Today, the Biden-Harris Administration released All In: The Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness, which sets a bold but achievable goal to reduce homelessness 25 percent by 2025. The plan is the most ambitious effort by any administration to prevent people from becoming homeless, address inequities that disproportionately impact underserved communities, including people of color and other marginalized groups, and help cities and states reduce unsheltered homelessness. To reach that goal, All In outlines new strategies to prevent homelessness and increase the supply of housing with supportive services. These strategies build on the proven “Housing First” model— an approach where housing is the first step to a better, safer, and healthier life and serves as a platform for providing services so that people can stay housed. All In also sets the foundation for new initiatives, including one to reduce unsheltered homelessness in a cohort of geographically diverse communities that is being announced today.
In the plan, President Biden calls on state and local governments to set their own goals for 2025 and to use All In as a blueprint for addressing homelessness in their communities. “My plan offers a roadmap for not only getting people into housing but also ensuring that they have access to the support, services, and income that allow them to thrive,” said President Biden. “It is a plan that is grounded in the best evidence and aims to improve equity and strengthen collaboration at all levels.”
All In builds on the Obama-Biden Administration efforts to prevent and reduce homelessness, including the use of proven strategies that led to a significant drop in homelessness between 2010 and 2016. Unfortunately, between 2016 and the beginning of the pandemic, some of those gains were reversed due to a lack of focus on evidence-based strategies and the number of people experiencing homelessness increased 6%. New data released today by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)[PECE1] shows that further increases in homelessness were largely avoided despite the economic crisis created by the COVID–19 pandemic –in large part because of the Biden administration’s robust response, including critical assistance in the American Rescue Plan and a historic economic recovery. According to HUD data, 582,462 people were experiencing homelessness on a single night in January 2022 – a slight .3% increase since 2020.
Because the Administration kept the national eviction moratorium in place until August 2021 and support from the American Rescue Plan, evictions were prevented and many vulnerable families were able to stay in their homes. The Emergency Rental Assistance program from the American Rescue Plan delivered over 8 million payments to provide rental or utility assistance to individuals at risk for eviction or housing instability. And, the expanded Child Tax Credit helped drive child poverty to record lows in 2021. As a result, eviction filings remained more than 20 percent below historic averages in the 12 months following the expiration of the national eviction moratorium.
In addition, the House America initiative, which leverages federal support for state and local governments provided through the American Rescue Plan, is on track to find permanent housing for more than 100,000 people experiencing homelessness and add more than 20,000 units of affordable housing into the pipeline by the end of December. The Department of Veterans Affairs also recently announced that it will likely exceed its goal of providing 38,000 permanent housing placements to homeless veterans by the end of 2022. President Biden’s Housing Supply Action Plan announced federal actions designed to create more affordable rental housing that will help close the housing supply gap, which is driving up costs and making it more challenging for Americans to find housing.
Despite
overall homelessness remaining relatively flat, the number of people
experiencing unsheltered homelessness—including people living in cars
and tents—rose by 3%. This recent rise in unsheltered homelessness stems
from a number of factors, including: decades of growing income
inequality; rising rents and limited housing supply; the pandemic’s
impact on shelters and other services; criminalization of homelessness
that makes it harder for people to find housing and jobs due to arrest
and conviction records; and inadequate access to health care (including
mental health and substance use treatment) and job training.
Ending
unsheltered homelessness will require a coordinated effort to promote
healthy and safe communities where all can live in dignity. Effective
practices, such as using an emergency management approach to resolve
encampments by rapidly moving people into housing with services and
supports, are starting to emerge as national models. Although each
community is different, and there is no one-size-fits-all solution,
these practices could be successfully replicated in communities facing
the growing challenge of unsheltered homelessness.
The White
House and the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness (USICH) are
announcing a new initiative dedicated to partnering with state and local
governments to improve and accelerate their efforts to get people off
the streets and into homes. Nineteen federal agencies commit to
accelerate implementation of effective state and local strategies that
target unsheltered homelessness.
