An innovative approach to homelessness

An article in today’s NY Times about a new approach to homelessness. Building on the “housing first” initiative that begin in the 1990s, it views homelessness more as a public health crisis than as a nuisance. Homeless people have access to emergency rooms; they do not have access to ongoing care. And this is expensive. In LA, 4800 chronically homeless people (10% of LA’s total homeless population) consume a half-billion dollars worth of services each year.

These are shocking statistics:

Another thing that Common Ground discovered was that the homeless were an amalgam of many subgroups. They have now surveyed almost 14,000 chronically homeless people and found that roughly 20 percent are veterans, 10 percent are over the age of 60, 4 percent have H.I.V. or AIDS, 47 percent have a mental illness and 5 percent remain homeless because they can’t find housing with their pets.

For more on the 100,000 homes project, go here.

Updates on the Civil War anniversary

First up: This article on the Secession Ball, held last evening in Charleston, SC. No comment is necessary. The brilliant historian Eric Foner offers a necessary historical perspective.

A century and a half after the civil war, many white Americans, especially in the South, seem to take the idea that slavery caused the war as a personal accusation. The point, however, is not to condemn individuals or an entire region of the country, but to face candidly the central role of slavery in our national history. Only in this way can Americans arrive at a deeper, more nuanced understanding of our past.

The Civil War lives on, as does racism. To wit, Haley Barbour.