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A Trump July 24 executive order calls for a sharp turn in homelessness response, prompting condemnation from advocates. How could it impact Asheville?
Dallas receives $51 million each year in federal grant funding. Congress could change the rules on how that money is used.
The order directs Attorney General Pam Bondi to “reverse judicial precedents and end consent decrees” that limit ...
The administration has pledged to end support for Housing First, the approach behind the V.A.’s greatest housing success ...
A recent executive order issued by the White House, titled “Ending Crime and Disorder on America’s Streets,” is causing “growing concern among mental health advocacy groups across the nation.” That ...
Ohio housing advocates spoke out against President Donald Trump’s recent executive order that would force those experiencing homelessness off the streets by committing them to mental health ...
President Trump's order describes a push to jail or hospitalize people as 'new,' 'compassionate' and 'evidence-based.' It is ...
President Trump's executive order is not an attack on the homeless. It's a defense of each family's right to help the ones ...
President Donald Trump’s recent executive order on homelessness, titled “Ending Crime and Disorder on America’s Streets,” is a dangerous shift in policy ...
President Donald Trump will take executive action to clear the homeless from streets and send them to rehabilitation centers, according to reporting.
RI homeless advocates are worried about impacts to programs that help them house people experiencing homelessness.
On July 24, President Donald Trump issued an executive order to “end crime and disorder on America’s streets, which was directed at the homelessness endemic taking place across the nation." ...