President Donald Trump on July 24 issued an executive order aimed at significantly re-ordering the federal government's approach to people who don't have housing.

That order — which seeks to end the government's funding of so-called "housing first" initiatives and suggests mandatory mental health and addiction treatment, or "civil commitment" for some — has drawn applause from some conservatives and rebuke from advocates for people experiencing homelessness.

The order, officially titled "Ending Crime and Disorder on America's Streets," comes in the wake of a U.S. Supreme Court decision last year that upheld municipalities' rights to criminalize encampments in public places.

But what could Trump's executive order mean locally? Professionals who work to aid people without homes in Greater

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