• Homelessness hit record high this year amid affordable housing shortage

    From useapen@21:1/5 to All on Sat Dec 28 07:44:55 2024
    XPost: alt.society.homeless, alt.home.repair, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: sac.politics, talk.politics.guns

    Homelessness in the U.S. hit the highest level on record this year as the affordable housing crisis intensifies, federal regulators said Friday.

    The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) tallied more than
    770,000 people experiencing homelessness on a single night in January, an
    18 percent increase from 2023 that is likely an undercount.

    Families with children experiencing homelessness jumped 39 percent, the
    largest increase on record, according to HUD data. Nearly 150,000 children
    were experiencing homelessness, a 33 percent increase from 2023.

    Veterans were the only population where homelessness continued to decline,
    down 8 percent from 2023. The number of veterans experiencing homelessness
    has fallen 55 percent since HUD started collecting data on veteran
    homelessness in 2009.

    Black people continue to be overrepresented among the homeless population: around 32 percent of people experiencing homelessness are Black despite
    making up only 12 percent of the U.S. population, according to HUD, which
    also found that the share of homeless people who identify as Black
    decreased from 37 percent in 2023.

    The latest surge follows a 12 percent increase in homelessness in 2023
    amid rising rents and a decline in pandemic assistance.

    HUD acting Secretary Adrianne Todman emphasized in a statement that the
    data was nearly a year old and �no longer reflects the situation we are seeing,� especially as interest and mortgage rates have come down.

    �No American should face homelessness, and the Biden-Harris Administration
    is committed to ensuring every family has access to the affordable, safe,
    and quality housing they deserve,� Todman said, adding that �it is
    critical that we focus on evidence-based efforts to prevent and end homelessness.�

    The cost of buying a home hit an all-time high earlier this year, with advocates and policymakers alike citing a steep shortage in housing and
    even fewer affordable homes.

    The U.S. housing shortage ballooned to 4.5 million homes in 2022 from 4.3 million in 2021, according to a June report from the real estate
    marketplace Zillow. The National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC)
    estimates the U.S. is short 7.3 million homes that are affordable and
    available to low-income individuals.

    �Increased homelessness is the tragic, yet predictable, consequence of underinvesting in the resources and protections that help people find and maintain safe, affordable housing,� said Renee Willis, incoming interim
    CEO of the NLIHC.

    Local, state and federal leaders have been scrambling to find solutions to
    the affordable housing crisis, including Low-Income Housing Tax Credits, property tax abatement, commercial-to-residential conversion and
    inclusionary zoning.

    https://thehill.com/business/housing/5057741-homelessness-us-record-hud/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Kamala Joe@21:1/5 to useapen on Sat Dec 28 11:47:36 2024
    XPost: alt.society.homeless, alt.home.repair, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: sac.politics, talk.politics.guns

    useapen wrote:
    “No American should face homelessness, and the Biden-Harris Administration is committed to ensuring every family has access to the affordable, safe,
    and quality housing they deserve,” Todman said, adding that “it is critical that we focus on evidence-based efforts to prevent and end homelessness.”

    Despite 4 years in office, the ever-lying Biden-Harris Administration did absolutely nothing to fix the problem.

    On January 21, 2025, the fake news MSM will be blaming President Trump again.

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  • From Frank <"frank@21:1/5 to Kamala Joe on Sat Dec 28 07:34:10 2024
    XPost: alt.society.homeless, alt.home.repair

    On 12/28/2024 6:47 AM, Kamala Joe wrote:
    useapen wrote:
    “No American should face homelessness, and the Biden-Harris
    Administration
    is committed to ensuring every family has access to the affordable, safe,
    and quality housing they deserve,” Todman said, adding that “it is
    critical that we focus on evidence-based efforts to prevent and end
    homelessness.”

    Despite 4 years in office, the ever-lying Biden-Harris Administration
    did absolutely nothing to fix the problem.

    On January 21, 2025, the fake news MSM will be blaming President Trump
    again.

    More housing will be available when illegals are deported.

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  • From Chris Ahlstrom@21:1/5 to Kamala Joe on Sat Dec 28 08:10:33 2024
    XPost: alt.society.homeless, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    Kamala Joe wrote this post while blinking in Morse code:

    useapen wrote:
    “No American should face homelessness, and the Biden-Harris Administration >> is committed to ensuring every family has access to the affordable, safe,
    and quality housing they deserve,” Todman said, adding that “it is
    critical that we focus on evidence-based efforts to prevent and end
    homelessness.”

    Despite 4 years in office, the ever-lying Biden-Harris Administration did absolutely nothing to fix the problem.

    On January 21, 2025, the fake news MSM will be blaming President Trump again.

    https://childrenshealthwatch.org/homelessness-among-students-increases-137-under-trump-the-highest-in-years/

    February 3, 2020

    President Donald Trump spent $11 million on a campaign ad during the Super
    Bowl to tell the country he’s created the best economy in American history.
    But for the 1.5 million children struggling with homelessness in the United
    States, it isn’t exactly the case.

    As Trump biographer David Cay Johnston explained Monday, the economy isn’t
    anything to brag about. The New York Times reported the results of a recent
    study from the National Center for Homeless Education showed that during
    the 2017-2018 school year, homelessness among students saw a 137 percent
    increase. “It was the highest number recorded in more than a dozen years,
    and experts said it reflected a growing problem that could negatively
    affect children’s academic performance and health,” the Times explained.

    There are three main points of cause: first, is that the economy isn’t as
    great as the president thinks. Second, the impact of natural disasters was
    so serious that many children and their families were forced to live in
    hotels until disaster relief was granted to their area. Finally, one of the
    greatest problems is the opioid crisis, which the administration has been
    fighting with a tired “just say no” policy.

    Plenty of blame to go around.

    Note the lying in the first paragraph from ever-lying world-record lying
    Trump. :-D

    --
    * wichert_ imagines master without a MTA
    <james> wichert: ehm? that might hinder peformance of the BTS :p

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