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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Monday, September 23, 2024

Due south of Denver's homelessness crisis, a Colorado county has nearly eradicated its own unhoused population with a simple message to its citizens: "Handouts Don't Help." ... Douglas County's Homeless Engagement, Assistance and Resource Team - which pairs behavioral health experts with area police officers in their interactions with the homeless - made 250 contacts with the homeless population when the initiative first started in 2022.

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Oh look, Boaz became a socialist.

#1 | Posted by Sycophant at 2024-09-23 03:43 PM | Reply

"Denver homeless to get $1,000 a month in basic income program"

I think he just didn't bother to read the fine print, hahaa!

The City and others can pan panhandling when they have support centers and basic income to help what are mostly the victims of radical capitalism gone wild.

And radical rwing candidates.

Sort of like what Jesus said to do.... love your neighbor and care for the poor, the sick, and the homeless. And especially the Immigrants... he made a big deal out of that.

And no, he never said communities couldn't pool their resources to accomplish these things. Nor that it had to be individual giving or the church, who he said should help.

SO, just the opposite of rwing 'conservative' Republicans these days.

#2 | Posted by Corky at 2024-09-23 04:34 PM | Reply

Denver Gave Homeless People $1,000 Per Month -- A Year Later, Nearly 50% Of Them Secured Housing (July 2024)
finance.yahoo.com

... A yearlong Denver program testing unconditional cash payments for people experiencing homelessness showed that twice as many participants secured stable housing, according to a report released one year after the experiment began.

The Denver Basic Income Project provided financial assistance to over 800 people. Participants were divided into three groups:

- - - Group A received $1,000 per month for 12 months.

- - - Group B received a one-time payment of $6,500 followed by $500 monthly payments for 11 months.

- - - Group C, the control group, received $50 per month.

The one-year report of the Denver project, released on June 18, revealed promising outcomes. After receiving monthly payments for 10 months, 45% of participants secured stable housing. The program also led to fewer emergency room visits, hospital stays, nights spent in shelters and jail incarcerations. The city estimates cost savings of $589,214 due to reduced use of public services.

Unconditional cash transfers, also known as basic income, are gaining traction as a poverty-reduction strategy for U.S. cities. Unlike traditional social services such as SNAP or Medicaid, basic income empowers recipients to prioritize their most pressing needs.

"What is fundamentally different about our approach is how we start from a place of trust," said project Founder and Executive Director Mark Donovan at a press conference.

The Denver report highlights two main areas where the program benefited participants: covering essential needs and fostering financial stability. ...


#3 | Posted by LampLighter at 2024-09-23 07:17 PM | Reply

#3 | POSTED BY LAMPLIGHTER

You're an engineer right? Whats wrong with that study in relating it to the real world?

#4 | Posted by oneironaut at 2024-09-23 09:37 PM | Reply

LOL, Comrade Boazo the socialist, who knew.
Better not let Daddy Vladimir find out.

#5 | Posted by a_monson at 2024-09-23 10:58 PM | Reply

Wow, it's such a simple, elegant plan. You shame people from giving handouts, and the homeless people will simply ...evaporate!
Which I presume to mean, that they get jobs and rent apartments and become good, productive members of society.

#6 | Posted by AustinTX at 2024-09-24 02:04 AM | Reply

@#4 ... Whats wrong with that study in relating it to the real world? ...

What else does your current alias got besides unsubstantiated criticism?


#7 | Posted by LampLighter at 2024-09-24 02:38 AM | Reply

Would be more lucrative to give the rich permits to hunt the homeless.

That's Capitalism, baby!

#8 | Posted by ClownShack at 2024-09-24 02:55 AM | Reply

If branding it "Handouts Don't Help" actually has a positive effect on psychology of the homeless and on those helping the homeless, then I support it.

I take issue when people label anything and everything intended to help the homeless as a "handout"

#9 | Posted by hamburglar at 2024-09-24 06:24 AM | Reply

Just push them into a different county. Yah, us! /s

#10 | Posted by Brennnn at 2024-09-24 08:21 AM | Reply

FTA:
In five branded vehicles, the HEART Team approaches each homeless individual reported, offering them services to get back on their feet.

"If people need services, they're getting them. They're getting hotel vouchers, we're partnering with Ready to Work," Laydon said. "If somebody needs a job, they will get one. If they need a bus ticket back to their family in Tennessee, we've done that. If someone needs food for a night or a week, they'll get it."

Sounds like "Handouts Don't Help" is really saying "private, untargeted handouts don't help, but a combination of targeted donations and public funds can help solve homelessness". This is a good initiative, using public funds for targeted and longer term care/support of the homeless population. Well done Douglas County!

#11 | Posted by bartimus at 2024-09-24 11:18 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

Start out by making capable people decide whether to work with self respect and dignity or just evaporate.

#12 | Posted by Robson at 2024-09-25 01:13 PM | Reply

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