>> clements: well, of course you can. >> cooper: frank clements needed more help than most. after he got an apartment, we found him finishing off a bottle of whiskey. >> clements; i ain't no angel, i'm a damn drunk. ( laughs ) >> cooper: in the weeks that followed, social workers tried to help frank get treatment. they even drove him to appointments. he'd get sober for a while, then start drinking again, then be filled with remorse. he was so disruptive when drunk, he had to be moved out of two different apartments. some critics of the 100,000 homes campaign question whether scarce housing resources would be better spent on homeless kids or working-poor families, rather than somebody like frank. is it fair to give somebody an apartment who's made bad choices and is being irresponsible? >> kanis: i don't think fairness is the right way to look at it. what i would prefer to look at it is what's good for everybody. so, having somebody on the streets, fair or not fair, is costing us as a society, as taxpayers more than it would cost to have them in housing. >> cooper: it does see