Friday, July 25, 2025 - U.S. President Donald Trump has signed an executive order that seeks to overhaul the way the U.S. manages homelessness.
The order signed Thursday, July 24, calls for changes to
make it easier for states and cities to remove outdoor encampments and get
people into mental health or addiction treatment. That includes involuntary
civil commitment for those "who are a risk to themselves or others."
"Endemic vagrancy, disorderly behavior, sudden
confrontations, and violent attacks have made our cities unsafe," the
order states.
The White House action also seeks to shift federal funding
away from longtime policies that sought to get homeless people into housing
first, and then offer treatment. Instead, it calls for prioritizing money for
programs that require sobriety and treatment, and for cities that enforce
homeless camping bans.
It also directs the departments of Health and Human
Services, Housing and Urban Development, and Transportation to assess federal
grant programs and prioritize places that actively crack down on illicit drug
use, urban camping and loitering, and urban squatting "to the maximum
extent permitted by law."
Critics said the sweeping action does nothing to solve
homelessness, and could make it worse.
"This executive order is forcing people to choose
between compassionate data driven approaches like housing, or treating it like
a crime to have a mental illness or be homeless," said Jesse Rabinowitz
with the National Homelessness Law Center
"Institutionalizing people with mental illness,
including those experiencing homelessness, is not a dignified, safe, or
evidence-based way to serve people's needs," Ann Oliva with the National
Alliance to End Homelessness said in a statement.
Trump's order also calls on the Substance Abuse and Mental
Health Services Administration to defund addiction programs that include
"harm reduction." This is certain to disrupt frontline health care
programs that work to reduce overdoses from fentanyl and other street drugs.
Thursday's White House action builds on a landmark Supreme
Court ruling last year that said cities can punish people for sleeping outside
even if they have nowhere else to go. Since the high court ruling, well over
100 cities across more than two dozen states have passed or strengthened bans
on homeless camping.
0 Comments