If your proof is simply, "There's more homeless people now!" You have to factor in the percentage of homeless that were already going to increase without that billion dollars spent due to rent raises (30 percent in five years) and subtract it from the percentage of homeless that specifically came to the city seeking those services. (Unknown?)
Then take that number and compare it to how many people were taken off the street and decide if that's a fair trade off. 15,000 affordable housing units were built in Seattle in the last 12 years. That's fifteen thousand would-be homeless and their families compared to the 12,000 still on the streets.
But you also have to remember, only a portion of the billion dollars actually went to affordable housing.
You can't say the entire billion dollars was wasted if you turn around and say you believe in things like ER care, rehab and homeless shelters, because that all makes up a significant portion of the billion dollars.
But here's the kicker. That billion dollars a year that Trek was mewling about was actually for the entire Puget sound area, not just Seattle. Seattle, according to the article, only spends around 60 million a year on the homeless.
https://www.bizjournals.com/seattle/new ... costs.html
Weird. I still don't understand how non-profits could take that much from the Puget sound area if their biggest city only has a 63 million dollar homeless budget. Anyone know what's up with that?The city plans to spend $63 million addressing homelessness next year, $2 million more than this year. Much of those funds will go to nonprofits, which spend more than $746 million on the issue each year.
My main point is this is far from an obvious cut and dry issue, but reactionaries are addicted to anger and allergic to nuance so one can only shrug.