
Originally posted by
abrowne
People being people, and people often being similar in core behaviour, tend to not like being without shelter. People with the means and the will tend to change their situation - new job, temporarily staying with friends, possibly moving to another city, and so on. It is those that do not have any means or will to effectively help themselves that are chiefly meant when the term homeless is tossed about. My point is that simply providing affordable housing for these people is not the sole answer and that social net programs and health programs and employment programs seem to be more important as steps in helping that particular group leave the street behind. Yes, they need something affordable to land in when the time comes, but we are talking about two very different type of issue.
Especially in this case. When homelessness is complained about in a city it is usually the visible, panhandling element that gets minimized.