Los Angeles Project 50 shows it costs more to leave vulnerable neighbors on the street than it does to house them permanently
TweetA research authority with the County of Los Angeles has released its cost-effectiveness findings on Project 50, the County’s ambitious 2007 effort to move its most long-term, vulnerable homeless people into permanent housing. The report compared a cohort of long-term homeless individuals who did not participate in Project 50 to those who did. Its conclusion may not surprise many of you: it costs more to leave vulnerable neighbors on the street than it does to house them permanently. Some of the highlights:
- Between 2008 and 2010, Project 50 cost the county $3.045 million but generated $3.284 million in estimated savings. That is equivalent to a $4,774 surplus for each apartment provided. This is a 7.2% return on investment over 2 years.
- Incarceration costs for program participants fell 28% in their first year in Project 50, compared to a 42% increase for non-participants.
- Medical costs for Project 50participants fell 68% in their first year, compared to a 37% drop for the control group.
Read the Los Angeles Times article about Project 50 here.
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