Unless they have some serious plan for helping move people from hotels into apartments, other than putting up fliers . . . as of December 1, there's going to be a lot of homeless people.

They actually have to pay attention to it.

They are the poorest folks ... and they are the ones who are going to be left with nothing. It's going to show up at homeless shelters this winter.

As tragic as this result is, unfortunately, it is not a surprise. We have been afraid for several weeks that an increase in homelessness would be the outcome of the Bush transitional housing program. This is simply the logical consequence of a flawed program design and an inept program implementation.

If you don't have the resources, getting housing relocation assistance has proven to be problematic.

It's scandalous. Congress should have hearings about the lack of information that's available.

The consequences are most dire for those least able to compete. Once somebody with a family loses housing and is living in a shelter, their ability to regain a foothold is much harder.

People wait years for housing assistance. They should not be delayed because somebody else is getting their money.

The disparity between what people earn and what even modest rental housing costs grows larger each year. This is the housing market in which millions of low-wage workers and elderly or disabled people must try to find safe and decent homes.