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Busting homeless myths: Q&A with a California researcher

For more than a decade, California has topped the list of U.S. states with the most people experiencing homelessness. Despite the state putting billions of dollars toward the problem, the number of those without housing keeps ticking up. 

A new landmark survey of California’s homeless population reveals who is homeless in the state, and why – and dispels some common myths along the way. The findings offer clues about how to build better programs to ameliorate the homelessness crisis in the Golden State and across the country.  

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California harbors 30% of the nation’s homeless population. The lead researcher of a landmark study on who is homeless in the state, and why, shares possible solutions.

High housing costs are the leading cause of homelessness, more so than mental health or drug abuse, according to the new study. Other revelations: Ninety percent of the homeless population in California is from California, and they are older – nearly half are over age 50. 

The study provides a half-dozen policy recommendations with an emphasis on closing the gap between income and housing costs.

“We need to move away from some of the mythology around [homelessness] and focus on real solutions,” says Margot Kushel, the study’s principal investigator and director of the Benioff Homelessness & Housing Initiative at the University of California, San Francisco. The Monitor explores this issue in a Q&A with Dr. Kushel. 

For more than a decade, California has topped the list of U.S. states with the most people experiencing homelessness. Despite the state putting billions of dollars toward the problem, the number of those without housing keeps ticking up. But a new landmark study could lead the way out of this morass. 

The recent survey of California’s homeless population reveals who is homeless in the state, and why – and dispels some common myths along the way. The findings offer clues about how to build better programs to ameliorate the homelessness crisis in the Golden State and across the country.  

High housing costs are the leading cause of homelessness, more so than mental health or drug abuse, according to the study. Other revelations: Ninety percent of the homeless population in California is from California, and they are older – nearly half are over age 50. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

California harbors 30% of the nation’s homeless population. The lead researcher of a landmark study on who is homeless in the state, and why, shares possible solutions.

Researchers at the Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative at the University of California, San Francisco surveyed 3,200 people experiencing homelessness, and conducted 365 in-depth interviews, for the largest and most comprehensive examination of homelessness in three decades. 

California harbors 30% of the nation’s homeless population, which reached an all-time high last year. The new study provides a half-dozen policy recommendations with an emphasis on closing the gap between income and housing costs, including increased access to affordable units, expanding rental subsidies, and financial support to prevent housing loss. 

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