Early
next year, the White House and the U.S. Interagency Council on
Homelessness will begin working with a cohort of cities and states that
will receive:
- Full-time federal assistance: A community response team will develop and execute a new local strategy over two years to reduce unsheltered homelessness. The team will be made up of a full-time lead and part-time federal program experts, including a USICH senior regional advisor, who will work in partnership with elected and local leaders, homeless service providers, and people who have prior or current experience of homelessness.
- Maximum flexibility and regulatory relief: The community response teams will identify problems and USICH will lead a task force to identify solutions and minimize red tape and bureaucratic processes.
- Technical support and additional capacity: The federal government will help participating communities utilize and analyze all available data.
- Volunteer support: Agencies will provide volunteers for outreach to people experiencing homelessness and access to peer-to-peer networks to exchange best practices and approaches.
USICH will lead implementation of the overall initiative and will establish a Federal Response Leadership Team to coordinate the overall response, develop tools and guidance, track progress and report to its Council leadership, and elevate issues that cannot be resolved.
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This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot' for Monday:
Monday, December 19, 2022. Iraq has an athlete receiving worldwide
attention, did Joe Biden lie about Iraq and Afghanistan, more
antiquities returned to Iraq, we continue our coverage of the hearing on
the rise in hate and violence aimed at LGBTQ+ individuals, and much
more.
Starting in the United States:
US House Rep David Cicilline: I want to begin by reminding everyone here -- especially my Republican colleagues across the aisle -- what this hearing is about. It's called "The Rise of Anti-LGBTQI+ Extremism and Violence in the United States." And despite this hearing title, colleagues on both sides of the aisle have obviously condemned the attack on Club Q and violence more broadly, it's obviously more telling that the Republicans on this Committee -- with one exception -- did not ask any questions about anti LGBTQI+ extremism and violence. Instead, they've only wanted to talk about crime broadly or hate crimes against other communities. I'm disappointed, yet not surprised that a few weeks after a killer murdered five people at an LGBTQI+ nightclub, Republicans on this Committee could not bring themselves to discuss anti-LGBTQI+ violence and its causes with our witnesses. Our community is scared -- terrified that we'll be attacked going to the doctor, scared that we'll be attacked going to night clubs, scared that we'll be attacked for living as our authentic selves and, unfortunately, this fear is well grounded. The attack at Club Q is only the latest high profile attack against our community. In 2021, 20% of all reported hate crimes were motivated by hate based on sexual orientation or gender identity. Let me repeat that: Despite the fact that LGBTQI+ people make up roughly 7% of the population, 20% -- or more than 1 in 5 reported hate crimes -- last year were motivated by sexual orientation or gender identity bias. My colleagues want to talk about anything but this anti-LGBTQI+ violence and their rhetoric that has contributed to it. This violence is impacting both LGBTQI+ individuals and their families.
He is exactly right. It was shocking to watch the hearing take place, know the title and witness one Republican Committee member after another practice Florida's "Don't Say Gay or Trans" throughout the hearing.
The stupidity and hatred was on full display from the GOP side. It reminded me of a scene in COMING HOME. Jane Fonda's Sally is volunteering at a VA hospital while her husband is serving in Vietnam. She tries to speak with other officer wives about what's going on in the hospital and what the veterans are needing. They have no interest at all. And they certainly don't want reality in their little newsletter.
The Republicans on the Committee turned their heads to reality just like the officers' wives in that film.
We're continuing our coverage of last week's House Oversight and Reform Committee hearing. US House Rep Carolyn Maloney presided over the hearing -- she's the Chair of the Committee, James Comer is the Ranking Member. The hearing was held due to the rise in violence aimed at the LGBTQ+ community which includes last month's Club Q shooting. The shooting left five people dead:
- Daniel Davis Aston, 28
- Kelly Loving, 40
- Ashley Paugh, 35
- Derrick Rump, 38
- Raymond Green Vance, 22
For other coverage of the hearing, see Thursday's "Iraq snapshot" and Friday's "Iraq snapshot" and Ruth's "Allies are needed (House Oversight Committee)," Kat's "Respect for Marriage Act is only step one, more needed," "Cori Bush speaks some truth in Committee hearing," Trina's "LGBTQ youth need a safe nation (Dr. Jessie Pocock)," Mike's "Texas, come claim your idiot (House Oversight Committee)," Stan's "Shontel Brown, Chris Wallace, Wonder Woman" and Rebecca's "glenn greenwald wants to be the biggest bitch there is ."
