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Could it work here? Sacramento announces radical new plan to tackle homelessness

Californians “are becoming homeless faster than we can get people the help they need,” says mayor Darrell Steinberg. Here, Seána Glennon examines his proposal.

LAST MONTH, THE mayor of California’s capital, Sacramento, announced a radical new plan to tackle the city’s homelessness crisis: a new law mandating the city to house the homeless, with a corresponding obligation upon homeless people to accept accommodation when it is offered.

If passed, this would be the first law of its kind in the US and could provide a
blueprint for other states to follow.

California is a state in which gross societal inequalities are evident, with gated communities in cities like Sacramento and Los Angeles existing alongside shantytowns and ‘tent cities’.

The problem has become increasingly politically charged, leading to this recent push to
meaningfully tackle it. Although the societal contexts and legal systems differ, many of the issues experienced there are those we in Ireland are familiar with: a pattern of rising rents and spiralling house prices leading to serious barriers to home ownership, insecurity in the rental market and homelessness.

Ireland’s housing and homelessness crisis has persisted for the past decade. Government
parties and opposition continue to fight bitterly over the approach to take. The only thing it seems the political parties can agree upon is that this is indeed a crisis and that action needs to be taken.

Could the imposition of a statutory obligation to provide housing, similar to that proposed in Sacramento, be the first step?

No fundamental human right to housing has ever been recognised in Ireland, either in the Constitution or in legislation.

Successive Irish governments have acknowledged the persistent homelessness crisis as a priority and have offered long-term roadmaps which they promise will address it. Yet none of these proposed plans have provided for consequences for a failure to deliver.

What has been missing from Ireland’s various housing strategies over the years has therefore been meaningful accountability.

The radical element of Sacramento’s proposed new approach is the idea of not only a
mandatory legal obligation on the city to provide housing, but also a corresponding
obligation on the part of the homeless person to accept accommodation when offered.

Such a model is not uncontroversial.

Homelessness advocates have long argued for housing to recognised as a fundamental human right which ought to be enshrined in statute or in the Constitution and enforceable in a court of law.

There are legitimate concerns, however, that mandating an obligation to accept whatever housing is offered is an interference with individual autonomy and may operate to provide city authorities with carte blanche to bulldoze temporary homeless structures where any offer of alternative shelter has first been made.

Perhaps in anticipation of these concerns, the Sacramento Mayor acknowledges that
housing alone, without accompanying services, will not suffice. He argues that requiring
people to accept accommodation is the best way to ensure they can get the help they need
and that “there is no liberty in dying alone on the street”.

Those in chronic, long-term homelessness are more likely to experience deteriorating
mental health. Empirical evidence is available to suggest that providing independent housing to homeless people suffering mental health difficulties, without any prior conditions, can benefit the recipients from both a physical and mental health perspective.

In the 1990s in New York City, a group of people experiencing homelessness and mental illness were provided with immediate access to housing, without first being required to undergo any treatment programmes or to prove that they were ‘ready’ to be housed. The provision of housing was integrated with physical and mental health services.

2007 study by Deborah K. Padgett of the experiences of the group showed that the provision of permanent, independent housing afforded the participants the freedom and security to begin to build a stable and less stigmatised life for themselves.

The study noted that few people will refuse an offer of housing and that most will benefit from it, physically and mentally.

The introduction of a legal obligation to provide or obligation to accept housing in an Irish context, however, would need to be carefully considered to ensure its constitutionality and the protection of the rights of those in need of secure shelter.

What would be involved in an ‘obligation’ to accept accommodation? An immediate concern of homelessness advocates in Sacramento is the possibility of criminal sanctions for a refusal to accept an offer of accommodation.

While the details of the proposed law remain to be seen, the Mayor has indicated that any penalty would likely be in the civil sphere. This aspect of the plan clearly needs to be examined further, and indeed, care must be taken to ensure that the voices of those experiencing homelessness are listened to.

If any obligation to accept accommodation is to be contemplated, such accommodation would need to be of an acceptable standard, at a minimum complying with the United Nations key elements of ‘adequate’ housing, which include habitability, accessibility, appropriate location and cultural adequacy.

The Minister for Housing here, Darragh O’Brien, is due to publish a major new policy on housing later this month – Housing for All. We await full details of what exactly the new plan will contain, but one aspect to look out for will be that of accountability: if the plan fails to achieve the aims it promises, will there be any concrete consequences for the state, other than the possibility of being punished by voters at the next general election?

It remains to be seen whether the right-to-housing measure will be passed by Sacramento’s City Council, but we can also look to countries closer to home who have existing models of a legally enforceable right to housing.

Scotland has long had legislation obligating local authorities to house the homeless and to provide temporary accommodation until suitable permanent housing becomes available.

In a similar vein, France introduced legislation in 2007 providing for a legally enforceable right to housing.

The enactment of a statutory right to adequate housing does not automatically mean that homelessness will be eradicated, of course.

It must be accompanied by the political will to realise housing for all; a mandatory legal obligation, whether enshrined in the Constitution or in statute, may be just the tool needed to finally cement that political will.

