The United States saw an 18.1% increase in homelessness this year, a dramatic rise driven mostly by a lack of affordable housing as well as devastating natural disasters and a surge of migrants in several parts of the country, federal officials said Friday.

  • eran_morad@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    shit, where i live, even UNaffordable housing is out of reach. there is fucking nothing on the market.

  • irotsoma@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    But…but…the unemployment rate is so low. They must actually want to be homeless. /s

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      I am really sick and tired of “Affordable Housing” being neoliberal jargon for “subsidized housing.” It’s an extremely biased framing of the debate that makes it hard to give fair consideration to other means of achieving actual affordability, such as – just for example – fixing the motherfucking zoning code so that developers aren’t forced to include expensive amenities like parking spaces and are allowed to build stuff that’s cheap enough for people to afford at market rate.

      • Serinus@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        I mean, to effectively have affordable housing without parking lots and screwing traffic, you need real mass transit. Which should really be our focus over the next 15-20 years anyway, besides green energy, of course.

        Speaking of which, we need a moderator for !fuckcars. The previous mod has been afk for 2 months. It’s like, your normal browsing plus maybe a five minute commitment per month. Are you interested? Message me.

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          12 hours ago

          I mean, to effectively have affordable housing without parking lots and screwing traffic, you need real mass transit.

          No, you don’t – that’s another assumption I’m sick and tired of hearing. You change the zoning rules to allow day-to-day amenities (housing/jobs/shopping/etc.) to exist within walking distance first, then once a bunch of people with that kind of lifestyle move in, they will drive demand for good transit after.

          If you try to do it backwards, by maintaining policies that cater to driving until the transit magically appears, you end up building a car-dependent Hellhole that is infeasible to retrofit while never actually getting the damn transit because you can’t show any demand for it (fucking obviously, because everybody who lives there is forced to drive!). Or if you do somehow force through transit anyway, over the kicking and screaming of the racists and reactionaries, you’ll end up with nobody using it and them screeching “we told you so” because it’ll still be worse than driving.

          You HAVE to quit subsidizing the entitled driver class FIRST.

          • Serinus@lemmy.world
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            11 hours ago

            I think transit tends to create commercial and residential demand. That demand can, should, and usually does drive zoning for the area.

            At least for me, my nimbyism about high density housing is all about not having the transit to support it. Our roads are already past max capacity, and adding just another lane isn’t going to last long. Even if the new communities are the 4 over 1 mix housing and commercial.

    • thefartographer@lemm.ee
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      9 hours ago

      Probottom: why do we include migrants in our homelessness statistics if we’re not offering them social welfare?

      Propowerbottom: tax brackets should also be influenced by the number of properties a person owns. Unless a real estate agent and actively trying to sell or reno the property, get penalized for hoarding.

      Edit: @[email protected] I’m disappointed in your correction. Now I just look like a fool! I thought we were ride or die!!

    • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      14 hours ago

      That increase comes on top of a 12% increase in 2023, which HUD blamed on soaring rents and the end of pandemic assistance. The 2023 increase also was driven by people experiencing homelessness for the first time.

      This is the “economy” that the Democrats ran on being a “good economy.”

      Two straight years of massive increases in homelessness, but the increases started, shocker, in 2020.

      This is from the AP News article that AP themselves references for the 12% increase in 2023:

      https://apnews.com/article/homelessness-increase-rent-hud-covid-60bd88687e1aef1b02d25425798bd3b1

      The numbers ticked up to about 580,000 in the 2020 count and held relatively steady over the next two years as Congress responded to the COVID-19 pandemic with emergency rental assistance, stimulus payments, aid to states and local governments and a temporary eviction moratorium.

      Jeff Olivet, executive director of the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness, a federal agency, said the extra assistance “held off the rise in homelessness that we are now seeing.” He said numerous factors are behind the problem.

      In other words, homelessness was exploding in 2020 and then was hidden for two years because of government assistance that got some people through some hard times. Obviously it wasn’t helping enough if homelessness was still growing during 2020-2022.

      • gibmiser@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        What policy decisions or laws enacted by the Biden administration do you think caused this?

        • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          13 hours ago

          None, I think those kind of effects take years to manifest and I think it was actually the Trump admin that undid a large amount of it (I mean remember who he put in charge of Housing?), but it didn’t start appearing when he was President due to Trump endlessly juicing the stock market and then during the Pandemic he begrudgingly agreed to assistance. Those things kind of hid how badly he was screwing the pooch.

          But even then, I think that this is a six-decade long manifestation of what has been festering in the USA. Republicans tear things down and erode living standards and human rights, and while Democrats are busy trying to preserve or reverse those things which prevents them from working on making things better, Republicans are busy kicking the next thing down, and the cycle continues.

          • grue@lemmy.world
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            But even then, I think that this is a six-decade long manifestation of what has been festering in the USA. Republicans tear things down and erode living standards and human rights, and while Democrats are busy trying to preserve or reverse those things which prevents them from working on making things better, Republicans are busy kicking the next thing down, and the cycle continues.

            Yes, and another big reason Democrats fail to make things better is because they are too often working from fundamentally incorrect assumptions/towards untenable goals and therefore come up with wrong solutions that don’t work. (They’re often less wrong than Republicans’ assumptions/goals/solutions, but still wrong nevertheless.)

            For example, even among Democrats (let alone Republicans) the prevailing notion is that we can somehow eat our cake and have it too when it comes to single-family housing in cities, due to a combination of NIMBY entitlement and oil/car industry corrupting influence. Because of that, they insist on keeping car-dependency baked into the zoning code and then delusionally try to paper over the inevitable spiraling costs with subsidized housing, instead of admitting that the physical geometric reality of space dictates that cities must be walkable in order to be affordable because cars simply don’t fucking fit!

    • skhayfa@lemmy.worldOP
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      14 hours ago

      The sharp increase in the homeless population over the past two years contrasts with success the U.S. had been having for more than a decade.

      Going back to the first 2007 survey, the U.S. made steady progress for about a decade in reducing the homeless population as the government focused particularly on increasing investments to get veterans into housing. The number of homeless people dropped from about 637,000 in 2010 to about 554,000 in 2017.

  • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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    17 hours ago

    I don’t want to see percentage increase values for things like these. I’d prefer percent of population, or absolute values.

    • skhayfa@lemmy.worldOP
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      17 hours ago

      more than 770,000 people were counted as homeless — a number that misses some people and does not include those staying with friends or family because they do not have a place of their own.

    • SeaJ@lemm.ee
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      14 hours ago

      And you would get those of you bothered to read the first three paragraphs of the article.

    • protist@mander.xyz
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      16 hours ago

      770,000 people were counted as homeless

      23 of every 10,000 people in the U.S.