You can stream the hearing below.
Testifying before the Committee, Matthew Haynes, founding owner of Club Q:
We have received hundreds of hate mail and e-mails. In the interest of time, I am not reading them all to ou. But here are a few examples. "I woke up to the wonderful news that 5 mentally unstable f**gots and lesbians and 18 injured. The only thing that I'm mad about is that the f**gots had courage to subdue the wonderful killer. I hope more shootings happen again. Have a blessed day." "The shooter was doing God's work, 5 less f**s not enough. Those that stopped him are the devil." "All gays should die." I could go on, but you get the point. I spoke Sunday with our hero Army veteran Rich Fierro and his wife Jessica. They told me they and their daughter have been receiving hate messages on their phones, e-mail and at their business. Most with the same basic theme: Condemning them to hell for stopping the shooter.
Brandon Wolf survived the 2016 attack on the Pulse Nightclub in Florida. He told the Committee:
For decades, we told young people that "it gets better." Those of us who grew up in schools where we had to hide to survive or face violence and abuse were told the tides were shifting and the world would finally let us simply be. And for a while, it did get better. But we are witnessing a violent backlash to that progress and I'm here to say we must recommit to the work of making America better than those who have placed a political target on the LGBTQ community, on trans youth and families, on our access to life-saving health care and who now seek to erase our existence from every school and every library. Being LGBTQ in America, in 2022, means looking over your shoulder before holding hands with someone you love. It means watching as your very humanity is litigated on every cable news network and across each social media platform, wondering which faces around the Thanksgiving dinner table will have been indoctrinated and emboldened to challenge your right to exist. It means wondering when those hateful words will come from someone with an assault weapon and the directions to the bar you and your friends are in seeking refuge from a world that has been made more dangerous by extremist rhetoric of extremists and opportunistic politicians.
These are real issues. It was surprising to watch how many on the left ignored these hearings. Less surprising was to watch self-loathing gay men dismiss and attack the hearings. Less surprising because that's what self-hatred prompts.
Some only identify as gay when they're pretending to care about their sick husband. But, let's be honest, if they really cared about their husband, they wouldn't be Tweeting and doing YOUTUBE and RUMBLE political commentaries or, for that matter, announcing that they didn't want kids (despite now having two). No, if they really cared about their sick husband who might die, they'd have their ass at the hospital every damn day.
They fake their way through life. They're pathetic.
The hearing was about reality. Molly Sprayregen (LGBTQ+ NATION) reports:
On Thursday, the Congressional LGBTQ+ Equality Caucus released its Inaugural Report on the Conditions of LGBTQ+ People in the United States.
The report was spearheaded by the caucus’s chair, Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI), with the intention “to educate the public on the significant disparities LGBTQ+ people experience and serve as a benchmark by which the country can judge its progress on LGBTQ+ rights in the years to come,” according to a press release.
The report examines LGBTQ+ people in the areas of education, economic security, health care, and housing.
Unsurprisingly, it shows how LGBTQ+ people face disproportionate challenges in every single area.
It highlights, for example, a GLSEN survey that found 74.2% of K-12 trans students said they feel unsafe in school due to their gender, and that 76.1% of LGBTQ+ students who attended any portion of school in-person during the 2021-2022 school year endured verbal harassment due to their LGBTQ+ identity.
It also cites a 2020 Trevor Project survey that found 28% of LGBTQ+ youth between the ages of 13 and 24 had been homeless or experienced housing insecurity at some point.
The list of challenges and disparities goes on.
