding housing. If homelessness was merely a financial issue, it would have been solved long, long ago -- there is absolutely no shortage of money being thrown at the problem.
But money is not the only issue. It may not even be the primary issue. Drug abuse and mental illness are far more responsible for homelessness than merely cheap rents. You cannot make any progress towards a permanent solution unless those issues are out of the way first.
So, what if we just gave the homeless all of the drugs they could possibly want... but no emergency medical care?
"Hey guys, here's a kilo of fentanyl!"
"but soured on the policy when progressive cities like Portland and San Francisco became useful punching bags."
You mean rather, "soured on the policy when the evidence clearly showed that it wasn't working" ?
(if "working" means "fewer homeless and problems from them", anyway)?
This is one of the poorest crafted articles I have read on this site in a long time. I don't mean the subject or the conclusions or the recommendations, bad as they are. I mean that it wanders all over the place, pretending it's going to show how Miami fixed their homeless problem, and all it does is dance around showing how every other city didn't fix the problem. I started skimming and gave up.
Focus, man, focus! If you want to audition for the New Yorker or Atlantic, buddy, I got news for you -- not even those wordy rags are this poorly crafted and organized.
How dare you! Quality standards and critiques are just racist, man.
My reaction as well. I still don't know if Miami fixed it's homeless problem.
It sounds like, to the extent they've been successful, it's mostly been by old-fashioned rousting of bums, not by anything new or different.
That was exactly what happened with me! Gave up in frustration looking for the so-called solutions amongst the litany of other city failures and went to the comment section for a more focused summary.
Great point. Just like we all do with many of Reason's articles. It's funny that most times there are people in the comments section that have more personal experience and insight than the writer of the article. But is should be expected to be the case; a collection of individuals not entirely made up of elites or "experts" will give more sound advice than the elites and experts. I think Thomas Sowell said that in a much simpler, concise and meaningful way than I just did.
Agreed. I couldn't tell what the point was from sentence to sentence. I'm not sure what worked. What are the preconditions for successful homeless housing? Housing First without preconditions seems to be disfavored/ failed, but what are the good ones. As another said, maybe rousting hobos just works.
"Advocates worry that if the Supreme Court overturns the 9th Circuit precedent, it will lead to an arms race between cities trying to craft the most punitive and unwelcoming anti-homeless laws."
Oh. So you do get it. I guess they're smarter than I thought.
Meanwhile, the Supreme Court has taken up a case on whether cities can ban homeless people from sleeping in public even if there's no available shelter space, potentially setting the stage for a huge shift in the civil rights of homeless people in the United States.
There's is no "civil right" to homestead public property. As far as I can tell that entire case is based on a false precept, that the homeless were being criminalized for being homeless, rather than for the act of attempting to homestead public property.
If the homeless don't want to participate in society, they can go not participate in society not in the middle of society. Not in the middle of cities. There's still a lot of empty space out there. Crazy hermits traditionally lived in the woods, not the middle of towns.
San Fran has a city gov't made up of people who have slopped at the public trough and never had a job where they could be fired as a result of incompetence.
We have a mayor who thinks 'solving' the bum problem can be accomplished by providing rent-free housing, a cell phone, a stipend and (if you're a drunk), free booze.
And she expresses surprise that the bum count has increased since she has instituted those policies; pretty sure the first paragraph will tell you why.
We do not have a bum problem; we have an idiot-voter problem.
"Ending homelessness" is a fundamentally anti-libertarian idea.
There are ways for the homeless to improve their condition and get better lives for themselves. Almost none of them are the role of government, and of course government intervention is more likely to make things worse.
Government's main role in all of this is to respect and protect property rights. Allow shelters to exist and to feed people, but also enforce trespassing laws.
Again, we ignore the simplest solution.
What do homeless bums want more than anything else? Shelter, food, and a place to sleep. So, we build some nice big complexes with really small rooms that have a cot bolted to the wall, and the door locks from the outside. A self-heat meal drops from a slot three times a day, and a second slot drops the garbage into a large incinerator. Which, incidentally, powers the heating system.
And none of this bougie bum mentality of doing so in a nice tropical paradise. Build it in Alaska. 300 miles NW of Fairbanks would work.
Note that this also puts a huge dent in the drug problem.
Simple solutions guys. Simple solutions.
This guy gets it.
Though I say we supply the place with everything the DEA confiscates. Just make sure the incinerator slot is large enough for a body.
Tanaga Island? Near the air station, so resupply is easy?
Didn't the article say it was "grotesque" that Miami considered putting the camp on an island?
Was that the island that they were horrified by, or was it that there's a sewage treatment facility there? Because, if it's the later, we can just call it the neighborhood of Dowisetrepla, like in that TV show, and make it sound fancy.
Either way, my biggest problem with people drugging themselves to oblivion is only that I have to pay taxes to cover their emergency care, or that they're monopolizing public space. Let 'em do what they want, as much as they want, and the problem will be mitigated rather significantly.
The article did say it was grotesque. My thought is we describe the plan, and then the people who scream and fuss about it get sentenced to actually housing these poor unfortunates themselves, if giving them housing and food on an island is too grotesque for their sensitivities.
Turning Miami into a Florida version of Kensington Ave.(Philadelphia)....what could go wrong?
Any analysis of homelessness which doesn't distinguish addicts from the unfortunate is just bogus.
The solutions are radically different, and combining them invites deliberate conflation.
