California Proposition 1 will probably make homelessness in California worse

Story by The Editorial Board, The Orange County Register

No one disputes that California is struggling to deal with a spiraling homelessness crisis. Our state has more than 181,000 homeless people — a number that has increased a mind-bending 40% since 2019, per a CalMatters report. Whatever the state government is doing, it’s not working.

And what it’s doing, mainly, is throwing money at the problem. Figures from last year peg state homeless spending at $7.2 billion a year, or $42,000 per homeless person. That number accounts only for state spending and not the myriad local costs, including the amount of public-safety and public-works budgets that pay for related costs.

Instead of rethinking the state’s failed approach, Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to throw more money at the problem and give state agencies — rather than local governments, which generally have done a better job — more power to control funding. He wants voters to approve Proposition 1.

Modeled on Los Angeles’ failing Project Roomkey, the March 5 ballot initiative would run up $6.38 billion in debt to fund specific mental-health-related services. The general approach is understandable, given most homeless people suffer from mental-health and addiction issues. As always, details matter.

And Prop. 1’s details can make one’s head spin. As AP reported, it is “one of the most complicated and lengthy measures in recent years” and “takes up 68 pages” of the voter guide. As this editorial board explained, Prop. 1 is a “bureaucratic power grab that robs counties of mental health services funding” and runs up debt — even though a lack of funding isn’t the main problem.

Other news outlets are echoing these concerns. Another AP report quoted local officials who fear the measure “would worsen the problem.” That’s because it empowers the state to meddle in how counties spend nearly $3 billion in annual revenue funded by a 2004 tax on millionaires. If Prop. 1 passes, the state would take 10% of these mental-health funds, leaving less for programs that keep people out of homelessness.

Nearly a third of the Prop. 1 money would fund local-government efforts to build affordable housing via motel conversions and new construction. But that money would have to conform to California’s official — and misguided — “Housing First” policy that prioritizes construction of permanent housing, rather than temporary housing combined with social services.

The bottom line: “Housing First” diverts money from programs that could help the homeless get back on their feet toward a utopian concept that views homelessness mainly as a housing matter. Given the mental-health and addiction issues that are a main reason many people are homeless, it’s unwise to base state policy on the idea that the main solution is just giving them a permanent home. Even if it were a sound approach, the state has shown itself incapable of building affordable housing quickly and cost effectively, with many projects costing $800,000 or more a unit. There’s not enough money in the state budget to make a dent in homeless numbers at that rate.

There is no easy fix for California’s homelessness crisis, but the starting point, as always, is to do no more harm. Proposition 1 is a big-spending blank check that could indeed worsen the situation. By voting no, voters will help prod state officials to embrace programs that might actually work.

Complete list of Obama $500 million gun violence package

The President’s plan to protect our children and our communities by reducing gun violence.  Reasonable and sensible people should be able to support these proposals!

More at http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/docs/wh_now_is_the_time_full.pdf

1. CLOSING BACKGROUND CHECK LOOPHOLES TO KEEP GUNS OUT OF DANGEROUS HANDS

  • REQUIRE BACKGROUND CHECKS FOR ALL GUN SALES
  • STRENGTHEN THE BACKGROUND CHECK SYSTEM

2. BANNING MILITARY-STYLE ASSAULT WEAPONS AND HIGH-CAPACITY MAGAZINES, AND TAKING OTHER COMMON-SENSE STEPS TO REDUCE GUN VIOLENCE

  •  GET MILITARY-STYLE ASSAULT WEAPONS AND HIGH-CAPACITY MAGAZINES OFF THE STREETS
  •  GIVE LAW ENFORCEMENT ADDITIONAL TOOLS TO PREVENT AND PROSECUTE GUN CRIME
  • END THE FREEZE ON GUN VIOLENCE RESEARCH
  • P RESERVE THE RIGHTS OF HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS TO PROTECT THEIR PATIENTS AND COMMUNITIES FROM GUN VIOLENCE
  • ENCOURAGE GUN OWNERS TO LIVE UP TO THEIR RESPONSIBILITY TO STORE GUNS SAFELY

