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DOJ looking at options for homeless, mentally ill

Discussion in 'Too Hot for Swamp Gas' started by rivergator, Apr 27, 2025 at 5:52 PM.

  1. wgbgator

    wgbgator Premium Member

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    Its a lot of the same people, since shelters are only open at certain times. Certainly spikes at times of the year when sleeping outdoors is not ideal. There are encampments I've heard of outside of the city, and that's certainly a different mix of people, but they tend to police themselves from what I've been told (how effectively, I don't know, but they avoid cops and don't want attention from them and want to stay away from jail). Different set of activists working with them than say, the Christian-oriented shelters who see cops all the time and have to work with them as best they can, as they are in the middle of the city.
     
    • Informative Informative x 1
  2. l_boy

    l_boy 5500

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    I would support a managed, bare bones minimalist approach to the down on your luck types - basic cheap housing. The problem is we are just not capable of that - for various reasons, one being the right wing won’t fund anything, and two the left wont allow such an approach because of various interests and regulations it can’t be built.

    Some places like Houston and SLC the “housing first” model has worked because you can construct affordable options. In places like CA it can’t because you can’t construct anything affordable. So in CA Housing first advocates oppose shelters because they think the draw attention and resources away from more permanent solutions. But more permanent solutions are unaffordable due to regulation and political constituencies, and NIMBYism, so you get neither more shelters nor more housing.
     
  3. wgbgator

    wgbgator Premium Member

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    I dont really know if its the "left" (it confuses me how people use that term broadly) ... city government Democrats and liberals are essentially Republicans when it comes to cops, housing, and keeping rich city-dwelling people happy, and they tend to line up against the people advocating things like public housing, rent control, tenant's unions, police reform, even homeless advocates ... they despise activists nearly as much as Republicans, if not more TBH. Lots of Blue state governments behind bringing the recent Grant's Pass ruling into being - they want to clear encampments and arrest people willy nilly too. Now people are blaming immigration for housing prices and scarcity on top of that. I dont know how we can do anything without some kind of sense of social solidarity. Capitalist/market ideology tends to pit people against each other in a competition for scarce resources, and we get stuck with the fallout. But nothing will change until its contested politically. Just another thing cowardly poll-watching Dems have adopted a do-nothing attitude about because they think public opinion is fixed, and doing nothing is the path of least resistance.
     
  4. l_boy

    l_boy 5500

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    Democrats - Ezra Klein (whom I’m guessing you view as a Zionist capitalist pig ) goes into this great deal.
     
  5. wgbgator

    wgbgator Premium Member

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    Well, he's a lot less stupid and trolly than Matty Yglesias.
     
  6. duggers_dad

    duggers_dad GC Hall of Fame

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    Yes, yes, I realize the homeless come in all stripes (put mental illness to the side, we’re all mentally ill) but working with them over the years I’ve found that a goodly percentage of homeless are high functioning and prefer the freedom of their encampments to the strings attached to facilities designed to remedy their situation.
     
  7. pogba

    pogba GC Legend

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    But isn't that a function of the facilities having requirements/aims of rehabilitation? Find it hard to believe someone would turn down free housing.
     
  8. duggers_dad

    duggers_dad GC Hall of Fame

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    Trust me, there are strings attached with such facilities that some do not prefer. Why else would someone actually prefer to be on the streets ?
     
  9. chemgator

    chemgator GC Hall of Fame

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    If DOJ would just put the mentally ill president in prison like they were supposed to, I would be happy.
     
  10. danmanne65

    danmanne65 GC Hall of Fame

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    Daytona beach does that for race and bike weeks.

    I also don’t know what the solution is. Volusia county is building a facility near the jail, which is 10 miles from anybody. I suspect no one will ever go there of their own free will.
     
  11. chemgator

    chemgator GC Hall of Fame

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    You make it sound like you think that Rambo was fiction. I'm going to put a note in your file. Wait until Trump hears about this.
     
    • Funny Funny x 1
  12. demosthenes

    demosthenes Premium Member

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    Have you thought about the logistics of this? Homeless people often do not have modes of transportation. How are they going to get to services? Where I am the city is basically the entire county it sits in too.
     
  13. CaptUSMCNole

    CaptUSMCNole Premium Member

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    What services are you specifically referring to? Let's make sure we are talking apples to apples here when we are discussing what services homeless people utilize.
     
  14. demosthenes

    demosthenes Premium Member

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    Anything for living that people do not create for themselves, whether it be food, goods or services. It could also be sources of income including just panhandling, bottle returns, etc. There’s a reason homeless are concentrated within cities and pushing them outside the boundaries isn’t a workable solution for most. I don’t know what the solution is but making it illegal to camp within city limits (check out Jacksonville’s city limits) without having enough housing options in place doesn’t seem like an appropriate way to handle the situation.
     
  15. CaptUSMCNole

    CaptUSMCNole Premium Member

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    I'm failing to see what services they could not access during the day just as long as the do not stay overnight inside the city limits. I take your point about how big Jacksonville's city limits are but would that not mean that homeless people would need to know how far they can travel in a day to be able to go in and out of city limits to access those services.

    I'm not sure what the best solution is on how to handle this but I think giving cities some ability to prevent homeless camps from forming and reforming within their limits is a necessary tool in the tool box to help address the problem.