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New Study Says High Housing Costs, Low Income Push Californians Into Homelessness
KTVU • June 20, 2023
People experiencing homelessness in California are already a vulnerable group, often struggling with poor health, trauma, and deep poverty before losing their housing. Margot Kushel, MD, the study's principal investigator and director of UCSF’s Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative spoke with KTVU news about the key findings and recommendations. Dr. Kushel said, "These are not folks coming into California once they are homeless. They are our neighbors, our friends, our community members."
Adding Affordable Housing Is ‘Essential’ to Fixing California’s Homelessness Crisis, Study Finds
LAist • June 20, 2023
There is a massive shortage of affordable housing for people with very low incomes in California. Only 24 units of housing are affordable for every 100 extremely low income households in California, compared to 33 units nationally. To address the housing crisis, the statewide study on people experiencing homelessness recommend a variety of policies to increase affordable housing and provide more effort to prevent people from becoming homeless. "This is all about the disconnection between people’s incomes and housing costs" said Margot Kushel, MD, a physician who treats homeless people, and the lead investigator of the study for the UCSF Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative.
The Biggest Survey of Homeless Californians in Decades Shows Why so Many are on the Streets
Cal Matters • June 20, 2023
Loss of income is considered the number one factor for why Californians experience homelessness, according to new research from UCSF. The new findings highlight the idea that money is not only the main cause of the homelessness, but also a potential solution. "I think it’s really important to note how desperately poor people are, and how much it is their poverty and the high housing costs that are leading to this crisis" said Margot Kushel, MD, director of the UCSF Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative and principal investigator of the landmark study.
California’s Homelessness Crisis Is Homegrown, Study Finds
KFF Health News • June 20, 2023
California’s homelessness crisis is a homegrown problem that is deepening amid a shortage of affordable housing and emergency shelter, and it’s often the brutal conditions of living on the street that trigger behavioral health problems, such as depression and anxiety, researchers found in a comprehensive study on homelessness. The new findings show that at least 90% of adults who are experiencing homelessness in the state became homeless while living in California. “This idea that homeless people are rushing into California is just not true,” said Margot Kushel, a physician who treats homeless people, and the lead investigator of the study for the UCSF Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative. “There’s so much myth-making around this magnet theory that people who are homeless flock to California, but this is our own problem.”
Lack of Affordable Housing Is Driving Older Californians Into Homelessness
KQED News • June 20, 2023
With modern home prices out of reach for many California residents on fixed incomes, older adults have become the fastest-growing segment of the unhoused population across the state, according to new research from UCSF. California makes up 30% of the nation’s unhoused population and is home to half of all the country’s unsheltered population, according to the landmark study, which looks at how people in the Golden State become unhoused, experience homelessness, and exit homelessness. Nearly half of all unhoused adults in the study were age 50 or older, and Black and Native American residents were “dramatically overrepresented,” the study shows. “The results of the study confirm that far too many Californians experience homelessness because they cannot afford housing,” said Margot Kushel, MD, director of the UCSF Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative and principal investigator of the landmark study.
Column: The Truth About Our Homelessness Crisis: As Californians Age, They Are Priced Out
Los Angeles Times • June 20, 2023
Public policy and common perception have long tied the road to homelessness with mental illness and drug addiction. But a new study—the largest and most comprehensive investigation of California’s homeless population in decades—found another cause is propelling much of the crisis on our streets: the precarious poverty of the working poor, especially Black and brown seniors. “These are old people losing housing,” said Margot Kushel, MD, the lead investigator on the study and the director of the UCSF Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative.
A New Study Paints a Different Picture of Homelessness in California
New York Times • June 20, 2023
There are a lot of myths about people who are homeless in California: They’re from another state. They don’t want a job. They don’t want a home. A new study published by the University of California, San Francisco, paints a different picture, one of people who were working and living in poverty in the state until they suddenly lost their homes. Not knowing where to turn, they ended up on the street, where they endure violence and poor health as they try for years to climb back to stability. “Something goes wrong, and then everything else falls apart,” said the study’s lead researcher, Margot Kushel, MD, director of the UCSF Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative. “Everything in their life gets worse when they lose their housing: their health, their mental health, their substance use.”
New Study Says High Housing Costs, Low Income Push Californians Into Homelessness
AP News • June 20, 2023
Homeless people in California are already a vulnerable group, often struggling with poor health, trauma and deep poverty before they lose their housing, according to a new study on adult homelessness. The study attempts to capture a comprehensive picture of how people become homeless in California, and what impeded their efforts at finding permanent housing. Researchers at the UCSF Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative hope that the study will strengthen public support for policies that focus on offering housing and emergency rental assistance—rather than policies emphasizing punishment or stigma. “People are homeless because their rent is too high. And their options are too few. And they have no cushion,” said Margot Kushel, MD, UCSF's BHHI director and lead investigator. “And it really makes you wonder how different things would look if we could solve that underlying problem.”
California Homelessness: Largest Study in Decades Reveals ‘Fundamental Problem’ Behind Issue
San Francisco Chronicle • June 20, 2023
California’s homeless population is predominantly made up of people who lived in the state before losing their housing, with nearly half older than 50 and a disproportionate number who are Black and indigenous, according to a new statewide study. “We have got to bring housing costs down, and we’ve got to bring incomes up,” said Margot Kushel, MD, the study’s principal investigator and director of UCSF’s Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative. “We need to solve the fundamental problem—the rent is just too high.”
California Statewide Study Investigates Causes and Impacts of Homelessness
UCSF News • June 20, 2023
The University of California, San Francisco Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative (BHHI) has released the largest representative study of homelessness in the United States since the mid-1990s, providing a comprehensive look at the causes and consequences of homelessness in California and recommending policy changes to shape programs in response. The California Statewide Study of People Experiencing Homelessness (CASPEH) used surveys and in-depth interviews to develop a clear portrait of homelessness in California, where 30% of the nation’s homeless population and half of the unsheltered population live.