How Is It Going With Mayor De Blasio's Efforts To Reduce Homelessness?
/For twenty years, from 1994 to 2013, we had Republican mayors in this most Democratic of cities. OK, Bloomberg (2002 - 2013) didn't maintain the Republican label consistently; however, he was a successful businessman with at least some common sense. And Bloomberg's predecessor Giuliani wasn't perfect either. Anyway, at least those two tried a little. Then in 2013 we elected the far left progressive Bill de Blasio, with the soaring promise of more and yet more government spending on social programs to bring newfound equality and social justice to all. At the top of de Blasio's agenda were the issues of "affordable housing" and "homelessness." I've had a long series of posts on the folly and idiocy of de Blasio's "affordable housing" efforts. (See posts accumulated under this tab.) For today, let's check in for an update on how it's going with "homelessness."
First, the starting point. The Coalition for the Homeless -- a leading advocacy organization for more spending to reduce the problem -- put out a big summary in late 2012, toward the end of Bloomberg's tenure. Bottom line: the number of "homeless" was put at 43,000:
Last night, more than 43,000 homeless men, women and children went to sleep in New York City municipal shelters, including an all-time record 17,000 children.
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