“When the city misses a homelessness benchmark deadline like those above, which occurs regularly, officials simply extend the target date and throw more money at the problem, with no accountability for failure,” Independent Institute Senior Fellow and Director of the Center on Entrepreneurial Innovation Lawrence McQuillan explained in the book, Beyond Homeless: Good Intentions, Bad Outcomes, Transformative Solutions. “The logical conclusion is that ineffectiveness is the result of design problems, not awareness problems or money problems.”The people of California deserve better. If the government cannot track its own spending on homelessness programs, then it cannot effectively evaluate programs and service providers, much less use this information to direct funding to where it will do the most good and root out waste, fraud and abuse. This is unfair to the people experiencing homelessness in need of effective services, and unfair to taxpayers who see yet more of their money wasted with little to show for it.

Adam B. Summers is a columnist, economist and public policy analyst. He is the author of the HJTA report, “Broken promises: The failure of homelessness spending in California,” and editor and coauthor of the Independent Institute book, Beyond Homeless: Good Intentions, Bad Outcomes, Transformative Solutions.

Jon Coupal is president of the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association.