StarSong
Awkward is my Superpower
- Location
- Los Angeles Suburbs
To begin with, I'm not looking to start a contentious political or religious discussion here, though I recognize political and religious components may enter into some of the solutions This is not intended to become a blame-game, nor to pinpoint fault. Rather it's a question about how first world countries can address the problem that is starting to overwhelm communities as increasing numbers of people tip into homelessness.
During my past year's travels through NY, NJ, CA, OR, AZ, NM, and TX I've seen large numbers of homeless people of all ages in every state and every community. Some are employable but fell into that proverbial "two paychecks away from being on the streets" financial category, and they tragically lost those two paychecks. Along with their jobs and their homes they lost their bases of operation, so to speak. Without a permanent address, a shower, and enough money to provide themselves transportation to and fro, holding down a job is all but impossible. Pulling mentally ill or substance abusers onto a productive path is an even more protracted, complex issue.
Still - the answer can't be to mostly ignore them, if for no better reason than it quite demonstrably hasn't worked well so far.
My sincere question: Is anybody on this forum living in a country, state, or community where homelessness is being addressed and ameliorated somewhat? If so, how is that being accomplished?
I hope that the mods are OK with this thread. If they see fit to delete it, I will certainly understand.
During my past year's travels through NY, NJ, CA, OR, AZ, NM, and TX I've seen large numbers of homeless people of all ages in every state and every community. Some are employable but fell into that proverbial "two paychecks away from being on the streets" financial category, and they tragically lost those two paychecks. Along with their jobs and their homes they lost their bases of operation, so to speak. Without a permanent address, a shower, and enough money to provide themselves transportation to and fro, holding down a job is all but impossible. Pulling mentally ill or substance abusers onto a productive path is an even more protracted, complex issue.
Still - the answer can't be to mostly ignore them, if for no better reason than it quite demonstrably hasn't worked well so far.
My sincere question: Is anybody on this forum living in a country, state, or community where homelessness is being addressed and ameliorated somewhat? If so, how is that being accomplished?
I hope that the mods are OK with this thread. If they see fit to delete it, I will certainly understand.