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chockablock | 2 years ago

The narrative that most homeless people in SF come there from other places is contradicted by data. In annual surveys, ~70+% of people who are homeless in SF lived in SF when they became homeless.

https://sfstandard.com/public-health/latino-homelessness-sur...

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hechtoid|2 years ago

there's a lot of issues with the methodology in this cluster of surveys. for one it's entirely self-reported, and furthermore it only asks where they were staying immediately prior to becoming homeless. digging further into cases you see people who come here and live in an rv for a month or crash in their friend's garage, before ending up on the streets and counted here as a local resident. studies which take into account longer history and context tell the same story.

if we didn't have such a huge issue with out of state people swelling our homeless population, we wouldn't have such programs as these to repatriate them: https://www.sfexaminer.com/news/housing/homeward-bound-reloc...

j-krieger|2 years ago

Which still means that one third of homeless people are shipped in from somewhere else, which is an astonishingly high number

kelnos|2 years ago

I've gone back and forth on how I feel about self-reported data like that.

If you're homeless and moved to a particular city because you believe you'll have a better time there, then you might feel incentivized to claim that you originally lived there before becoming homeless.

Unfortunately there's no good way to confirm or refute this data.

DoreenMichele|2 years ago

Well, I didn't say that. You inferred that.

There are also lots of reasons to question exactly how such numbers are determined and what they really mean, which is a long discussion I don't care to have.

HDThoreaun|2 years ago

No, you said SF was a "dumping ground" for the homeless.