Thank you to the team at Sasaki for releasing the Understand Homelessness project. Check out their interactive site which maps the issue and defines the terms in the clearest way we have yet seen: http://www.understandhomelessness.com/
News
Thank you to the team at Sasaki for releasing the Understand Homelessness project. Check out their interactive site which maps the issue and defines the terms in the clearest way we have yet seen: http://www.understandhomelessness.com/
Housing price recovery, coupled with slow wage growth, has hurt rather than helped most Americans. "Affordable" housing is now a serious concern, not just in Hawaii, SF, and NY, but increasingly across the country.
http://www.businessinsider.com/mortgage-payments-as-share-of-income-rises-to-seven-year-high-2017-2
An incredible account from Politico magazine on one city that is making progress in the challenge to reduce homelessness:
http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2016/12/what-works-albuquerque-homeless-solution-housing-policy-214527
Hawaii is a place like no other on earth.
To most visitors, Hawaii is the equivalent of paradise, with the world's most beautiful beaches, mountains, and marine life. However, for far too many local residents, Hawaii is a land of acute inequality, stark poverty, and unattainable housing.
The Los Angeles Times recently covered the challenge with excellent detail:
Homelessness in Hawaii has grown in recent years, leaving the state with 487 homeless per 100,000 people, the nation's highest rate per capita, followed by New York and Nevada, according to federal housing statistics.
Since 2010, the number of homeless has risen, even as the national rate has fallen during the economic recovery. The increase, driven by years of rising costs in the island chain, low wages and limited land, thrust the image of people sleeping on beaches alongside the state's famed one of a relaxing tropical paradise.
Officials have tried to solve the problem. They've offered homeless services, banned sitting and lying on Waikiki's sidewalks and proposed using shipping containers as temporary housing. Gov. David Ige's declaration of a state of emergency on homelessness in October underscored the depth of the crisis.
While there are shelters and programs to help the homeless, there are far fewer empty beds than are needed — about 550 on any given night on Oahu, where an estimated 4,900 of the 7,620 homeless people live, according to service providers.
The state needs 27,000 affordable rental units by 2020, but lawmakers set aside enough money for 800 units this year. Maintaining the existing public housing could cost $800 million over the next decade, according to state estimates.
Statewide, 10,000 people wait five years or more to get into state-run public housing, and the waiting list for Section 8 rent assistance in private housing was so long, they closed the list for about a decade.