Tag Archive for: Homelessness

America’s Blue Bastions Have Crept Right Amid Rampant Crime And Homelessness

America’s most liberal cities and states have shifted their policies to the right in recent elections, as crime and homelessness remain large issues in Democratic strongholds.

Left-wing policies in blue states like California and Colorado and cities such as Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Oakland were rejected by voters last week, with voters passing anti-crime ballot measures and ousting liberal district attorneys and mayors. Some of the policies voters supported include tougher drug penalties, harsher prosecution of criminals by district attorneys and more funding for law enforcement.

“I think people are realizing that it’s not a good idea to cut millions upon millions of dollars from your local police department’s budgets, [and] it’s not a good idea to publish lists of crimes that you’re no longer going to prosecute,” Zack Smith, senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation, told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “And so what you’re seeing is politicians who formally supported those positions are starting to walk back some of their most radical previous policies.”

San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins was reelected by a wide margin, fending off a challenge from left-wing candidate Ryan Khojasteh, who worked for former District Attorney Chesa Boudin, according to multiple sources. Boudin was recalled in 2022 after facing widespread criticism for being too lenient on crime.

Boudin prohibited all cash bail in 2020, saying it unfairly targeted racial minorities, according to the San Francisco Gate. The policy was opposed vehemently by the San Francisco Police Officers Association, saying San Franciscans will “pay a heavy price for it.”

Jenkins, who has received praise for her tougher crime policy compared to her predecessor, will now serve her first full four-year term.

In 2023, Jenkins increased the yearly number of convictions in the city for the first time in eight years, according to city data. Many metrics of crime in San Francisco decreased in 2023, with homicide down 7% from 2022, larceny-theft down 11% and rape down 7.2%, according to San Francisco Police Department data.

Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price was recalled by a whopping 25 points in her election in early November. Under Price, crime in the county surged, with auto theft in 2023 more than doubling, robbery increasing 19%, burglaries 14% and theft under $200 in value increasing 31%, according to county statistics.

Price vowed to decrease the juvenile conviction rate and not “overcriminalize the youth,” according to her campaign platform. The same year she took office, a juvenile crime wave plagued the city, with police arresting suspects that participated in as many as 20 robberies, according to CBS News in May 2023.

Prison populations plummeted under Price’s leadership, going to levels not seen since 2003, according to the Chronicle in November 2023. Additionally, Price neglected to onboard attorneys sent by Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom to help prosecute drug crime, which prompted Newsom to rescind the offer. Additionally, a presentation used by Price’s office to train victim-witness advocates taught that “the carceral state grew out of chattel slavery” and repeatedly claimed that there was racial bias in criminal justice.

Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao was also recalled along with Price, losing her bid to stay in office by a wide margin, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. Oakland Police Officers’ Association President Huy Nguyen told the Daily Caller News Foundation that managing the Oakland Police under her leadership was like “trying to keep a patient in the ICU alive.”

Thao cut the Oakland Police’s sworn officer count from 728 to 678 since 2022 as of August. Oakland lacked a police chief for nearly a year after Thao fired LeRonne Armstrong for alleged misconduct during an investigation into a hit-and-run involving a police car and a weapons discharge by an officer. An arbitrator report exonerated Armstrong for wrongdoing in September 2023, according to NBC Bay Area.

A city-wide crime report in December 2023 showed motor vehicle theft was up 44% for the year, robbery up 38%, violent crime up 21% and overall crime up 17%. Voters accused Thao of ignoring the city’s crime and homelessness problem while touting improvements, according to the LA Times.

“The progressives in Oakland did the same thing they did in San Francisco. They ignored the crime. They ignored the poverty,” Recall Sheng Thao spokesperson Seneca Scott told the LA Times. “They need to do some soul-searching.”

“Overall, the trend is toward moving toward more common sense crime policies, putting more police on the street, empowering them to do their job’s responsibly, and then having district attorneys who actually prosecute crimes,” Smith told the DCNF. “And I think what many people are realizing is that being a law and order district attorney doesn’t mean that everyone is necessarily going to prison for first-time non-violent offenses.”

