Has Berkeley Forgotten the Legacy of Catherine Bauer?
That the Bay Area and the nation are in the midst of a housing crisis is undeniable. Pre-coronavirus, the National Alliance to End Homelessness reported that more than a half million people were without shelter on any given night. Public officials seem to be at a loss to help the many thousands now sleeping in our parks and city streets.
This was not always the case. In his “Second Bill of Rights” speech in 1944, President Franklin Roosevelt articulated that every citizen has the right to employment, education, housing and medical care. These values took a hard right turn with the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980. His trickle-down, tax cuts for the rich philosophy has colored policy since that time, no matter if there was a Republican or Democrat in the White House.
Real estate investors recognize the Bay Area as a target of opportunity by erecting profitable market rate housing, in turn displacing residents who cannot afford ever higher rents and mortgages. Proposals to deal with the homeless are at best very temporary and inadequate measures like crowded shelters, a few tent cities, or a handful of tiny houses, or at worst coercive measures to break up and displace encampments.
However, the problem of housing is not insolvable. Just as the management of the coronavirus crisis should not be handled by politicians and corporations, but rather public health scientists and physicians, likewise the housing crisis should be managed by those with public housing expertise and sound, well-funded public policy.
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