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The Progressive Approach To Homelessness Comes To Madison, Wisconsin
Manhattan Contrarian ^ | 23 Dec, 2023 | Francis Menton

Posted on 12/24/2023 5:30:39 AM PST by MtnClimber

December 23, 2023/ Francis Menton “Homelessness” is one of my favorite topics because it provides an endless supply of examples of clear, dramatic, and immediate failure of the government programs supposedly intended to assist the poor and vulnerable. All of the big progressive cities follow some version of the same policies, which in summary amount to spending more and more money to provide “housing first” as the obvious solution to homelessness. All of these cities have rapidly stepped up spending over the past decade on promises to the voters to solve the homelessness problem with more subsidized housing; and all of them have then seen homelessness rise relentlessly along with the spending. It’s almost impossible to believe that nobody can learn from this experience.

For today I’ll provide the latest update from Los Angeles, as well as look at how a very similar approach has worked out in the smaller (but equally progressive) city of Madison, Wisconsin.

In a post back in March, I went into considerable detail about the efforts over the past several years of the City and County of Los Angeles to solve homelessness by ramping up spending to build new housing units into which the homeless can be placed. In 2016 the voters passed a special bond issuance, called Proposition HHH, in the amount of $1.2 billion. An LA-based non-profit called Local Housing Solutions, which advocated for Proposition HHH, described the initiative as providing funding mostly for “permanent supportive housing units for people experiencing homelessness.”

And then, as recounted in my post, in the aftermath of the referendum and as the spending took place over the following several years, the number of homeless people counted in LA City and County proceeded to go from 44,359 in 2015 to 69,144 in 2022.

Next, in early 2022, the efforts in LA to solve homelessness by spending ever more public funds on supportive housing got another big jolt of funding, this time when the City agreed to add some $3 billion of spending as part of a settlement of a lawsuit. In my March 2023 post I promised to check back in another year or so to see if all the spending is starting to make any difference at all. Checking back today, I find that a big official survey of homelessness was conducted in LA back during the summer, with the results reported in the Los Angeles Times on June 29. The results will not surprise any reader here:

The homeless count for Los Angeles County is in, and officials say the numbers are discouraging. The annual point-in-time count released Thursday by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority found a 9% increase in Los Angeles County and a 10% increase in the city of Los Angeles.

The Times provides the following chart showing the inexorable rise of homelessness over the past nine years:

Does anyone think that if we just allow more time for the whole $3 billion to get spent that that will turn things around?

Well, all of that is taking place in the big, faceless, soulless City of Los Angeles, with its huge and unaccountable bureaucracy. Perhaps we should look to a much smaller and more intimate, if equally progressive, place.

So, consider the latest news out of Madison, Wisconsin (population about 270,000). Like Los Angeles, Madison has also adopted the official orthodox progressive “housing first” policy as its way of addressing homelessness. How is that going? The Wisconsin State Journal has the story on December 21 (h/t Ann Althouse):

2 biggest Madison homeless projects could close within months, leaving city scrambling . . . . The two biggest "Housing First" initiatives for the homeless in Madison don't have enough money to continue operating and could be closed and sold early next year. As a result, the city of Madison is chasing options to ensure that dozens of vulnerable people aren't put out on the street.

The Wisconsin State Journal piece contains some substantial history on the projects, including the adoption of the “housing first” orthodoxy and the oodles of public funds from many sources that got poured in:

At the time of their conception, Rethke Terrace and Tree Lane were seen as big, bold attempts to get the homeless off the streets or out of temporary shelter into new, four-story, modern buildings with units that provided privacy, bathrooms and kitchens. . . . The projects were largely financed by federal tax credits provided by the Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority. . . . The two developments got financial assistance from the city, Dane County and the federal low-income housing tax credits. Also, the city and county housing authorities assigned project-based housing vouchers to 54 of the 60 studios at Rethke and 40 of the 45 units at Tree Lane.

With all that money available, how did it all go so wrong? The Wisconsin State Journal quotes Madison Community Development Director Jim O’Keefe:

"We didn’t get here overnight; the conditions at these properties developed as the result of years of neglect and inattention on the part of their property managers . . . and owners. . . .”

“Years of neglect”? Looking further in the article, we find that one of the projects (Rethke) opened in 2016, and the other (Tree Lane) in 2018. That makes five years in one case, and seven in the other, to go from brand new to uninhabitable. Both, moreover, had been subject to City “nuisance orders” as early as 2019, at which point the paint would have been barely dry.

So as of now, a receiver has been appointed, and he has asked the court to “immediately commence the process of winding down the projects,” including helping tenants to relocate.

Perhaps the model of building brand new housing, and then handing it out with no demands or expectation of responsible behavior (let alone rent) in return, has some kind of fundamental problem. But don’t expect the people currently administering these programs ever to figure that out. Their solution will always be more money and a bigger staff for their agency.


TOPICS: Society
KEYWORDS: californication; homelessness; leftism; madison; wisconsin
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1 posted on 12/24/2023 5:30:39 AM PST by MtnClimber
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To: MtnClimber

The free housing does nothing to cure the drug addiction.


2 posted on 12/24/2023 5:30:49 AM PST by MtnClimber (For photos of Colorado scenery and wildlife, click on my screen name for my FR home page.)
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To: MtnClimber

“The Progressive Approach To Homelessness....”

Because it’s worked so well in Portland, Seattle, LA and SF.


