Despite laudable efforts by all
levels of government, private individuals, nonprofit
organizations, and charitable foundations to end homelessness,
the number of homeless persons in Washington is unacceptably
high. The state's homeless population, furthermore, includes a
large number of families with children, youth, and employed
persons. The legislature finds that the fiscal and societal
costs of homelessness are high for both the public and private
sectors, and that ending homelessness should be a goal for state
and local government.
The legislature finds that there are many causes of
homelessness, including a shortage of affordable housing; a
shortage of family-wage jobs which undermines housing
affordability; a lack of an accessible and affordable health care
system available to all who suffer from physical and mental
illnesses and chemical and alcohol dependency; domestic violence;
and a lack of education and job skills necessary to acquire
adequate wage jobs in the economy of the twenty-first century.
The support and commitment of all sectors of the statewide
community is critical to the chances of success in ending
homelessness in Washington. While the provision of housing and
housing-related services to the homeless should be administered
at the local level to best address specific community needs, the
legislature also recognizes the need for the state to play a
primary coordinating, supporting, and monitoring role. There
must be a clear assignment of responsibilities and a clear
statement of achievable and quantifiable goals. Systematic
statewide data collection on homelessness in Washington must be a
critical component of such a program enabling the state to work
with local governments to count homeless persons and assist them
in finding housing.
The systematic collection and rigorous evaluation of
homeless data, a search for and implementation through adequate
resource allocation of best practices, and the systematic
measurement of progress toward interim goals and the ultimate
goal of ending homelessness are all necessary components of a
statewide effort to end homelessness in Washington by July 1,
2015.
[2005 c 484 § 1.]