Danny De Gracia: It's Time To Have Uncomfortable Conversations About Homelessness
We need to look at structures, systems and big pictures in approaching our solutions to Hawaii.
November 28, 2022 · 5 min read
About the Author
Danny de Gracia is a resident of Waipahu, a political scientist and an ordained minister.
Danny holds a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and minor in Public Administration from UT San Antonio, 2001; a Master of Arts in聽 Political Science (concentration International Organizations) and minor in Humanities from Texas State University, 2002.
He received his聽Doctor of Theology from Andersonville Theological Seminary in 2013 and Doctor of Ministry in 2014.
Danny received his Ordination from United Fellowship of Christ Ministries International, (Non-Denominational Christian), in 2002.
Danny is also a member of the Waipahu Neighborhood Board, a position he’s held since 2023. His opinions are strictly his own.
Beyond the superficial opulence that is Hawaii鈥檚 visitor industry, the epidemic of homelessness is a problem that local politicians have ignored or put out of view for decades.
It is quite revealing how, when global representatives descended upon Oahu for the 2011 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation conference, Hawaii leaders聽opted to beautify only the places between the airport and resort areas, so as to give the impression our state was better off than it really was.
罢丑颈蝉听聽to governance is the same way we treat homeless people with indifference, acting as if so long as we don鈥檛 鈥渟ee鈥 them encamping in Waikiki or Downtown Honolulu, the problem is solved.
Incoming Democratic Gov. Josh Green is the latest in a string of leaders to promise to do something about the homelessness crisis. Among former Hawaii governors and Honolulu mayors, promising to fix homelessness is something we all say, but somehow never seem to accomplish.
The situation is becoming so intolerable that now homeless people can be found overflowing everywhere, be it the streets of Chinatown or even in suburban areas like Royal Kunia where I live.
If things persist, the time will come when Hawaii government will no longer be able to play a shell game of shuffling homeless from place to place or attempting to put them out of view of affluent tourists or distinguished visitors. We need to stop kicking the can down the road and pretending this is something we don鈥檛 see.
To begin, our community needs to have courageous, uncomfortable conversations about homelessness that allow us to discuss the actual problem.聽聽by saying specious things like 鈥渢he real issue is substance abuse鈥 or 鈥渢his is actually a mental health issue鈥 which,聽聽and makes it seem like the only people to blame for homelessness are homeless individuals themselves.
One of the things that concerns me is the fact that we can never solve homelessness while people want housing to be unaffordable. 鈥淯h, people want housing to be unaffordable?鈥 I鈥檓 talking about the fact that in our bubble economy, there are people who view houses as stores of wealth, and resist any policy that would cause the value of their properties to decrease or lower the market rate for rent.
That鈥檚 the demon that torments us. On one side, , on another side, we get all NIMBY and say affordable housing is fine, so long as it doesn鈥檛 affect my property values. And聽聽if housing were suddenly much cheaper?
Is there more to the housing supply bottleneck than we know? This is something we need to discuss and get to the bottom of.
And then there鈥檚 the giant elephant in the room that no one wants to discuss: Inflation. You can鈥檛 convince me that rising prices of food, clothing, energy, health care and everything else don鈥檛 have a role in putting people out on the streets. But how much of “inflation” is made worse by our own self-inflicted policies?
Hawaii was already a pricey place to live when the economy was good 鈥 and that鈥檚 a subjective assessment of prosperity. Today, Hawaii鈥檚 cost of living is something that crushes people and forces everyone to make tough decisions that sometimes put vital needs in competition with each other. If we want to help homeless people, we have to remedy the conditions that put people out on the streets.
For example, how many people can afford their聽Hawaii vehicle registration fees? How many people can afford to pay skyrocketing electricity bills聽because we鈥檝e bottlenecked energy production to virtue signal on the environment? How many people are paying more than they should on goods and services聽because the General Excise Tax has a snowball effect on prices? All of these things put pressures on people and squeeze a population into poverty.
I鈥檓 so glad we will now have a medical doctor as our governor to address the homelessness problem, because he should naturally be able to understand the public health risks and humanity at stake. Then again, we have an engineer as our outgoing governor, and you see how well he handled infrastructure and big construction projects, so maybe I shouldn鈥檛 get my expectations too high.
But, seeing as how Green won his election in a massive landslide, we have every right to remind him that to whom much is given, much is required. Talk is cheap, but life in Hawaii is very expensive. Times are tough. I fear the day that Oahu starts to look like the Philippines where poverty is rampant and people are packed into shantytowns with no hope, no future, and no way of escape.
We need to look at structures, systems and big pictures in approaching our solutions to Hawaii. We need to start valuing the lives of the people who are most vulnerable and change the trajectory of our community.
We need to stop treating the homeless as invisible, stop making them invisible, and start alleviating the economic pressures for the ordinary person here in the Aloha State.
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ContributeAbout the Author
Danny de Gracia is a resident of Waipahu, a political scientist and an ordained minister.
Danny holds a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and minor in Public Administration from UT San Antonio, 2001; a Master of Arts in聽 Political Science (concentration International Organizations) and minor in Humanities from Texas State University, 2002.
He received his聽Doctor of Theology from Andersonville Theological Seminary in 2013 and Doctor of Ministry in 2014.
Danny received his Ordination from United Fellowship of Christ Ministries International, (Non-Denominational Christian), in 2002.
Danny is also a member of the Waipahu Neighborhood Board, a position he’s held since 2023. His opinions are strictly his own.
Latest Comments (0)
Take a drive on the West Side and view the explosion of tents that have been erected by the homeless. This starts from the Kahe Power Plant to Yokohama Bay. Wait - look away and maybe it will all go away. No - a better plan would be to just talk about it to make it go away. Talk is cheap but still nothing gets done. It something does get done why is the homeless problem growing? Just get out of the capitol and do some leg work to see the seriousness of the homeless problem. It's not just in Waikiki and China Town.
Silversword · 2 years ago
I totally remember the gloss over the city did for that Asia-Pacific conference, it was a complete farce. They paved roads only in Waikiki and up to Diamond Head lookout. Amongst a bevy of deferred maintenance, roads neglected for decades somehow became smooth as glass overnight. Completely opposite of how the city usually runs, we had immediate action, so as not to show the world how third-world Honolulu has become. I balk as much as anyone over our steep government fees and taxes, but I don't mind paying for it, IF, we would get what we paid for. If you're paying top dollar, for a good or service, you should get a top of the line result. Just the fact that public parks can't be kept clean, or free of homeless, so you can actually use them is a clear indication that we should get a tax decrease, or things need to get done, as they where in 2011, only on a grand scale. The approach to homeless needs to change, as all the stuff, aside from the plane ticket home program, the city has tried, has failed. We are going in the wrong direction and unless Green steps up enforcement and clean up, will just be more of the same.
wailani1961 · 2 years ago
-I am more aware now of easy it could be to be marginalized and slide into homelessness.,or dispare-I have been assisting an individual who is visually impaired,misplaced their ID and credit card unable to withdraw bank funds without ID-assisted the individual with online appointment for a replacement ID the process was efficient,if an individual has computer literacy and has good vision-otherwise the process of obtaining an ID is difficult 芒聙聰this should be an important outreach service
Swimmerjean · 2 years ago
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