As the Los Angeles Times asked the other day in an editorial, "How can a place with 58,000 homeless people continue to function?"
The editorial noted: "As homelessness spreads across Los Angeles County — the official tally shows a 46% increase from 2013 to 2017 — it is drawing two conflicting responses, at times from the same people. There’s sympathy and a desire to help, but there’s also a sense of being invaded and perhaps even endangered — in terms of both physical safety and public health..."
How can a place with 58,000 homeless people continue to function?
Ted Hayes, homeless advocate, said two weeks ago on the Bill Cunningham national radio show from Cincinnati, Ohio, that 95% of the homeless in Los Angeles County are black. What is going on?
TedHayes.US
The editorial noted: "As homelessness spreads across Los Angeles County — the official tally shows a 46% increase from 2013 to 2017 — it is drawing two conflicting responses, at times from the same people. There’s sympathy and a desire to help, but there’s also a sense of being invaded and perhaps even endangered — in terms of both physical safety and public health..."
How can a place with 58,000 homeless people continue to function?
Ted Hayes, homeless advocate, said two weeks ago on the Bill Cunningham national radio show from Cincinnati, Ohio, that 95% of the homeless in Los Angeles County are black. What is going on?
TedHayes.US