Elias: Proof of California Prop. 1’s worth will be in its performance

California Proposition 1’s final narrow passage more than two weeks after the March 5 elections raises one very basic question: Could it help solve homelessness or merely be another financial boondoggle helping a few but leaving the crisis in the streets essentially unsolved?

First, there is no doubt this measure can help some of California’s approximately 180,000 unhoused people. Its $6.4 billion cost is planned to provide more than 11,000 new treatment beds for people with serious mental and emotional problems, reinforce the treatment they can already get in some counties through the relatively new and unproven Community Assistance, Recovery and Empowerment (CARE) court system and possibly reduce some of the homelessness now so visible on streets and parks all around California.

However, some informed estimates held during this winter’s campaign that it could not solve more than 2% of the problem. That raises an obvious question: If this estimate is correct, is that enough of an improvement to justify the $310 million the state’s general fund will likely pay in each of the next 30 years to repay the bonds?

The money is to be added onto the $10 billion to $13 billion now distributed each year to counties for mental health care and drug and alcohol treatment. Roughly one-third of that money comes from a tax on those with yearly incomes higher than $1 million that’s been levied for this purpose since 2005. That tax would continue under Prop. 1, so there will be no substitution of bond money for tax funds, and the new money should strictly be an add-on.

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With about 70% of Californians listing homelessness as California’s biggest unsolved problem, reason to vote for this proposition was plentiful, but it’s fate was uncertain for weeks after Election Day. The new bond’s proceeds might seem like a drop in the bucket, though, considering that about 47% of today’s homeless people are said to be afflicted with mental or emotional illness, with another 150,000 others in similar difficulty now housed in prisons at a cost of about $130,000 per year.

Some experts said during the Prop. 1 campaign that the urgency of the problem makes every dollar coming in constructive. Maybe not, though, if that gives voters the sense they’ve just done something important, causing them to become frustrated with government when they see the bonds solving only a bit of the crisis.

For sure, the mental illness problem is severe. For one measure, there’s $217 million spent just by the Golden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transportation District on adding steel netting to prevent suicides by people jumping from that landmark span.

Californians who voted for this measure were probably correct to do it, even if it couldn’t by itself solve homelessness or mental health crises. Every dent in the problem represents improvement in the quality of life for many who have been unhoused.

Part of Prop. 1’s background was the realization that one in every 20 California adults now lives with serious mental illness and that the more treatment beds are available, the more likely some progress can be made treating those who need it. At the same time, one in 13 California children of school age suffers serious emotional disturbance and one in 10 Californians has some sort of substance abuse disorder.

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One little publicized part of Prop. 1 speaks to this last issue, allowing a small percentage of current mental health spending to be used against substance abuse. Since substance abuse from alcoholism to opioid dependence can lead straight into to mental illness, this may help with mental illness and chemical dependence.

It all amounts to a measure of how Californians are still paying for the single biggest error made by Ronald Reagan, who as governor in the 1960s and ’70s engineered the closing of most of this state’s mental hospitals, which were never replaced.

Reagan planned to set up smaller halfway houses to replace those institutions, letting recovering mental illness patients ease back into society while still getting treatment. Those homes never materialized, and homelessness has proliferated steadily ever since.

If Prop. 1, combined with CARE courts, can solve even a small percentage of today’s problems, it would be a positive. If it’s too little and doesn’t accomplish much, though then now that it has narrowly passed it will go down as a waste of public money. The proof, as usual, will be in the performance.

Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com, and read more of his columns online at californiafocus.net.

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