The Steve Hallstrom Show Episode 553: Fargo's Homeless Crisis, Housing First Failure, and Charlie Kirk's Legacy
Update: 2025-10-10
Description
This episode, hosted by Andrew Sletten, on the one-month anniversary of the Charlie Kirk assassination, frames the growing homeless crisis in Fargo as a battle of ideologies, contrasting "freedom and responsibility" with the "victimology" mindset he argues is perpetuated by progressive policies. Fargo's Homeless & Policy Debate The "San Francisco" Path: The host, who works and invests downtown, warns that Fargo is currently taking a policy path that has previously "ruined" West Coast cities like San Francisco. He attributes the core of the crisis not to poverty, but to untreated mental illness and drug addiction. The Problem with "Housing First": Sletten heavily criticized the "Housing First" initiative—a policy that prioritizes giving homeless individuals an apartment before addressing addiction or mental illness. He cited a 12-year Harvard study and a National Academies of Science study suggesting this policy has led to no better outcomes and sometimes worse outcomes due to the lack of mandatory treatment. The host noted that the cost of providing a full apartment without accountability is "astronomical" and "unsustainable". The "Victimology" Mindset: Sletten argued that a "victimology" mindset, prevalent in progressive policy, prevents holding individuals accountable for public actions like defecating on private property. He stressed that while trauma is real, holding individuals to a standard of responsibility is necessary to maintain a "polite society". The Ambulance Abuse Scheme: A former EMT shared a startling observation: homeless individuals in the downtown area would frequently call for an ambulance ride to Sanford Hospital (costing thousands of dollars) and then immediately sign themselves out upon arrival, using the ambulance as a "cheaper than Uber" taxi service. This resulted in emergency services being tied up and unavailable for life-threatening calls. Proposed Solution: Shelter First: Sletten proposed a "shelter first" approach that incorporates incremental, reward-based housing. He cited a study in Birmingham, Alabama, where success rates increased when individuals were offered private rooms as an incentive to pass a drug test.
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