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Aug-19-2010 16:38TweetFollow @OregonNews WRAP's 2010 'Without Housing' Update Has ArrivedBy Ralph E. Stone Salem-News.comWRAP argues that until we recognize housing as a human right, we will not end mass homelessness in the United States.
(SAN FRANCISCO) - Between 2.3 to 3.5 million Americans experience homelessness and it is estimated that the recession will force another 1.5 million more people into homelessness. The 2010 Update of "Without Housing - Decades of Federal Housing Cutbacks, Massive Homelessness and Policy Failures" by the Western Regional Advocacy Project (WRAP), an update of its 2006 report. (It can be downloaded at its website wraphome.org) In "Without Housing," WRAP sets forth a timeline of modern-day homelessness, the past three decades of policy failures, provides a look at present-day realities, gives grassroot approaches on how to get involved, and possible solutions. WRAP concludes that ending homelessness in the United States will require a serious recommitment by the federal government to create, subsidize and maintain truly affordable housing. It notes that the root cause of homelessness in the lack of affordable housing. WRAP traces the cause of the present housing crisis to the Reagan administration’s elimination of affordable housing funding and the dismantling of the social safety nets created by the New Deal. As a result, in the 1980s, under Reagan’s policies, homelessness reemerged throughout the United States. WRAP notes that recent homeless policy has focused on a series of underfunded, patchwork efforts that tend to pit sub-populations of people experiencing homelessness, service providers and advocates against each other in battles for meager funds. Rather than addressing homelessness by providing housing options at all income levels, homeless policy in the United States has devolved into byzantine formulas to count the number of homeless people and determine whether or not someone “qualifies” for homeless housing and services. Unless we make a massive commitment to the construction and subsidization of affordable housing, homelessness will continue to grow no matter how many case managers or outreach workers we fund. We may alter the face of homelessness or shift its demographics through preferential outreach to particular sub-populations, but we will not change the underlying cause. WRAP recommends that the United States government provide more new affordable housing, better maintain existing public and subsidized housing, place a moratorium on the demolition of any public housing without an enforceable guarantee of one-for-one replace- ment with a right of return, develop constructive alternatives to the criminalization of homelessness and ensure that all decisions impacting tenants in public and subsidized housing is made with full tenant participation and input. WRAP argues that until we recognize housing as a human right, we will not end mass homelessness in the United States. We cannot solve the systemic causes of poverty until we recognize that quality education, economic security, and health care are all essential human rights. The primary message of report then, is that building truly affordable housing and ensuring the human right to a home will end the contemporary crisis of mass homelessness in the United States. WRAP offers a grassroots approach to getting involved, and possible solutions to what has become the everyday crisis we know as homelessness. Change is desperately needed. Millions of people without shelter are depending on it. ================================================== Salem-News.com writer Ralph E. Stone was born in Massachusetts. He is a graduate of both Middlebury College and Suffolk Law School. We are very fortunate to have this writer's talents in this troubling world; Ralph has an eye for detail that others miss. As is the case with many Salem-News.com writers, Ralph is an American Veteran who served in war. Ralph served his nation after college as a U.S. Army officer during the Vietnam war. After Vietnam, he went on to have a career with the Federal Trade Commission as an Attorney specializing in Consumer and Antitrust Law. Over the years, Ralph has traveled extensively with his wife Judi, taking in data from all over the world, which today adds to his collective knowledge about extremely important subjects like the economy and taxation. You can send Ralph an email at this address stonere@earthlink.net
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Paul Wiser August 21, 2010 8:33 am (Pacific time)
There are things far worse than capitalism. The communists were reported to have killed upwards of 30 million in the Soviet Union, possibly up to 100 million by Mao in China, and countless millions in Southeast Asia. An economic system is as good as the people who run it privately coupled with responsible governmen oversight. That balance is the difficult thing to keep in tune, but it is capitalism that has advanced civilization, whereas other types have failed and during that failing have created untold death and misery. Does someone have a better system to pontificate? Keep in mind it was capitalism that has given you this internet to communicate with. And it is capitalism that allows for it to continue.
gp August 20, 2010 1:41 pm (Pacific time)
At our house were just discussing this morning the usefulness of homelessness to the corporate states of amerika. The homeless are a constant reminder of what will befall those who don't play capitalism's sick game. Go on you gulf fishermen, fish those poisoned fish and sell them to your neighbors in midwest restaurants...or squak about health risks and sit out your days on a flattened refrigerator carton begging spare change.
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