Portland, Oregon, recently ousted its mayor Ted Wheeler in favor of Keith Wilson, who won handily in the ranked-choice election, according to The Associated Press. Wheeler assumed office in 2017, campaigning on improving homelessness programs, housing options and a slew of other left-wing policies, according to his platform in 2016. Since 2017, Portland’s homeless population has increased from 4,015 in 2017 to 6,297 in 2023, according to homelessness advocacy organization Do Good Multnomah.

Wheeler tried to correct the problem on his way out, signing into law a homeless camping ban in May, which would potentially fine or jail homeless people who refused shelter, according to Oregon Public Broadcasting. However, the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office said they would not allow the use of county jails to enforce the law.

In Wilson’s campaign, he addressed issues of lack of police resources by promising to provide aid to an “overtaxed” police department by sheltering homeless people that tie up manpower. He also promised to end open drug use and homelessness in the first year of his administration by creating more “emergency” homeless shelters in order to reduce street encampments, citing his experience with his homelessness non-profit Shelter Portland.

Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascon lost his seat by a 20-point margin to independent challenger Nathan Hochman, according to an unofficial tally. Hochman will assume the office as the city continues to reel from crime, with violent incidents overall remaining above pre-pandemic levels, according to FBI data.

Gascon faced heavy criticism during his tenure for leniency in prosecuting criminals. He promised upon taking office to not pursue the death penalty, not to try minors as adults and wouldn’t give life sentences without parole, according to Bolts Magazine. (Watch The Daily Caller’s documentary ‘Rigged’ HERE)

For example, Gascon did not seek the death penalty for the murderer of Los Angeles Police Department Officer Ryan Clinkunbroomer. A convicted murderer reportedly called Gascon his “champ” in 2022 after he did not include gang membership and firearm enhancements on his charge. Violent crime in Los Angeles also jumped by 12% and property crime by 15% from 2021 to 2023, according to CalMatters.

“It’s mostly a vote on Gascón,” Mark DiCamillo, director of the UC Berkeley IGS poll, told the LA Times in November. “Hochman is the other candidate in this race and he’s in that fortunate position of running against an unpopular incumbent.”

Tough-on-crime ballot measures also won decisive victories at the ballot box.

Californian voters at large passed Proposition 36, which raised penalties for retail theft and drug possession. The measure effectively reversed the 2014 Proposition 47, which downgraded theft under $950 from a felony to a misdemeanor while lowering drug possession penalties. Robberies in California were up 3.8% and shoplifting was up by almost 40% in 2023 compared to 2019, according to the Public Policy Institute of California.

Colorado passed Proposition 128, which requires those guilty of certain violent crimes like second-degree murder, first-degree assault, class two felony kidnapping or sexual assault to serve at least 85% of their sentence to be eligible for parole, raising the threshold from 75%. Voters also passed Proposition 130, which allocated $350 million to the state’s various police departments through the Colorado Department of Public Safety.

Additionally, Colorado voted to amend its constitution, removing the right to bail in first-degree murder cases where a conviction is highly likely, according to the state legislature.

In Arizona, voters passed Proposition 313, which requires a life sentence for those convicted of child sex trafficking. Proposition 314 was also passed, which toughens a slew of laws on illegal immigration and fentanyl, including empowering state and local police to arrest illegal immigrants outside of ports of entry.

In addition to local and state elections, the recent presidential election showed a massive swing toward Trump and Republicans.

San Diego County shifted towards president-elect Donald Trump by seven points, Los Angeles County by 14 points and Fresno County by 16 points compared to 2020, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. Latino voters mostly drove the shift rightward.

Nassau County in Long Island, New York, saw a 14-point swing to Trump and Miami-Dade County in Florida swung 19 points to the former president, according to The New York Times. Miami-Dade was last won by a Republican candidate in 1988, according to CBS.

Price, Gascon and Thao’s offices did not immediately respond to the DCNF’s request for comment.

AUTHOR

Wallace White

Contributor.

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EDITORS NOTE: This Daily Caller column is republished with permission. ©All rights reserved.