Homelessness is an extreme problem and it demands an extreme solution. If the
government is as confident as it claims to be that this new plan will address the problem,
then it should mandate itself to achieve the outcomes promised with tangible consequences for a failure to deliver.

This includes the empowerment of those affected to claim their right in a court of law.

Government is asking the electorate to have faith in its new plan to solve the homelessness crisis, where all previous plans have failed.

A law mandating it to achieve its promise would be not only a serious statement of intention but would show that the government believes its own pledge.

Seána Glennon is a PhD candidate at the Sutherland School of Law, UCD and Chief Outreach Officer at UCD’s Centre for Constitutional Studies

This work is co-funded by Journal Media and a grant programme from the European Parliament. Any opinions or conclusions expressed in this work is the author’s own. The European Parliament has no involvement in nor responsibility for the editorial content published by the project. For more information, see here.

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38 Comments
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    Mute Gerard
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    Jul 16th 2021, 6:46 PM

    The obligation to accept is the more unusual part.

    Lots of governments, including Ireland, have undertaken an obligation to provide housing for those who need it (whether they’re achieving it or not).

    But some of the stories you read “We couldn’t take that house, it didn’t have enough bedrooms!”

    Children don’t NEED their own bedrooms and until recent decades sharing was very much the norm. Moreover, if you need a bedroom for every child then you should stop having more until you can afford to house them yourself.

    I’m sure, or certainly I hope, people like this are the very small minority of homeless, but for anyone working to pay for their own housing the entitlement some seem to have is really a slap in the face.

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    Mute Dave Hammond
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    Jul 18th 2021, 8:20 AM

    @Gerard: it would be smart for Ireland to adjust the regulations to reduce gaming the system – there is still a significant homeless crisis but the number of people who are refusing accommodations and /or living on benefits long term is a serious problem under the “homeless” label that need to be tackled – the current mess of a system needs a complete overhaul in ireland

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    Mute Derek Anderson
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    Jul 16th 2021, 6:19 PM

    Nothing will ever work in Ireland with FF FG G at the helm.

    206
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    Mute Just Some Guy
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    Jul 16th 2021, 6:27 PM

    @Derek Anderson:

    The opposition wouldn’t do much better if the roles were reversed because they are all useless.

    179
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    Mute dublindamo
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    Jul 16th 2021, 6:28 PM

    @Derek Anderson: so what will work ? Love to know what the magic sauce is that only SF seem to know but keep to themselves

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    Mute Fr. Fintan Stack
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    Jul 16th 2021, 6:44 PM

    @dublindamo: Try keep up. SF are offering solutions to beat the band but are being ignored by government. I’m not going to educate you here. Go look it up. Not saying they have al the answers but the FFG party are certainly not solving anything.

    93
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    Mute Frank Cauldhame
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    Jul 16th 2021, 6:59 PM

    @Just Some Guy: FFG haven’t even started planning how to solve the housing crisis, to them it’s an opportunity to enrich cuckoo funds and to he’ll with the people, sure how long do they need to come up with a viable plan?

    65
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    Mute Roy Dowling
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    Jul 16th 2021, 7:07 PM

    @Fr. Fintan Stack: Any reason why there not putting those solutions in place up north? Q. The it’s Westminsters fault blah blah blah response. Even when there in power SF blames someone else.

    63
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    Mute ed w
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    Jul 16th 2021, 7:07 PM

    @Derek Anderson: they could just build social houses instead of hoping private sector builds more. which takes pressure of private rental and that reduces rents. or am i thick and missing something.

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    Mute Fionn Darland
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    Jul 16th 2021, 7:11 PM

    @Fr. Fintan Stack: Housing is being sorted fathers. Btw, there is no such entity as FFG no matter how many times you and your sf budz regurgitate it.

    33
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    Mute Fionn Darland
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    Jul 16th 2021, 7:15 PM

    @Frank Cauldhame: No such entity as FFG no matter how many times you and your sf budz regurgitate it. Housing will be sorted very soon. Social housing, affordable housing and private housing are all cranking up.

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    Mute Frank Cauldhame
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    Jul 16th 2021, 7:24 PM

    @Fionn Darland: FFG haven’t even begun to procrastinate about housing, soon in their language could be decades away.

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    Mute Fr. Fintan Stack
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    Jul 16th 2021, 7:39 PM

    @Fionn Darland: so which side of the FFG party embarrasses you ? If I was you it would be both.

    31
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    Mute Fionn Darland
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    Jul 16th 2021, 7:58 PM

    @Frank Cauldhame: A few days now and you can read the ‘Housing for all’ paper from the Housing Minister. There is no such entity as FFG no matter how many times sf regurgitate it.

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    Mute Fionn Darland
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    Jul 16th 2021, 8:02 PM

    @Fr. Fintan Stack: There is no such entity as FFG no matter how many times you and your sf budz regurgitate it. I would be embarrassed by a leader who hung up the phone on rte radio rather than answer a straight forward question on where sf stood on the opening of hospitality. Scarlet for you.

