OF THE
TIMES

The report by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) released Friday has laid bare the problem of rising homelessness that has been plaguing an array of states, but none of them has experienced a crisis of the proportions that one of the wealthiest states in the country, California, is now facing.Why isn't Silicon Valley stepping in to help solve a problem they had a large hand in creating? 3 billion to create SOME sort of solution is peanuts to them.
21,306 more people have been homeless on at least a single night in California than last year, which amounts to an increase of 16.4 percent, the report says. California's "contribution" to the report has effectively rendered null the progress noted around the country, as the homeless population has plummeted in 29 states and Washington, DC.
Overall, HUD reported an increase of 14,885 people from last year, which brings the total in the US to about 568,000.
The primary reason for the spike in homelessness on the West Coast is that the cost of housing there remains "extremely high," Carson said. California is also home to a peculiar phenomenon known as 'working homeless', brought forth by exorbitant rent prices fueled by the burgeoning tech industry. The inability to afford rent drives not only the vulnerable population, such as veterans and single mothers, to the streets, but also employees who are not well off enough to cover the costs of housing.

Comment: For shady Russian mobster-types, an Israeli passport can be a very useful thing to have:
WikiLeaks: U.S. worried Israel becoming 'the promised land' for organized crime