3. MAKING SCHOOLS SAFER

  •  PUT UP TO 1,000 MORE SCHOOL RESOURCE OFFICERS AND COUNSELORS IN SCHOOLS AND HELP SCHOOLS INVEST IN SAFETY
  • ENSURE EVERY SCHOOL HAS A COMPREHENSIVE EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT PLAN
  • CREATE A SAFER CLIMATE AT SCHOOLS ACROSS THE COUNTRY

 4. IMPROVING MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES

  • MAKE SURE STUDENTS AND YOUNG ADULTS GET TREATMENT FOR MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES
  • ENSURE COVERAGE OF MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT

New Year’s Resolutions

I do not know if this is just an American pass time but every New Year many of us make a list of resolutions of things we promise ourselves to do but are quickly forgotten.

One of the most popular is losing weight.  Weight Watchers, Nutrisystems and Jenny Craig all enroll thousands of new participants.  The gyms all sign up hundreds and perhaps thousands of new members.  Clearly this is a commercial bonus.

There are however many other kinds of resolutions.  One person I know writes out a set of goals for the new year.  He revises them annually.  In his case that set of goals gives him directions to his life.

Forbes Magazine posts on line Seven Strategies for Highly Effective New Year’s Resolutions. Summarized as follows:

  1. Know Your Why. For a resolution to stick, it has to      be aligned with your core values. In other words, you have to “Know      your why” and feel truly passionate about the goals you set for      yourself.
  2. Be Specific. Resolutions to ‘eat better, get      fitter, be happier, relax more or have better life balance’ are doomed for      failure because they lack specificity.
  3. Don’t Just Think It, Ink it! A Stanford      University study found that when people wrote down their goal, it      increased the probability of them achieving it by over 70%.
  4. Design Your Environment. Design your environment so that it’s      hard NOT to do what you resolved. Create a progress chart, recruit a cheer      squad among your family and friends, find someone to hold you accountable,      hire a trainer, join a group, create a blog.
  5. Narrow Your Efforts. Set yourself up for success and start      with JUST ONE MAJOR UNDERTAKING come starting January 1st.
  6. Focus On The Process. PERSISTENCE ALWAYS PAYS OFF.
  7. Forgive Your Failures. Your setbacks and failures will not      define your success in the year ahead or any year. HOW YOU RESPOND WILL.

What are my resolutions?  I have none today.  I have never believed this process is a worthwhile endeavor.  I have made resolutions but they were not tied to New Year’s day.

Good Luck!

Lifestyle

Congratulations to Weight Watchers for convincing millions of overweight people that their solution is a change of Lifestyle.  Weight Loss Boss by David Kirchhoff, the CEO of Weight Watchers International, is all about Lifestyle.  My lovely wife, who needs to lose at least another 18 pounds, contends that her revised eating habits are all about Lifestyle.  Losing weight and keeping it off is not my idea of a Lifestyle.

I like the Wikipedia definition. Lifestyle (sociology), the way a person lives to one’s own ability. Individual identity. A lifestyle typically reflects an individual’s attitudes, values or world view. Therefore, a lifestyle is a means of forging a sense of self and to create cultural symbols that resonate with personal identity.

The Free Dictionary offers a concise easy to understand definition.  A way of life or style of living that reflects the attitudes and values of a person or group.

Microsoft Word provides a definition by reading its Thesaurus. Way of life, Existence, Standard of living, Routine, Life, Daily life, Everyday life, Means.

What is the Lifestyle of the rich and famous? Robin Leach spotlighted the eccentricities and excesses of a different member of the “rich and famous” each week from 1984 to 1995.

My Lifestyle is doing the things I like to do without having a boss.  It’s writing in this blog and walking or riding around taking pictures of unusual things.

I AM TRULY VERY FORTUNATE.

What’s your Lifestyle?