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    Mute This time its personable!
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    Jul 16th 2021, 8:03 PM

    @Fr. Fintan Stack: ah the do your own research argument. But I met Santa Claus in Arnotts years back, so am I to believe these other stories online also?

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    Mute Frank Cauldhame
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    Jul 16th 2021, 8:22 PM

    @Fionn Darland: So there’s no effin FFG have produced a paper on housing for all, after six years of mutual support. How many years do they think that will buy them?

    16
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    Mute Nollaig Ó Ceallaigh
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    Jul 16th 2021, 8:43 PM

    @Fionn Darland: “scarlet for you”? Are you a15 year old girl?

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    Mute Aidan O' Neill
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    Jul 16th 2021, 9:03 PM

    @Fionn Darland: it isn’t though. It got worse in the last decade and prices are spiralling out of control. It’s not being sorted at all

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    Mute Fionn Darland
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    Jul 16th 2021, 9:15 PM

    @Frank Cauldhame: There is no such entity as FFG no matter how many times you and sf regurgitate it.
    They are called coalitions. You know, when different parties work together to get things done to benefit citizens.

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    Mute Nollaig Ó Ceallaigh
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    Jul 16th 2021, 9:17 PM

    @Fionn Darland: You realise copying/pasting the same shïte over and over again does nothing to dissuade people that you’re not a shill, a bot, or an ïdiot. Or all three.

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    Mute thesaltyurchin
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    Jul 16th 2021, 9:22 PM

    @Derek Anderson: Put whatever title you want on it. I call it ‘Irish people’

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    Mute David Saunders
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    Jul 17th 2021, 11:58 AM

    @ed w: who exactly are going to build these houses when all the builders are busy building houses for the private sector and know they are going to make a living so they can pay their own bills

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    Mute David Grey
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    Jul 16th 2021, 6:47 PM

    If FG/FF/Labour/Greens are in Government they just do whatever makes their pals richer.
    The crisis could be solved incredibly easily.
    Over 20% of housing stock isn’t even occupied.
    Tax the hilt out of them & introduce compulsory purchase orders well below market place if they don’t become occupied within 6 months.
    Give grants for people ( not businesses) to restore buildings that haven’t been occupied in over 5 years.
    The Government just want to keep prices high & landlords happy.

    86
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    Mute Mairead McNabola DeJong
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    Jul 17th 2021, 12:47 AM

    If they are serious about tackling homelessness then introduce law to reduce each tds salary by 1000e per annum per homeless person and then it has a chance of being addressed…will never happen of course, would be like turkeys voting for Christmas…

    17
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    Mute Just Some Guy
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    Jul 16th 2021, 6:26 PM

    The opposition wouldn’t do much better if the roles were reversed because they are all useless.

    41
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    Mute Adam J
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    Jul 16th 2021, 6:36 PM

    @Just Some Guy: That’s just a sound bite though, unless you have some crystal ball that the rest of us aren’t aware of?

    45
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    Mute sean o'dhubhghaill
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    Jul 16th 2021, 6:42 PM

    @Just Some Guy: What would YOU do?

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    Mute talksense
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    Jul 16th 2021, 6:48 PM

    @Just Some Guy: Sinn Fein have a few money trees, so cash no problem

    19
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    Mute Tony Harris
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    Jul 16th 2021, 6:48 PM

    @Just Some Guy: How do YOU know?

    17
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    Mute Brendan McCarron
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    Jul 16th 2021, 7:09 PM

    @Just Some Guy: So will we proclaim Michael D. the King and move to a constitutional monarchy? Or maybe Denis OBrien can lead a patron class of Technocrats where society are only permitted to use their technology or services?

    A puppet state, with Dustin the Turkey as figureheads?

    A military dictatorship under Mary Robinson?

    13
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    Mute Fachtna Roe
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    Jul 17th 2021, 1:13 AM

    @Just Some Guy: Who was in government when the State was wrecked financially?

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    Mute The only INFP in Ireland
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    Jul 16th 2021, 7:36 PM

    It sounds good but they’d make a shambles out of it somehow

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    Mute Edmund Murphy
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    Jul 16th 2021, 8:20 PM

    This sounds like the shameful and expensive conditions of direct provision would just be expanded out to all the inconvenient people who live here.

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    Mute Bramley Hawthorne
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    Jul 17th 2021, 10:25 AM

    Higher prices and rents are not FFG policy but tackling them goes against the interests of those who keep this party afloat and in government. Therefore they will do nothing to address the issue.

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    Mute Eamonn O'Hanrahan
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    Jul 17th 2021, 5:17 PM

    Loads of empty buildings all over the country… I’m sure there are loads of opportunities for anyone willing to move out of the cities…

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    Mute Eamonn O'Hanrahan
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    Jul 17th 2021, 5:17 PM

    Loads of empty buildings all over the country… I’m sure there are loads of opportunities for anyone willing to move out of the cities…

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    Mute Phil Quinn
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    Jul 18th 2021, 9:53 AM

    vulture funds and their need here are a fg mindset…..which unfortunately darragh o’brien has bought into. remove them from the end user market and the impact on rent / house prices will be huge. They were needed 10 years ago to restore the countries balance sheet but surplus to requirements now

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