MPD sweeps unhoused encampments by Washington Circle, L Street amid Trump takeoverGW HatchetBy Tyler IglesiasAugust 15, 2025Local law enforcement, at President Donald Trump’s directive, cleared four unhoused encampment sites near Washington Circle and L Street late Friday morning after federal officers failed to sweep the sites Thursday night.The sweeps, conducted by Metropolitan Police Department and Department of Public Works officers, cleared at least seven tents and evicted at least four unhoused individuals from encampments at 22nd and K streets, Washington Circle and K street and 26th and L streets. The clearings come after two separate groups of federal agents arrived to evict residents near Washington Circle Thursday night — three days after Trump federalized the MPD and deployed 800 National Guard troops and other federal agents throughout the city, in part to clear unhoused encampments — but left after a resident showed the agents a sticker from the Office of the Deputy Mayor of Health and Human Service indicating she had until Monday to leave.[...]Shortly after, a garbage truck and about eight MPD officers began clearing another encampment at 26th and L streets. At 11:33 a.m., about twenty MPD vehicles and the garbage trucks from the operations lined the 2600 block of Pennsylvania Avenue before headings toward Georgetown.
So four months latter...
Judge blocks homelessness changes, rebukes agencyBy Jennifer Ludden | NPRPublished December 20, 2025Topline:The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development cannot impose dramatically different conditions for homelessness programs for now, according to an oral ruling Friday by U.S. District Judge Mary McElroy in Rhode Island.Why it matters: McElroy granted a preliminary injunction to a group of states, cities and nonprofits who said a last minute overhaul of how to spend $4 billion on homelessness programs was unlawful. She also agreed with their argument that it likely would push many people back onto the streets in the middle of winter, causing irreparable harm.The backstory: HUD has sought to dramatically slash funding for permanent housing and encourage more transitional housing that mandates work and treatment for addiction or mental illness. The overhaul – announced last month — also would allow the agency to deny money to local groups that don't comply with the Trump administration's agenda on things like DEI, the restriction of transgender rights and immigration enforcement.
So Trump has them rounded up, all their belongings were taken, many individuals lost their tents, winter clothing, and even lifesaving medications when their property was cleared by sanitation crews and law enforcement. NPR wrote,
McElroy granted a preliminary injunction to a group of states, cities and nonprofits who said a last minute overhaul of how to spend $4 billion on homelessness programs was unlawful. She also agreed with their argument that it likely would push many people back onto the streets in the middle of winter, causing irreparable harm."Continuity of housing and stability for vulnerable populations is clearly in the public interest," said McElroy, ordering HUD to maintain its previous funding formula.The National Alliance to End Homelessness, one of the plaintiffs, said in a statement the order "means that more than 170,000 people – families, seniors, veterans, and people with disabilities – have respite from the government's assault."
Have you noticed that Trump barrows ahead with no consideration for the laws!
HUD has sought to dramatically slash funding for permanent housing and encourage more transitional housing that mandates work and treatment for addiction or mental illness. The overhaul – announced last month – also would allow the agency to deny money to local groups that don't comply with the Trump administration's agenda on things like DEI, the restriction of transgender rights and immigration enforcement.
Section 8 housing!
Fox Homesby Dustin FoxTuesday, May 6, 2025Section 8 housing assistance has long served as a crucial buffer against homelessness for low-income families, the elderly, and people with disabilities. But in 2025, that safety net may unravel. President Trump’s proposed budget takes a bold, controversial turn—cutting rental aid by 40% and shifting program authority from the federal government to the states.This seismic shift in how housing aid is distributed could reshape the way America supports its most vulnerable citizens. It also raises the question: What happens when the federal government stops guaranteeing rental support and leaves states to “fill the gap if they want”?Trump’s 2025 HUD Budget: What’s Being Proposed?The 2025 proposal doesn’t mince words. The White House has called the current rental assistance system “dysfunctional,” and proposes the following:
- A 40% reduction in Section 8 and housing voucher funding
- Replacement of federal oversight with state-controlled block grants
- A two-year eligibility cap on able-bodied adults receiving aid
- A 12% cut in funding for homelessness programs
- The elimination of community development grants used for housing and neighborhood revitalization.
While framed as an effort to promote efficiency and local autonomy, the reality is more complex. This isn’t just a policy shift—it’s a gamble that assumes states will step in to carry a burden that has, for decades, rested on federal shoulders.
Okay... Trump rounds up the homeless, seizing their belongings, cuts funding to Section 8 housing,
Here’s what we’re really risking:
- Accelerated Housing Displacement: Without vouchers to stabilize monthly rent, families will face an immediate risk of losing their homes. This isn’t just a coastal problem. Rent burdens in the Midwest and South are rising just as fast—and the safety net is thinning everywhere.
- Breakdown of Local Rental Markets: Many landlords, especially small-property owners, rely on timely voucher payments to keep their properties afloat. Removing that guaranteed income undermines the rental ecosystem, potentially pulling hundreds of affordable units off the market entirely.
- Increased Burden on Public Systems: When Section 8 fails, the burden shifts elsewhere—emergency shelters, overstretched school systems, hospital ERs, and child welfare departments. These aren’t just budget line items—they're life-saving services that were never designed to substitute for long-term housing solutions.
- Disruption of Workforce Stability: Workers without stable housing are less reliable, less productive, and more likely to cycle in and out of employment. Cutting Section 8 not only destabilizes lives but also weakens local economies dependent on a consistent labor force.
- Fracturing of Generational Progress: Housing is foundational to everything else—education, employment, health, and mobility. When families lose that foundation, the long-term impact stretches far beyond temporary displacement. We’re not just erasing progress—we're obstructing the path forward.
Even within the administration, there is a concerted effort to reframe the conversation. HUD Secretary Scott Turner described the budget as “bold,” stating that rental programs have become “too bloated and bureaucratic to efficiently function.” He emphasized that the agency’s goal is to promote self-sufficiency over subsidy dependency. But critics argue this position ignores structural issues like wage stagnation and the chronic shortfall in affordable housing development.This isn’t a partisan debate. It’s a practical one. The numbers don’t lie: cutting Section 8 without structural alternatives will displace, disrupt, and destabilize communities. And unlike other federal programs, there’s no easy or immediate replacement when housing security vanishes. We need to stop framing these cuts as an efficiency measure—and start acknowledging them for what they are: a wholesale retreat from one of our country’s most critical responsibilities.
What is Trump's next step? Turning the program to the states? Housing concentration camps? Where is he heading?
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