I don't think most of the people I see would be homeless if there was any better choice for them. Again, a lot of them have regular jobs. The washed out drug addicts and total mental cases are a different story, but I don't think those groups see their life as easy street either.Kath wrote: ↑Tue May 15, 2018 4:05 pmSeattle is the problem. New construction is so ridiculously over-regulated that it can add months and tens of thousands to get a new house built.
Whatever you subsidize, you get more of. Giving the homeless everything they need only tells the rest of the homeless in this country, that all they need to do is get to Seattle and life will be easy street.
Seattle should get out of its' own way and let the market handle this. Seattle will be Detroit if they keep being overly hostile to business.
What I see here is that the existing property-owning citizens -- mainly tech workers -- do not want to make it easier to build housing. I have seen them lobby to get developments struck down because they do not want the additional traffic or other potential effects to where they live that happen when you build new housing.