Relatively healthy people do occasionally become homeless due to misfortune, but they usually don’t stay homeless. It could be someone from the lower class living paycheck to paycheck who has a surprise expense they’re not insured for and can’t make rent. It could be a battered woman and her children escaping domestic abuse. They get services, they get back on their feet, they get housed. Ideally, the social safety nets would work faster and better than they do in practice, but the system basically works out for them.
The persistently homeless are a different story. They’re often mentally ill and/or addicted to drugs. They don’t have the will or capacity to take advantage of the available services. In the past, such people were often institutionalized. These institutions often didn’t act in their best interests, but it at least kept them off the streets so they couldn’t harass the rest of us. Your proposal probably wouldn’t help for them.
Relatively healthy people do occasionally become homeless due to misfortune, but they usually don’t stay homeless. It could be someone from the lower class living paycheck to paycheck who has a surprise expense they’re not insured for and can’t make rent. It could be a battered woman and her children escaping domestic abuse. They get services, they get back on their feet, they get housed. Ideally, the social safety nets would work faster and better than they do in practice, but the system basically works out for them.
The persistently homeless are a different story. They’re often mentally ill and/or addicted to drugs. They don’t have the will or capacity to take advantage of the available services. In the past, such people were often institutionalized. These institutions often didn’t act in their best interests, but it at least kept them off the streets so they couldn’t harass the rest of us. Your proposal probably wouldn’t help for them.