All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

California Is Awash In Misleading Data — And The Consequences Have Been Devastating

California is awash in incomplete and misleading publicly-collected data, and experts say it’s letting policymakers and politicians get away with running the state into the ground.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao touted in recent months a massive decrease in crime, but it was later revealed that Oakland published misleading non-violent crime data by comparing incomplete 2024 figures with complete figures from previous years, giving the false impression of improving crime to policymakers and the public. The crime statistics in Oakland are indicative of a larger issue in the whole state, which has routinely used misleading and incomplete data to hide the magnitude of serious issues like homelessness, the COVID-19 pandemic and crime that have ultimately harmed average citizens, according to experts who spoke to the Daily Caller News Foundation.

“California is wholly determined by ideology,” Christopher Calton, a research fellow in housing and homelessness at the Independent Institute, told the DCNF. “It’s shocking to me how deep-seated the culture is. The absence of accurate data helps policymakers. [Data] might make them look bad, so they gaslight people into thinking crime is better than it actually is.”

In Oakland, non-violent crimes and burglaries take up to six weeks to appear in crime data, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. The result is an underreported 2024 year-to-date crime figure on weekly reports, where incomplete 2024 numbers are compared against the previous years’ complete numbers, giving a false impression of reduced crime.

Nearly half of all crime in San Francisco goes unreported, according to a poll from local political research group GrowSF collected in September 2023. Violent crime in California has surged in recent years, jumping 26.4% from 2014 to 2022, according to the Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC).

“Data is more accurate to the extent to which people are reporting it,” Calton said. “Victims stop reporting it because it stops being enforced. People just stop calling in.”

Since 2014, California has had Proposition 47 in place, which downgraded the penalties for drug possession and theft under $950 from felonies to misdemeanors. Proposition 47 has been hotly debated in California politics, with critics arguing that the law is responsible for a wave of retail crime, as shoplifting rates climbed by 29% from 2019 to 2022, according to the PPIC.

A spokesperson for Newsom’s office stood by the state’s data, telling the DCNF that it has shown a drop in violent and non-violent crime across cities in California and the state at large, as well as improvements in homicide, larceny, arson, property crime and retail theft. The spokesperson pointed to efforts undertaken by the Newsom administration that have increased efforts to cooperate with local law enforcement across the state, including successes in Oakland, San Francisco and Bakersfield.

In addition to crime data, the California healthcare system also faces a lack of information on behavioral health and mental health.

The California Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) said in an analysis that the data from the state’s behavioral health infrastructure on the need and supply of services is “limited and of mixed quality,” citing an example of the DHCS not knowing how many people were staying under watch for days or weeks while not receiving treatment as they wait for a placement elsewhere in the emergency departments, according to a 2022 DHCS report. In 2020, a state auditor reported that the county-based mental health system contained “disjointed and incomplete” data reporting, saying the “state does not know the extent to which billions in funding has assisted individuals with mental illness.”

Between 2019 and 2021, fentanyl overdose deaths in the state rose by 121%, according to state records. Additionally, California lacked 4,767 psychiatric beds for patients with mental health conditions, according to a 2021 RAND Corporation study.

California announced in May they would allocate $6.8 billion to “counties, cities, tribal entities, nonprofits, and for-profits” to bolster the state’s mental health and behavioral health systems, citing the RAND study and the DCHS assessment as spurring the new funding, according to a May press release.

However, many third parties have had trouble recording important data, with counties, nonprofits and cities receiving large grants from California’s homelessness programs and often not keeping proper tabs on data relevant to their mission, according to Calton. California has spent over $30 billion tackling homelessness and housing since Newsom took office in 2019.

“They weren’t tracking their outcomes. California is acting as a banker government, and these non-profits are not tracking their outcomes,” Calton said. “This is just an example of how there’s no accountability in this. Who can even tell you how effectively it is being spent?”

Homelessness continues to plague California, with the state accounting for 28% of the nation’s entire homeless population, according to a 2023 U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development report. The state’s homeless population exceeds that of New York, the next highest state, by over 78,000 people.

