Daniel Wu
👤 PersonPodcast Appearances
Most of the people I spoke to, they said the homelessness problem is an affordable housing problem. Just a simple lack of housing units where most of these folks can afford and can get off the street and begin to establish stability. So with the damage done by the fires and the displacement, there's going to be a lot more work to do.
Most of the people I spoke to, they said the homelessness problem is an affordable housing problem. Just a simple lack of housing units where most of these folks can afford and can get off the street and begin to establish stability. So with the damage done by the fires and the displacement, there's going to be a lot more work to do.
He was really excited, he said, about the prospect of moving to somewhere that was going to give him his own clean space with his own bathroom and kitchen. And he had just moved in for barely a month by the time the fires started.
He was really excited, he said, about the prospect of moving to somewhere that was going to give him his own clean space with his own bathroom and kitchen. And he had just moved in for barely a month by the time the fires started.
What I heard from some of the people I spoke to, if they were lucky, they had friends or family they could stay with. Some slept in their cars, or some ended up back in just the emergency evacuation sites that were being used for everyone that had to flee the fires.
What I heard from some of the people I spoke to, if they were lucky, they had friends or family they could stay with. Some slept in their cars, or some ended up back in just the emergency evacuation sites that were being used for everyone that had to flee the fires.
Most of the people I spoke to, they said the homelessness problem is an affordable housing problem. Just a simple lack of housing units where most of these folks can afford and can get off the street and begin to establish stability. So with the damage done by the fires and the displacement, there's going to be a lot more work to do.
He was really excited, he said, about the prospect of moving to somewhere that was going to give him his own clean space with his own bathroom and kitchen. And he had just moved in for barely a month by the time the fires started.
What I heard from some of the people I spoke to, if they were lucky, they had friends or family they could stay with. Some slept in their cars, or some ended up back in just the emergency evacuation sites that were being used for everyone that had to flee the fires.