Zoning Police and NIMBYs Want To Keep People Homeless
Vineyard owners face $120,000 in fines for letting an employee and his family live on their 60-acre property without a permit.
Vineyard owners face $120,000 in fines for letting an employee and his family live on their 60-acre property without a permit.
Plus: A disappointing first round of "Baby YIMBY" grant awards, President Joe Biden endorses rent control, and House Republicans propose cutting housing spending.
Homeless advocates say the court's decision in Grants Pass v. Johnson gives local governments a blank check to "to arrest or fine those with no choice but to sleep outdoors."
First-place finishes include an investigative piece on egregious misconduct in federal prison, a documentary on homelessness, best magazine columnist, and more.
There may not be a perfect solution to ending homelessness, but there are some clear principles to reduce the friction for those working to do so.
Pirate Wires Editor in Chief Mike Solana discusses the lessons of San Francisco's politics, his vision for the future, and his critiques of libertarianism.
Plus: An interview with Colorado Gov. Jared Polis about the state's blockbuster year for housing reform.
The Institute for Justice has launched a project to reform land use regulation.
Nominated stories include journalism on messy nutrition research, pickleball, government theft, homelessness, and more.
Plus: California's landmark law ending single-family-only zoning is struck down, Austin, Texas, moves forward with minimum lot size reform, and the pro-natalist case for pedestrian infrastructure.
The needless complexity of affordable housing programs are hurting people they're supposed to help.
The Eighth Amendment provides little, if any, protection for the homeless. But courts can help them by striking down exclusionary zoning, which is the major cause of housing shortages that lead to homelessness.
Instead of a hefty real estate tax hike, voters want more logical, long-term solutions to a genuine crisis.
Plus: Evil tech bros want to teach kids math, Utah and Texas tackle DEI, Trump loves Sinéad, and more...
Thanks to "squatters' rights" laws, evicting a squatter can be so expensive and cumbersome that some people simply walk away from their homes.
Bureaucratic ineptitude leads to waste—and more people on the streets.
The judge found that Food Not Bombs' activity was clearly expressive conduct under the First Amendment.
Food Not Bombs activists argue that feeding the needy is core political speech, and that they don't need the city's permission to do it.
Desmond's analysis never goes deeper than his facile assertion that "poverty persists because some wish and will it to."
Plus: Beverly Hills homeowners can't build new pools until their city allows new housing, a ballot initiative would legalize California's newest city, and NIMBYs sue to overturn zoning reform (again).
"I have encountered many things," one witness told the grand jury, "but nothing that put fear into me like that."
L.A., Portland, and other cities are spending millions to house homeless people in outdoor "safe sleeping" sites.
The clients get a confusing maze and a lot of incentives to stay on welfare.
American cities and states passed a lot of good, incremental housing reforms in 2023. In 2024, we'd benefit from trying out some long shot ideas.
Plus: Austin's newly passed zoning reforms could be in legal jeopardy, HUD releases its latest census of the homeless population, and a little-discussed Florida reform is spurring a wave of home construction.
No amount of encampment sweeps and pressure-washing sidewalks is going to solve the problem of thousands of people living on the streets.
Los Angeles voters will decide in March whether to force hotels to report empty rooms to the city and accept vouchers from homeless people.
With a second term, the former president promised to end California's water shortage, clear homeless encampments, and conduct the biggest deportation operation in American history.
The best reforms would correct the real problems of overcriminalization and overincarceration, as well as removing all artificial barriers to building more homes.
Another exercise in nonsense by state lawmakers in California.
Joshua Rohrer not only seeks damages for his violent arrest but also wants the city's anti-panhandling ordinance overturned on First Amendment grounds.
Instead, try making it easier to build more housing!
A town clamps down on distributing clothes, personal care items, and food to the homeless.
Global warming is an issue. But there are other pressing problems that deserve the world's attention.
City Councilmember Curren Price is indicted for steering favors to affordable housing developers who were bribing his wife.
Start by looking at the government policies that have made it worse.
The Department of Justice is now intervening on behalf of the Orange County, California, group's right to distribute food at its resource center in Santa Ana.
Opposing sides of the debate around a New York City subway homicide have found unlikely common ground.
If you don't like San Francisco, that's fine, but don't tell tall tales about it.
Before assaulting her, the cops taunted her for being homeless, she claims.
The plan is unlikely to work, and the government already has a sordid recent history of funneling people into tent cities anyway.
Today, the Lone Star state counts 90 homeless people per every 100,000 residents. In California, the problem is almost five times as bad.
Robert Delgado's family is now seeking damages.
Have we forgotten the era of mass institutionalization?