The homeless population increased by 10,000 between 2021 and 2022. Without proper data, it becomes difficult to verify whether or not parties like counties, cities and nonprofits that receive funding are spending their money to directly tackle homelessness, according to Calton.

California does not know how effective three of its $24 billion homelessness and housing programs were over the past five fiscal years due to a lack of outcome data from organizations involved in the project, according to an April financial audit. The auditor said the programs in question did not have “adequate outcome data to assess the cost‑effectiveness” of the programs, adding that they “lack assurance that these programs represent the best use of state funding.”

Edward Ring, director of water and energy policy at the California Policy Center, told the DCNF that developers are citing success against homelessness when they simply put a roof over people’s heads while having no data on the behavior of people staying in these new developments.

“They say, ‘we need metrics to determine whether these projects are successful,’ and one of the metrics [they] will use is whether or not people stay in their new apartment, and so because they then have created an incentive for people to be kept in their apartments, they don’t monitor behavior at all,” Ring told the DCNF. “It’s a scam that’s making all kinds of people filthy rich.”

California also used misleading data to support lockdown measures during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to Cato Institute Policy Analyst Marc Joffe.

Joffe told the DCNF that the data used to support COVID-19 lockdowns in the state was lacking in demographic details on mortality. COVID-19’s mortality rate was highly age-dependent, as people over 65 made up 81% of COVID-19 deaths in 2020, according to the CDC.

“In the early stages of COVID, there was interest in knowing the demographics of who died, and counties often failed to provide that information or very wide bands of data, so it was harder to get an idea of what your risk was,” Joffe said. “They were withholding data to support the narrative of lockdowns in California. If [people] understood there was a very low mortality risk for people below 30–40 years old, they may have taken different action.”

During the COVID-19 pandemic, California was one of the more aggressive states when it came to imposing lockdowns, issuing stay-at-home orders for 85% of residents in the state in December of 2020, according to the BBC. Amid the lockdowns, many California residents left the state, resulting in a massive drop in tax receipts, with California seeing a total drop in revenue of $47 billion in 2020 and 2021, according to NBC.

The state is expected to run a $73 billion budget deficit in fiscal year 2024, with a projected $24 billion of tax revenue lost due to people leaving the state. California has already created a plan to make substantial cuts to reconcile the revenue gap.

COVID-19 demographic data is not the only thing California has kept from public disclosure, as they are also notoriously slow with reporting financial disclosures on that state’s spending to the federal government, according to Joffe.

“California has the longest delays in reporting its financial statements each year. We recently got their 2022 financial statement in March 2024, and we really do not know when we’re going to see 2023,” Joffe said. “It’s been six years now that the financial statements have come out past the nine months mandated by the federal government. California has the worst tardiness in reporting on its financial statements.”

The financial disclosures are required to maintain California’s credit rating, which determines how easily the state can borrow money, with California’s most recent report being from 2022, according to CalMatters. The state’s credit rating may be in jeopardy if delays persist, according to a 2022 state audit.

“If you have incomplete data and it’s misleading as a result, it may be worth withholding the data until it’s complete,” Joffe said.

AUTHOR

WALLACE WHITE

Contributor.

RELATED ARTICLE: California Is Staring Down The Barrel Of A Yawning Budget Deficit. Can It Even Be Fixed?

EDITORS NOTE: This Daily Caller column is republished with permission. ©All rights reserved.


All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

BIDENOMICS: Homelessness UP 12% from just last year, Homeless FAMILIES WITH KIDS up 16%

But the invaders storming our border are getting everything they need.

U.S. homelessness up 12% to highest reported level as rents soar

By Kevin Freking, AP December 21, 2023:

WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States experienced a dramatic 12% increase in homelessness to its highest reported level as soaring rents and a decline in coronavirus pandemic assistance combined to put housing out of reach for more Americans, federal officials said Friday.

About 653,000 people were homeless, the most since the country began using the yearly point-in-time survey in 2007. The total in the January count represents an increase of about 70,650 from a year earlier.

The latest estimate indicates that people becoming homeless for the first time were behind much of the increase.

Keep reading.

AUTHOR

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