“LGBTQ+ people deserve the same opportunities to thrive as their non-LGBTQ+ peers,” said Rep. Cicilline in a statement announcing the report. “The data presented in this report shows, however, that the lived experiences of LGBTQ+ people are vastly different than those of our straight and cisgender neighbors.”
“With the increasing rise of violence against the LGBTQ+ community and the growing number of anti-LGBTQ+ bills being introduced in state legislatures and in Congress, it is especially critical that all levels of government work to ensure true lived equality for LGBTQ+ people.”
“This includes by finally enacting the Equality Act into law to ensure comprehensive explicit nondiscrimination protections for LGBTQ+ people. Our ability to thrive in this country should not be limited due to our sexual orientation or gender identity. The fight for equality in this country will not be over until we address all of these disparities and create true equity for the LGBTQ+ community.”
More reality? Saturday, David Klepper (AP) reported:
In the days after a gunman killed five people at a gay nightclub in Colorado last month, much of social media lit up with the now familiar expressions of grief, mourning and disbelief.
But on some online message boards and platforms, the tone was celebratory. “I love waking up to great news,” wrote one user on Gab, a platform popular with far-right groups. Other users on the site called for more violence.
The hate isn’t limited to fringe sites.
On Twitter, YouTube and Facebook, researchers and LGBTQ advocates have tracked an increase in hate speech and threats of violence directed at LGBTQ people, groups and events, with much of it directed at transgender people.
The content comes after conservative lawmakers in several states introduced dozens of anti-LGBTQ measures and amid a wave of threats targeting LGBTQ groups, as well as hospitals, health care workers, libraries and private businesses that support them.
“I don’t think people understand the state of danger that we’re living in right now,” said Jay Brown, senior vice president at the Human Rights Campaign and a transgender man. “A lot of that is happening online, and online threats are turning into threats of real violence offline.”
Hospitals in Boston, Pittsburgh, Phoenix, Washington, D.C., and other cities have received bomb threats and other harassing messages after misleading claims spread online about transgender care programs.
In Tennessee, masked members of a white supremacist group showed up recently at a holiday charity event at a bookstore because the evening’s entertainment included a drag performer. An upcoming holiday party at an adults-only gay nightclub scheduled for Friday was also the subject of threats. The party’s theme? Ugly Christmas sweaters.
“And they’re still coming after us? It’s just straight up bigotry and hatred at this point,” said Jessica Patterson, one of the organizers of the event, who noted that groups calling for violence against LGBTQ groups often espouse other bigotries too. “They just have to hate someone.”
Nolan King and Ken Hathaway (YAHOO NEWS) report:
At UFC Fight Night 216, Albazi (16-1 MMA, 4-0 UFC) picked up his first TKO win in seven years when he finished promotional newcomer Alessandro Costa (12-3 MMA, 0-1 UFC) with a slick uppercut and follow-up punches at the UFC Apex.
After the fight, Albazi hammered home that he’s not playing around. He considers himself ready for the elite of the elite at 125 pounds.
“I wanted to come here to show not the same Amir,” Albazi told MMA Junkie and other reporters at a post-fight news conference. “I’ve already submitted two blackbelts before, so I wanted to put on a really good performance to show I’m a different level than these guys and that I’m ready for the top five. I’m ready for that belt. I hope you guys saw that. I hope you saw that I have knockout power, too. I can put people to sleep standing up, and I can put people to sleep on the ground. Just keep them coming, and I’ll keep taking them out.”
He made the astonishing claims as he spoke to war veterans in Delaware and also told them a previously unheard story of how his uncle Frank Biden won a Purple Heart medal for his service during the Battle of the Bulge in 1944 during World War II.
There appeared to be some glaringly inaccurate key details in his tale - including there being no evidence of such an honor ever being awarded.
Biden went on to explain how his father urged him have his brother, Frank, be awarded the prestigious medal normally given to those wounded or killed while serving, on or after 5 April 1917, with the U.S. military.
The president claimed all of this happened when he had been elected as vice president, in 2008. However, his uncle Frank had passed away in 1999 and his own father died in 2002 making such a conversation impossible.
