San Francisco and a bunch of other cities already tried this.
Problem is, at some point, the amount spent on homeless prevention and management exceeds the average income in a region. Someone with a job earning $ realizes $$ taxpayer funds is being spent on a homeless person.
As one might imagine, that doesn’t sit too well with them.
San Francisco and a bunch of other cities already tried this.
Problem is, at some point, the amount spent on homeless prevention and management exceeds the average income in a region. Someone with a job earning $ realizes $$ taxpayer funds is being spent on a homeless person.
As one might imagine, that doesn’t sit too well with them.