The Great Robot Rescue: When Good Intentions Met Hard Reality

By Futurist Thomas Frey

The Announcement

In January 2032, flanked by a gleaming white humanoid robot designated “Compass-1,” the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development announced what would become the most ambitious—and controversial—social program in American history.

“We’re not just housing the homeless,” she declared to cameras and reporters packed into the Capitol briefing room. “We’re giving them something better. We’re giving them hope. We’re giving them a partner.”

The Home Assistance and Navigation Directive—quickly nicknamed the HAND Program—would deploy 580,000 humanoid robots to every documented homeless person in America. One robot per person. Each unit cost $47,000 to manufacture, came equipped with AI decision-support systems, case management software, and the ability to navigate social services bureaucracies that defeated most social workers.

Total price tag: $27.3 billion, plus $4.1 billion annually for maintenance and cloud services.

“Think about it,” the Secretary continued, her hand resting on Compass-1’s shoulder. “These robots never get tired. Never burn out. Never give up on someone. They can work 24/7 to help our most vulnerable citizens navigate housing applications, job searches, medical care, addiction treatment. They can literally walk someone through every step of getting back on their feet.”

The bill passed Congress with rare bipartisan support. Conservatives liked the automation angle—fewer government workers, more efficiency. Progressives liked the scale—finally, resources proportional to the crisis. Technology companies loved it for obvious reasons.

By July 2032, deployment began.

Continue reading… “The Great Robot Rescue: When Good Intentions Met Hard Reality”

The Awakening Series: Final Thoughts—The Awakening and What Comes Next

By Futurist Thomas Frey

Seventeen columns. Seventeen sectors. One unmistakable pattern.

From graft and corruption to healthcare, education, financial services, insurance, defense contracting, supply chains, utilities, real estate, media, pharmaceuticals, nonprofits, taxation, homelessness, criminal justice, and student loans—we documented how systems designed to serve the public evolved to serve themselves. How complexity became camouflage. How information asymmetry became a business model. How extraction disguised itself as service.

AI is ending this era. Not through revolution but through persistent illumination—making visible what was always present but impossible to quantify at scale. And once these patterns become undeniable, the systems built on opacity become indefensible.

But revelation alone doesn’t create change. It creates possibility. What determines whether The Awakening becomes genuine transformation or merely more sophisticated extraction is what we do next.

Continue reading… “The Awakening Series: Final Thoughts—The Awakening and What Comes Next”

The Robot and the Homeless Man: A 2035 Pairing That Might Actually Work

By Futurist Thomas Frey

Marcus sits on his usual corner, back against the weathered brick of a closed storefront, when the robot rounds the corner at exactly 7:42 AM. It’s a humanoid model, scratched and dented—clearly refurbished, not new. It stops three feet away, maintaining respectful distance.

“Good morning, Marcus. My name is HAVEN-247. The city’s housing services program assigned me to assist you. I’m not here to judge, arrest, or relocate you. I’m here to help if you want help, and to leave you alone if you don’t.”

Marcus stares. Another goddamn program. Another social worker, except this one’s made of metal and doesn’t even pretend to care. He’s seen a thousand well-meaning interventions come and go. Why would a robot be any different?

Continue reading… “The Robot and the Homeless Man: A 2035 Pairing That Might Actually Work”

3 cities in the U.S. have ended chronic homelessness: Here’s how they did it

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Nine more have ended veteran homelessness. It’s part of a national program called Built for Zero that uses a data-based approach to help officials figure out exactly who needs what services. Now it’s accelerating its work in 50 more cities.

In late February, the city of Abilene, Texas, made an announcement: It had ended local veteran homelessness. It was the first community in the state and the ninth in the country to reach that goal, as part of a national program called Built for Zero. Now, through the same program, Abilene is working to end chronic homelessness. While homelessness might often be seen as an intractable problem because of its complexity–or one that costs more to solve than communities can afford–the program is proving that is not the case.

“By ending homelessness, we mean getting to a place where it’s rare, brief, and it gets solved correctly and quickly when it does happen,” says Rosanne Haggerty, president of Community Solutions, the nonprofit that leads the Built for Zero program. “That’s a completely achievable end state, we now see.” The nonprofit, which calls this goal “functional zero,” announced today that it is accelerating its work in 50 communities.

Continue reading… “3 cities in the U.S. have ended chronic homelessness: Here’s how they did it”

New thinking leads to a decline in homelessness

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The National Alliance to End Homelessness sees the recent success as the “giant untold story of the homelessness world.”

Since 2005, there has been a 17 percent decline in homelessness because of a radical change in how states address homelessness. This trend has withstood financial panic, a foreclosure crisis, and the Great Recession.

 

 

Continue reading… “New thinking leads to a decline in homelessness”

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