3 posted on 12/24/2023 5:36:16 AM PST by V_TWIN (America...so great even the people that hate it refuse to leave!)
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To: MtnClimber

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

The lefts answer to everything. Out of all that $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ only $$ goes where it should and the rest lines the pockets of the left.


4 posted on 12/24/2023 5:41:17 AM PST by maddog55 (The only thing systemic in America is the left's hatred of it!)
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To: MtnClimber

I used to believe governments enabled homelessness by creating incentives for people to be homeless, but it’s really much more sinister than that. Government is actually addressing homelessness by making people dependent on the government for food and shelter.


5 posted on 12/24/2023 5:43:25 AM PST by Spok (It takes a lot of learning to understand how little we know. (Paraphrasing Thomas Sowell.))
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To: MtnClimber

One thing I learned, as part of the Portland, Oregon Census2000 team, was that the city’s and county’s ‘homeless’, were they were folks/veterans who did not want nor trust any of the politicians or their dirty money.

They saw the politicians as users of them, for their own resumes, nothing more. They knrw if they wemt to “their politicians’ greener acres’”, they would ne inder their control, and if they did anything otherwise, they’d be back ‘out there to start over’.


6 posted on 12/24/2023 5:47:14 AM PST by Terry L Smith
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To: MtnClimber

I sure makes libs feel good about their passive aggressive enabling ways.. and gives them a hack job to distract them from their rampant cognitive dissonance.


7 posted on 12/24/2023 5:48:07 AM PST by Track9 (You are far too inquisitive not to be seduced…)
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To: MtnClimber

Doesn’t this author know that “homeless” has been declared taboo? Now it’s “the un-housed”.

Our local infobabes think it’s so cool they just can’t stop saying it.


8 posted on 12/24/2023 5:51:38 AM PST by MayflowerMadam ("A coward dies a thousand times before his death, but the valiant taste of death but once.")
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To: MtnClimber

The way to look at these programs is with cold accounting.

Where did the cash go?

It turns out the construction required payments to developers, architects, lawyers, general contractors and subcontractors etc.

They won.

All they had to do was give a “little taste” to their politician “friends”.


9 posted on 12/24/2023 5:54:22 AM PST by cgbg ("Our democracy" = Their Kleptocracy)
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To: MtnClimber
The free housing does nothing to cure the drug addiction.

But if we distributed all the Seized Fentanyl to the many homeless camps every Friday night, it would a long way towards cleaning up the drug addicted homeless population.
10 posted on 12/24/2023 5:56:00 AM PST by eyeamok
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To: MtnClimber

Unaccountable bureaucrats (socialists) are never held to account.


11 posted on 12/24/2023 5:57:37 AM PST by PGalt (Past Peak Civilization?)
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To: MtnClimber

Democrats make horrible government


12 posted on 12/24/2023 5:58:33 AM PST by butlerweave
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To: MtnClimber

Nice campsites along the shores of Lake Monona


13 posted on 12/24/2023 6:05:57 AM PST by bigbob
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To: StAntKnee

Manhattan Contrarian Ping


14 posted on 12/24/2023 6:08:58 AM PST by MtnClimber (For photos of Colorado scenery and wildlife, click on my screen name for my FR home page.)
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To: MtnClimber

Progressives = democrats = communists. Peas in a pod.


15 posted on 12/24/2023 6:09:58 AM PST by who knows what evil? (Hospitals are the most dangerous place on Earth! Dr. David Williams)
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To: MtnClimber
calling most homeless vulnerable, is like calling most rapist horny.

you could blast holes in the side of a mountain and make caves in which these people could live in, they just want to be out of the wind and the rain, while they do their drugs and suffer their own multiple psychosis.

all while someone else worry's about what to feed them and are they cold?

16 posted on 12/24/2023 6:11:43 AM PST by Ikeon (I stopped going to my family doctor whenever I felt sick. I've never been healthier. .)
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To: MtnClimber
Give the homeless a choice; go to Ukraine to be recruits in the Joe Biden shadow army, or check into a mental hospital. Ship all of the combat-age illegals crossing the southern border to Ukraine with no option.

And instead of threatening American citizens with F-16's and nukes, send the F-16s on search and destroy missions on the Mexican drug cartel operations.

17 posted on 12/24/2023 6:14:30 AM PST by Bernard (We honor veterans who fought to keep this country from turning into what it now is. --Argus Hamilton)
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To: MtnClimber

Why is the culture of “The ‘Do What Feels Good’ Culture” concerned with Homelessness? Aren’t the homeless just doing what feels good?


18 posted on 12/24/2023 6:16:35 AM PST by Lockbox (politicians, they all seemed like game show hosts to me.... Sting…)
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To: MtnClimber

In the 90s, the Clinton HUD admin sued the city I lived in and forced them to provide 23 single family homes for Section 8 housing. The city erupted in protest but to no avail. City leaders folded to charges of racism. In just a few years, the HUD owned, Section 8 homes were reduced to derelict buildings and slated for demolition.


19 posted on 12/24/2023 6:18:03 AM PST by DeplorablePaul
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To: MtnClimber

I lived in Madison through the 60s when the “progressives” elbowed into the city council and imported poor families with loads of Fatherless children from the deep south to seed the town to justify their instant welfare programs.

Madison went from a wonderful place to live to the shit hole it has become, aided and abetted by the radicalization of the University of Wisconsin.

I have no desire to ever visit that cess pool of liberal failure ever again. To quote one of my favorite electrical engineering maxims, “sometimes, the only solution to a bad design is a decent burial”!


20 posted on 12/24/2023 6:24:23 AM PST by Redleg Duke (“Who is John Galt?”)
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