Los Angeles' homeless crisis:
too many tents, too few beds
CNN,
by
Maeve Reston
Original Article
Posted By: NorthernDog,
6/22/2019 2:50:49 PM
In Los Angeles' Skid Row, tents line entire city blocks. These makeshift shelters for the city's homeless are now an almost permanent fixture of the city's landscape, with barbecue grills and clusters of bikes standing alongside them. Some residents have tethered their tents to nearby fences and industrial buildings. Others run long power cords from their tents to nearby light poles to tap into the city's power grid. A few Skid Row pet owners have created small dog yards next to their tents under tarps to block out the sun and makeshift fencing. On a recent evening in this industrial
It might just be me, but if they wouldn't encourage this type of thing they might not have this problem.
9 people like this.
It's not too many tents but too many drugs and alcohol. You'll never get rid of the tents or beds unless you focus on the real problem.
8 people like this.
Reply 3 - Posted by:
GoodDeal 6/22/2019 3:41:52 PM (No. 104231)
As LA goes so will the rest of the state.
2 people like this.
Reply 4 - Posted by:
LC Chihuahua 6/22/2019 3:44:28 PM (No. 104232)
Ultimately, the left is OK with this. Afterall, this is how people in the third world live. If its good enough for them, its good enough for us. Moral equivalency!
3 people like this.
Reply 5 - Posted by:
earlybird 6/22/2019 4:02:19 PM (No. 104244)
What #1 said. Los Angeles is cursed with excellent year-round climate and a do-gooder mayor who doesn’t understand that “if you build it, they will come” means “they will come and come and come and come” and you will never have built enough. When I lived in Santa Barbara in the 80s, the far more competent mayor had a survey performed that disclosed the roughly 1/3 of the homeless were alcohol and/or drug dependent; another third were mentally ill, and the remaining third were those who were temporarily down on their luck and striving to get back to what had been their normal. The previous mayor had walked into the County offices every day past hordes of camping beggars. The new mayor, a female, had that cleared out. About the same time the City’s Skid Row - prime territory on lower State Street nearest the beach - went through a renewal. The influx of new businesses that effectively cleared out the homeless. There was just too much activity to suit them. Encampments turned up across from East Beach which were periodically cleared out and cleaned up. I do not remember anyone building housing for them.
The part of industrial Los Angeles where the news media focus has always been Skid Row. It has just developed into a larger tent city, but it’s still in the same (avoidable) place. The notion that they should be moved into regular residential neighborhoods is insane.
A recall effort is being mounted to take Garcetti out of the mayor’s office. They can hope...
2 people like this.
Reply 6 - Posted by:
Krause 6/22/2019 4:35:02 PM (No. 104266)
I bet the Dems have them all registered to vote, though. Or at least someone will cast their vote for them!
2 people like this.
Reply 7 - Posted by:
Sunhan65 6/22/2019 5:14:34 PM (No. 104279)
We live in a nation of laws, but the laws don't apply to everyone equally. Hobos and bums do whatever they want without fear of citation by those same municipal authorities who would come down like a ton of bricks on somebody cutting down the wrong tree in their yard.
I can live in order, and I can live in chaos. You tell me which one we're in, and I'll adapt accordingly. I cannot abide a society where the law applies only to the the law-abiding.
It would take motivated residents a couple of weeks to clear uo the homeless problem in any city. But the cops would need to take a vacation first
2 people like this.
Reply 8 - Posted by:
droopydog 6/22/2019 5:31:02 PM (No. 104284)
Too many Dems doing too many stupid things. I used to work in Downtown LA and it has always been nasty...an open air mental asylum. I can't imagine what it's like now.
0 people like this.
Reply 9 - Posted by:
EQKimball 6/22/2019 5:32:10 PM (No. 104287)
Is there a tipping point for LA steets? 100,000? 200,000? When does it become obvious to all that more money for care, sanitation and housing will never be enough to do anything other than act as a magnet for more homeless?
4 people like this.
Reply 10 - Posted by:
JHHolliday 6/22/2019 6:10:09 PM (No. 104317)
If they forcefully removed every tent, burned it, and did that a few more times, the majority would leave for greener pastures. Heartless? Maybe, but the minority that are indeed just down on their luck could be housed in shelters and actually helped. That would never happen of course especially on the left coast.
Smaller towns across the country with sane management don't have this problem People are not allowed to camp on and block streets.
2 people like this.
Reply 11 - Posted by:
DVC 6/22/2019 6:58:06 PM (No. 104353)
Too many people not put into mental institutions is the root cause.
1 person likes this.
Reply 12 - Posted by:
RenoVet68 6/22/2019 7:47:42 PM (No. 104388)
I hope they're not standing by an open hydrant as they tap into the electrical grid.
1 person likes this.
Reply 13 - Posted by:
judy 6/22/2019 9:31:51 PM (No. 104434)
Is the Governor giving the homeless free health care like he is giving the illegals??
1 person likes this.
Reply 14 - Posted by:
KTWO 6/22/2019 10:00:15 PM (No. 104451)
After the Titanic sank the experts did not try to design and build ships that could hit icebergs at full speed and not be damaged. It would have solved the iceberg problem but it wasn't going to work.
Maybe the problem is too many homeless, not too few beds. I have no magic answer. But should we keep trying more of what isn't working?
2 people like this.
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Now they are tapping into the electrical grid and opening up fire hydrants to get water and bath. That's downright dangerous!