I’ve covered California’s homeless since before the word was used. This is what I learned

I’ve covered California’s homeless since before the word was used. This is what I learned
SACRAMENTO, CA – JANUARY 05: Antonio Rico, 63, removes some of his his belongings from his camp at a flooded homeless encampment on Bannon Island, along the Sacramento River on Thursday, Jan. 5, 2023 in Sacramento, CA. Rico said he decided to leave the island because of the recent storms. The storms last week caused flooding on the island, around 60 people who live in the encampment have being warned to move to higher ground. Massive atmospheric river to bring heavy rains, winds, flooding across California. Residents, business owners and emergency workers nervously await the epic Bomb cyclone storm expected to slam the Bay Area Wednesday and Thursday. Urgent high wind warning starting at 4 a.m. Wednesday, with gusts up to 50 mph in low-lying areas and up to 70 mph at the coast and among the regions highest peaks. (Gary Coronado / Los Angeles Times)
(Gary Coronado/Los Angeles Times)

I’ve covered California’s homeless since before the word was used. This is what I learned

Op-Ed,California Politics

Dale Maharidge April 7, 2024

In 1980, I reported on Sacramentos public inebriates. Most of them, a few hundred in all, lived in flophouse hotels. But some slept in the weeds.

I walked the wooded banks of the rivers that converge in the capital and found just a few dozen spots where men had bedded down on simple mats of cardboard or newspaper. There were no tents or camps.

The word homeless was rarely used then. It didnt appear in my article for the Sacramento Bee.

By 1982, amid a recession, newcomers who had lost their jobs began to appear in the weeds. In 1985, after three years of reporting on the subject, I co-authored one of the first books on contemporary homelessness. In 1988, I spent a week walking 10 miles of Sacramento riverbank and found 125 elaborate camps. This was new.

I returned to Sacramento more recently amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Now the tent cities in the woods along the rivers stretched as far as the eye could see, rivaling those photographed by Dorothea Lange during the Great Depression. The most recent federally mandated survey found more than 5,000 unsheltered homeless people in the city.

I can trace several of our modern doom loops to the 1980s. The roots of our continuing struggles with police brutality and sexual violence were present in stories I covered then. Meaningful gun control measures could have prevented the proliferation of mass shootings over the past four decades. And pro-housing policies could have negated the presence of todays tent cities.

Ive long despaired about the homelessness crisis in particular. In the wake of Ronald Reagans election, I blamed conservatives for abandoning the poor. I thought my journalism and others could change policy, perhaps even inspire a New Deal-style response equal to the challenge. Such was my naivet.

The blame, I eventually realized, also belongs to people we might call good liberals.

By 1980, baby boomers were in their first decade of homeownership in places such as Silicon Valley and the New York City suburbs of Westchester County. They rapidly became NIMBYs, vehemently opposing affordable housing in their neighborhoods. Many were Clinton Democrats. They went on to plant Black Lives Matter signs in their lawns. The message was hollow: We support you; just dont live near us.

Boomers, especially if they were white, got to buy houses, and then they zoned everyone else out. They watched their lawns and home equity grow. I was one of them.

In 1981, at 24, I bought my first house. At a price of $70,000, it cost less than three times my annual salary of $25,000, which was roughly the median income in Sacramento County. If adjusted for inflation alone, the homes value would be $218,000 four decades later, and my salary $78,000.

The median household income in the county today is about $84,000, not far from what inflation would predict. But Zillow estimates that my former home is now worth $578,000, more than double what can be attributed to inflation. My annual wages would need to be more than $190,000 to afford the house as easily as I did then. This is what the children and grandchildren of boomers face.

Much was made of the more than 60 housing bills passed by the Legislature and signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom last year. The legislation will streamline approval of housing in cities that arent meeting their goals, limit the use of environmental laws to block affordable housing, allow developers to build more densely when they include affordable units and let faith-based organizations build housing on their land, among other measures.

But its not nearly enough. Politicians have to get more aggressive in wresting control of zoning from cities.

Starting in 2018, state Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) repeatedly tried to advance bills that would have overridden local zoning to allow taller, denser apartment buildings near public transit and job centers. His fellow Democrats blocked them.

Even less ambitious housing-friendly bills often face a similar fate in Sacramento. Last year, state Sen. Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) proposed legislation that would have eased approval of small starter homes in areas restricted to single-family housing. That provision was stripped out of the bill.

Its the same story on the East Coast. Last year, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul proposed legislation to override local opposition to housing. Fierce blowback came from largely white, relatively affluent good liberals in places such as Westchester County, where Joe Biden got 67.6% of the vote in 2020. As in California, Democrats opposed to the plan used code language: local control, overcrowding, traffic.

New York state Assemblyman Phil Ramos cut through the euphemisms: It doesnt matter what kind of incentive you give them, he said at a rally. A wealthy community, before they allow Black and brown people in, theyll walk away from any amount of money. Hochuls plan was defeated in the Democratic-dominated Legislature.

Republicans, for their part, havent gotten any better on these issues. A podcast by the right-wing Cicero Institute suggested that instead of calling people homeless, we revert to words like vagrants, bums and tramps.

Such vilification is proved off the mark by the fact that poverty-stricken Mississippi has relatively few homeless people. Los Angeles County has six times as many unhoused people per capita as metropolitan Jackson. Why? An average apartment in the Mississippi capital rents for around $900, compared with $2,750 in L.A.

The Biden administration recently released a report calling for more housing, but the feds have limited power here. Ultimately, the report stated, meaningful change will require State and local governments to reevaluate the land-use regulations that reduce the housing supply. That largely means undoing single-family zoning.

Sen. Wieners push for apartment buildings in transit corridors had it right. Would this make parts of Los Angeles a little more like Manhattan? We can only hope so. If New York City is any guide, it would mean more vibrant neighborhoods and higher property values.

As the struggle over housing continues, tent cities have been normalized in California and beyond. Last year, a student of mine looked puzzled when I explained that homelessness of this kind hasnt always existed. I couldnt be frustrated with her, though: This crisis has lingered and worsened for more than twice as long as shes been alive. It didnt have to.

Dale Maharidge is a journalism professor at Columbia University and the author of the forthcoming

American Doom Loop: Dispatches from a Troubled Nation, 1980s2020s

, from which this was adapted.

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