by Laurel Duggan

 

King County, Seattle, has poured $230 million into homeless housing projects in the area since 2020, but half of those properties are vacant and they have yet to meet even half their goal of housing 1,600 homeless people, according to The Seattle Times.

The county is still buying up hotels and apartment buildings with funding from a special property sales tax passed in 2020 in order to house the homeless, according to The Seattle Times. The county is currently purchasing a 35-unit apartment building in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood to house queer, transgender, black, Native people and other people of color in order to meet equity goals: 7% of the county population is black and so is one quarter of the homeless population.

“That’s within our initiative to annually reduce racial disproportionality within chronic homeless communities,” Mario Williams-Sweet, a major initiatives manager for King County, told the outlet.

King County expects to pay another $25,000 annually for the operational costs of each unit, according to The Seattle Times.

County leaders also recently proposed a 500-person homeless megaplex in Seattle’s Chinatown, sparking outrage among locals. The facility is projected to cost $66.5 million dollars to build and $22 million per year to operate.

King County did not respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.

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Laurel Duggan is a reporter at Daily Caller News Foundation.
Photo “Homeless Tents” by Brett Sayles.

 

 

 


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