So we got him the Purple Heart. He had won it in the Battle of the Bulge. And I remember he came over to the house, and I came out, and he said, “Present it to him, okay?” We had the family there.
I said, “Uncle Frank, you won this. And I want to…” He said, “I don’t want the damn thing.” (Laughter.) No, I’m serious. He said, “I don’t want it.” I said, “What’s the matter, Uncle Frank? You earned it.” He said, “Yeah, but the others died. The others died. I lived. I don’t want it.”
Just like a generation — this generation in Vietnam — excuse me, in — in Iraq.
One of the last times I flew into Iraq, I went up in the cockpit.
And they fly me with what’s called a “Silver Bullet” when you fly the
President, and there’s a special container in the plane they stick you
in.
And I went up with a — I went up with a group, and I
was telling this to Beau’s father-in-law and my grade-school friend
who’s sitting right there — and he’s taping it all because he’s going to
use it against me here — (laughter) — Ronnie Olivere.
D.A. Bragg Announces Return of Antiquities Looted from the Iraqi Museum in 2003
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg, Jr., announced the return of antiquities to the People of Iraq that were looted from the Iraq Museum in 2003. The pieces were smuggled into the United States, where they were purchased through various galleries and online auctions by a private collector between 2004-2009. The antiquities were returned during a repatriation ceremony attended by Iraq’s Charge D’Affaires Dr. Salwan Sinjar and U.S. Homeland Security Investigations (“HSI”) Assistant Special Agent in Charge Tom Acocella.
“These stunningly preserved artifacts are just a few of the many antiquities looted from the Iraq Museum. Thanks to the thoroughness of our investigators and prosecutors, we discovered that these pieces were for sale online without the proper documentation. We are pleased that they are finally returning home to the museum where they rightfully belong,” said District Attorney Bragg.
“I’m grateful for the work by the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office for its efforts to repatriate these precious, historic antiquities to Iraq,” said Dr.Salwan Sinjari, Iraqi ChargĂ© d’Affairs to the United States. “These pieces belong to Iraq—and belong in Iraq—and now they will help the Iraqi people better understand and appreciate our own history and culture with this connection to the past. This is another example of the longstanding cooperation, friendship, and partnership between Iraq and United States.”
“Homeland Security Investigations is proud to stand with our partners from the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office and the Republic of Iraq to return these ancient cylinder and stamp seals. These items were looted by thieves taking advantage of the confusion of war to turn a profit with total disregard to their cultural value,” said Ivan J. Arvelo, Special Agent in Charge of Homeland Security Investigations in New York. “These artifacts date from as far back as 2700 B.C.E. and were a critical part of everyday life in the ancient world. Now, they will return to their rightful home.”
The pieces returned include four cylinder seals and three stamp seals dating to between the Mesopotamian (2700-2500 B.C.E.) and the Neo-Babylonian (612-539 B.C.E.) periods. These seals were an important part of daily life and are engraved with figurative scenes. The carved illustrations on these seven seals depict images of gods, human figures, animals, and other scenes of worship. Each unique seal served as a personal signature to guarantee authenticity of either an individual or a business, and appear today almost exactly as they would have looked to the ancient people who used them.
In March of 2021, one of the stamp seals was listed for sale in an online auction, leading this Office to begin an investigation into its origin and provenance. Our investigation revealed that the consignor of this stamp seal was in possession of six additional seals that were all purchased shortly after the looting of the Iraq Museum and lacked any documentation confirming that they had entered the art market prior to 2003.
The investigation was conducted by Assistant District Attorney Matthew Bogdanos, Chief of the Antiquities Trafficking Unit; Assistant District Attorney James Edwards-Lebair; Supervising Investigative Analyst Apsara Iyer, Investigative Analyst Giuditta Giardini; and Special Agent Bobby Fromkin of Homeland Security Investigations.
In 2022, the office has returned 892 antiquities, valued at over $104 million to 15 countries. Since its founding, the Antiquities Trafficking Unit has returned over 2,400 antiquities, valued at over $200 million, to 22 countries.
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The following sites updated: