Hawaii’s persistent homelessness crisis will be near the top of the agenda for the 2018 Legislative session, highlighted by more than a dozen bills to create legal encampments known as “safe zones.”
Lawmakers enthusiastic about the idea envision the areas as a refuge for people who they say are endlessly being shuffled around in sweeps.
Meanwhile, advocates for the homeless are focusing their efforts this session on securing funding for programs that move people from the streets into permanent housing.
Those groups take a measured approach to the idea of safe zones.
鈥淭hat is a very tricky subject for us,鈥 Pedro Haro of said of safe zones. 鈥淲e have concerns about how it would be implemented but we are open to learning.鈥
PHOCUSED works to 鈥減rotect the interest of Hawaii鈥檚 most vulnerable people,鈥 according to its mission statement.
听 by Rep. Tom Brower, who chairs the House Housing Committee, would create 鈥渉omeless villages鈥 of up to 100 鈥渉omes鈥 at the Sand Island Recreation Area, Campbell Industrial Park and the state land near the Waianae Boat Harbor.
鈥淭he intention is just to create smaller dwellings that people will be willing to stay in,鈥 Brower said. 鈥淚t could be a shipping container, it could be what we call igloos, but some sort of stationary structure.鈥
Land near the Waianae Boat Harbor is already home to听an established homeless community known as听Puuhonua O Waianae.
When the Hawaii Interagency Council on Homelessness met in October to discuss safe zones, members of the Waianae encampment听argued their community should be considered a legal encampment. Their idea appears to have gained traction this year with that would exempt people on the land from criminal trespassing laws.
Hawaii Island Mayor Harry Kim听has plans underway to transform vacant land in Kona into a homeless village. A听 would create two sites on the Big Island, each with 25 鈥渉omes,鈥 in Hilo and Kona.
In his safe zone , House Human Services Committee Chair Rep. John Mizuno referred to the areas as 鈥渙hana zones.”
measure would allow homeless families to camp on state land in exchange for working on park maintenance.
Yet听 offers general guidelines for a safe zone and leaves it up to the 听to add details.
Other measures related to homelessness include four bills听that would create mobile clinics, or vans that provide medical services to homeless people. Those and other measures aim to curb the frequent use of emergency rooms by some homeless people.
A听 that would waive the $10 fee for birth certificates might make things easier for outreach workers who spend a lot of time getting their clients ID cards and birth certificates.
Keep Funding Programs That Work
Gov. David Ige called homelessness the greatest challenge to Hawaii in his State of the State address.听
His administration鈥檚 legislative package doesn鈥檛 include bills related to homelessness but his supplemental budget request asks for $15 million to continue running homeless programs at their current level for the听fiscal year starting July 1.
The Department of Human Services would spend that money on outreach, rapid re-housing and Housing First, a program aimed at identifying chronically homeless people and quickly moving them into permanent, supportive housing.
鈥淚f that program is not being funded again there鈥檚 a risk of people falling back into homelessness,鈥 said Scott Morishige, the state homelessness coordinator.
PHOCUSED and , a coalition of service providers, are asking lawmakers to increase the funding to homeless programs.
鈥淔or many years the homelessness rate in Hawaii was going up and up and up. Last year we finally started to turn the corner. We really think part of that is investing more in these proven effective homeless programs,鈥 said Gavin Thornton, advocacy committee chair for Partners in Care.
Last year’s annual point-in-time count found a 9 percent drop in the state’s homeless population, the first decrease in eight years.
Morishige said the administration supports efforts to increase social service funding, 鈥渁s long as it doesn鈥檛 put other resources in jeopardy.鈥
In light of limited state resources, a few measures aim to provide more state money to address homelessness. Among them:
- – Increases the general excise and use tax by 0.5 percentage point for six years and dedicates revenues to address homelessness.
- – Authorizes transient accommodation brokers to collect taxes from short-term rental operators, with some of the revenue dedicated to homelessness initiatives.
- and – allocates funds from the transient accommodation tax to address homelessness in tourist and resort areas.
- – Establishes a three-year pilot project to create a state lottery and dedicate revenues to homelessness issues.
GET IN-DEPTH REPORTING ON HAWAII鈥橲 BIGGEST ISSUES
Support Independent, Unbiased News
Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. When you give, your donation is combined with gifts from thousands of your fellow readers, and together you help power the strongest team of investigative journalists in the state.