California Leads Country In New Ranking of States with Most Homeless Street People
Another first for California, and it’s not just the fine weather
By Katy Grimes, November 12, 2019 10:37 am
A new list on the growing number of homeless living on the streets and in shelters was recently published by 24/7 Wall Street: 48 Major US Cities Struggling to Shelter Growing Homeless Population.
California tops the list of states with the most unsheltered homeless people living on the streets. Since the latest U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development report to Congress in December 2018, the numbers have surely increased.
One fallacy of the 24/7 Wallstreet report is their claim, “the problem of homelessness is at its root a problem of affordable housing.” While housing is anything but affordable in California, the homeless street population is not made up of families seeking shelter. The majority of the vagrants living on the streets in California, are methamphetamine and heroin drug addicts, not moms and dads down on their luck. It’s just too easy a solution for politicians to claim the problem is affordable housing.
In California, new housing — apartments, condos and single family homes – cost developers ridiculous amounts for permits, fees and taxes. Renovating apartments and condos for affordable housing is anything but affordable. One recent remodeling and repurposing of an old Sacramento hotel into “affordable housing” for homeless cost more than $400,000 per unit. Los Angeles is higher – $600,00 plus.
And San Francisco has no where to build any new housing.
California’s dominant political class has created this mess.
Here is the 24/7 Wall Street list of 48 Major US Cities Struggling to Shelter Growing Homeless Population and numbers using 2018 data. California Globe extracted the California cities for this list below:
43. Oakland, Berkeley, California
> Note: Estimate includes Alameda County
> Homeless population: 5,496 (includes 3,863 unsheltered)
> City population: 417,442
36. Long Beach, California
> Note: Estimate only includes city proper
> Homeless population: 1,873 (includes 1,208 unsheltered)
> City population: 470,489
35. Sacramento, California
> Note: Estimate includes county of Sacramento
> Homeless population: 3,621 (includes 2,052 unsheltered)
> City population: 489,650
34. Fresno, California
> Note: Estimate includes Fresno and Madera counties
> Homeless population: 2,144 (includes 1,681 unsheltered)
> City population: 519,037
13. San Francisco, California
> Homeless population: 6,857 (includes 4,353 unsheltered)
> City population: 864,263
10. San Jose, California
> Note: Estimate includes Santa Clara City & County
> Homeless population: 7,254 (includes 5,448 unsheltered)
> City population: 1,023,031
8. San Diego, California
> Note: Estimate includes San Diego city and county
> Homeless population: 8,576 (includes 4,990 unsheltered)
> City population: 1,390,966
2. Los Angeles, California
> Note: Estimate includes Los Angeles city & county
> Homeless population: 49,955 (includes 37,570 unsheltered)
> City population: 3,949,776
Number one was New York City. But look at the numbers compared with Los Angeles: LA, with a population of 3.9 million, has 37,570 unsheltered. NYC, with a population of 8.5 million, has 3,711 unsheltered.
1. New York City, New York
> Homeless population: 78,676 (includes 3,711 unsheltered)
> City population: 8,560,072
- Legislative Data Practical Guide Released - November 21, 2024
- ‘Trans Women’ are the Latest Chapter in ‘The Emperor’s New Clothes’ - November 21, 2024
- Voters Hand Gov. Newsom First Statewide Minimum Wage Ballot Failure in California History - November 20, 2024
california:
2 percent of the states
12 percent of the population
25 percent of the homeless
100 percent of the bad ideas in government
including but not limited to:
letting insane people back out on the street within weeks of pouring a hot bucket of diarrhea onto a total random stranger on the street
Mmm, now that is a California I can be proud of. If we cannot be number 1 in education, then why not #1 in #2 covering our streets.
Thank You, Governor Newsom, former Governor Brown and the super majority legislators.
Nothing to see here folks, move along , just watch where you walk!
How does the State Bureau of Tourism also Bureau Commerce sell this “crappy” state?