And often, addiction is simply one aspect of a generally anti-social personality. Get them off the drug, and they're still pathologically inconsiderate assholes.
A lot of them are mentally ill. Schizophrenic, or other significant disorders. They'd rather self-medicate than treat the problem. I've crossed paths with a couple of these who are down right dangerous.
And a lot are literally just so anti-social that they won't even be so beholden to someone that they can show up at a certain place and time. Not "can't". "Won't." I suppose that's a sort of mental illness, too, but they'd literally rather live like dogs, scraping by just enough to eat and get high.
I don't know which is worse. After bad encounters, I don't want anything to do with any of them.
There's no such thing as "mentally ill."
How dare you say such blasphemy during pRiDe MoNtH? They are just people who live alternative lifestyles.
WHICH YOU WILL ACCEPT AND TOLERATE AND LOVE. DISSENT WILL NOT BE TOLERATED. IN THE NAME OF TOLERANCE.
George Carlin had it right when he said give them golf courses. Trump would never approve.
Collectivizing private land…
True libertarianism.
Does Miami Have the Answer to Homelessness?
- No.
Oakland, Ca. shows the way.
Reopening the looney bins would solve about 75% of the problem.
And the Poor Farms. Many mentally disabled people once had decent lives on the farms.
Reopening mental hospitals is one answer but....you can't do that! It violates the rights of the mentally ill to accost and even assault people, to run amok and set fires.
As for homeless illegal aliens...send them all back.
The newly elected right wing government in Austria has the right idea, forming a "remigration" government bureau.
As much as I hate communism and fascism, both provided a viable solution to the chronic homeless.
It was called "labor camps."
In these camps, the alcoholics, drug addicts, and the perpetually lazy found the joys and wonders of work, and once released, they rarely, if ever, were homeless again.
That's what the US needs to solve the homeless crisis.
Allow the religious organizations regardless of faith to build permanent homeless shelters for the mentally ill because that is what their God tells them to do, and build labor camps for those who refuse work.
This idea may or may not work, but I believe it's worth a try.
We'd have to properly exterminate the actual commies and fascists first though, because the temptation for them to be able to sentence people to labor camps would otherwise be entirely too strong. Of course, we need to exterminate them anyway so this isn't a huge burden.
"Homeless Empowerment Assistance Team" (HEAT) that clears tent camps, and the city recently paid a $300,000 settlement to end a lawsuit over improperly trashing homeless people's property, including an urn containing the ashes of a woman's mother.
For someone who has a LOT of experience in this area, that's a relatively cheap cost of doing business. Sorry we destroyed your cache of 25 stolen mountain bikes, here's $500 in recompense, but your ass isn't sleeping here.
If one looks at downtown San Franciso, or downtown Seattle at all the empty store fronts, lost jobs, lost revenue, urban decay, crime and literal piles of bodies, $300,000 to cover the tiny inconvenience of destroyed stolen bikes and other sundry items that are declared "the property" of the zombie hordes, that's a price all cities should be willing to pay to stave off the literal billions lost in money and lives lost to what happens if you DON'T get it under control quickly.
Any city that makes aggressive efforts will find that the homeless zombie-hordes will eventually move on to a neighboring city that has looser rules for public camping, and then it becomes their problem. When that city has finally had enough, it will then crack down and the hordes will move on to the next city that has looser rules and so on, and so on. Eventually, every city will do what all cities USED to do before the mid 2000s, Ie, remember how we used to deal with this problem, and then the problem will finally be much diminished.
$300,000 to cover the tiny inconvenience of destroyed stolen bikes and other sundry items that are declared “the property” of the zombie hordes
*giggle* Does that make those... "zombie hoards"? 😀 😀 😀
Betteridge's law of headlines is an adage that states: "Any headline that ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no."
All of these "solutions" seem like replays of every solution since the War on Poverty began. Instead of "housing projects", we'll have "mini-houses" and "relief apartments." Instead of "welfare," we'll have "drug treatment" and "food security." And so on.
There are clear government contributions to the current issue, sky high inflation being a big one. No one's pay is keeping up with inflation, so everyone in every large populated area in America is paying more for housing as a portion of their compensation, with those lacking the ability to acquire a mortgage (which stabilizes the housing cost) being hit the most.
But it's hard to blame government for people's individual decisions to pursue drug use (even that "harmless" recreational stuff Reason loves), such that they prioritize drugs over housing and even food. It's hard to blame all of this on mental illness, unless you include brain damage from drugs in that term. It's hard to blame local citizens for not loving the homeless enough to care for them, when the BEHAVIORS of the homeless absolutely ruin the quality of life everywhere they are -- the smell, the trash, the disease, the ugliness, the endless panhandling and harassment at stoplights, and the vandalism and other crimes.
My city is planning a new little community of homes for the poor and homeless on a lot formerly occupied by an elementary school campus. The photos all show cute little homes with little yards and some amenities for small children. We all know what this is going to look like a decade, and three decades, after it's built using public funds and magic grants. We know what the crime rates will do when an empty lot becomes full of shelters for all manner of bad behavior.
Reason likes advocating the liberalization land use (removing zoning, allowing multifamily housing, etc.), and I'm sympathetic. Yet I also know how I feel about having a vacant lot of my neighborhood being turned into a unit that's a magnet for every dysfunction found in our city. I care about the homeless, but I care about my kids more.
I don't think Miami has anything to improve markedly on existing situations. The homeless and near-homeless will end up in these places and programs as everyone with means to do so moves away. Who can blame them?