EL PRESIDENTE
Username Retired in Honor of Lanny.
- Joined
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Homeless people are a real problem with random crimes.
Housing First would make this so much easier to solve. Dangerous people would no longer be able to hide among the masses.
Crime would drop SIGNIFICANTLY.
That is the least efficient and most expensive way to treat the problem. In fact, it has never worked, anywhere, without authoritarian powers.Nah, locking them up would be better unless they can prove to be non-destructive. A lot of homeless are mentally ill or drug addicts. Both shouldn't be allowed in society. A junkie with a free hotel room is still going to be a junkie.
That is the least efficient and most expensive way to treat the problem. In fact, it has never worked, anywhere, without authoritarian powers.
I'm taking a hard pass on the expensive authoritarianism. But thanks for the offer.
I'll choose the proven least expensive, most effective option please .
You can keep them off the streets for far less, and help far more of them become productive members of society.I'll gladly pay more to keep homeless and drug addicts off the streets. The savings will be in the increased quality of life.
You can keep them off the streets for far less, and help far more of them become productive members of society.
You are advocating to spend 4x as much, and the only different result is more people are tortured and fewer are productive members of society (and higher crime and poverty rates). So paying 4x as much for a plan that doesn't work... Has never worked.
Again, I'll take the option that actually works and costs 1/4 as much. Thanks.
Housing first addresses mental illness and drug addiction far more effectively than prison. Prison is where people go to learn how to be criminals.You're not solving the problem. Drug addiction and mental illness. Like I said, they will still commit crimes. You're just giving them a space indoor to sleep.
85% of the prison population has an active substance use disorder or were incarcerated for a crime involving drugs or drug use. Inmates with opioid use disorder are at a higher risk for overdose following release from incarceration.
Housing first addresses mental illness and drug addiction far more effectively than prison. Prison is where people go to learn how to be criminals.
https://nida.nih.gov/publications/drugfacts/criminal-justice#:~:text=85% of the prison population,overdose following release from incarceration.
So again, the data shows us that with the "prison plan" you are spending quadruple while not solving anything... But actually making the problem worse.
Prisons are a part of the problem. Not the solution.
Under Housing First, the homeless are provided life-long, permanent housing.
It strictly prohibits, however, any requirement of service engagement—including mental health and addiction services—to address the underlying factors that led to a person’s homelessness.
No, I'm not. You keep making these untrue claims about housing first. Is it deliberate, or do you really not know?It wouldn't be a prison. It would be a specifically constructed facility for homeless persons with mental and drug treatment programs.
And you are still allowing druggies and craziest out in public.
https://www.cbs8.com/article/news/l...ment/509-b849c28b-c6c2-4055-b757-8f8c91c3e106
Yeah, that's not Housing First. California didn't institute housing first until a year or two ago (looks like it passed on 2016, but wasn't effective until 2019). Since that time we've had a few problems... you might have noticed...
Yeah, that's not Housing First. California didn't institute housing first until a year or two ago (looks like it passed on 2016, but wasn't effective until 2019). Since that time we've had a few problems... you might have noticed...
https://homelessness.ucsf.edu/blog/housing-first-not-housing-only
It worked great in Salt Lake City (until the program wasn't renewed after a decade). It works great in Finland...So we don't know if it works. Sounds lame.
All I know is the homeless are a big part of crime problems. They murder, steal and assault people.
It worked great in Salt Lake City (until the program wasn't renewed after a decade). It works great in Finland...
No, it works for ethnic minorities as well.So it works great in white populations. Got it
The effectiveness of a Housing First adaptation for ethnic minority groups: findings of a pragmatic randomized controlled trial
Little is known about the effectiveness of Housing First (HF) among ethnic minority groups, despite its growing popularity for homeless adults experiencing mental illness. This randomized controlled trial tests the effectiveness of a HF program using rent supplements and intensive case management, enhanced by anti-racism and anti-oppression practices for homeless adults with mental illness from diverse ethnic minority backgrounds.
Methods
This unblinded pragmatic field trial was carried out in community settings in Toronto, Canada. Participants were 237 adults from ethnic minority groups experiencing mental illness and homelessness, who met study criteria for moderate needs for mental health services. Participants were randomized to either adapted HF (n = 135) or usual care (n = 102) and followed every 3 months for 24 months. The primary study outcome was housing stability; secondary outcomes included physical and mental health, social functioning, quality of life, arrests and health service use. Intention to treat statistical analyses examined the effectiveness of the intervention compared to usual care.
Results
During the 24-month study period, HF participants were stably housed a significantly greater proportion of time compared to usual care participants, 75 % (95 % CI 70 to 81) vs. 41 % (95 % CI 35 to 48), respectively, for a difference of 34 %, 95 % CI 25 to 43. HF also led to improvements in community integration over the course of the study: the change in the mean difference between treatment groups from baseline to 24-months was significantly greater among HF participants compared to those in usual care (change in mean difference = 2.2, 95 % CI 0.06 to 4.3). Baseline diagnosis of psychosis was associated with reduced likelihood of being housed ≥ 50 % of the study period (OR = 0.37, 95 % CI 0.18 to 0.72).
Conclusion
Housing First enhanced with anti-racism and anti-oppression practices can improve housing stability and community functioning among ethnically diverse homeless adults with mental illness.