The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Tuesday approved $527.1 million in funding for strategies to battle homelessness in fiscal year 2021-22, while expressing frustration over the rising numbers of people living on the street.
Despite the massive inflow of cash from Measure H and dozens of carefully crafted initiatives that make up the county’s Homeless Initiative, visible encampments continue to grow and the situation on the street remains dire.
Supervisor Kathryn Barger highlighted one sobering statistic, noting that 739 homeless people died in Los Angeles County in the first six months of 2021. That number, generated in response to Public Record Act requests from a KNX Newsradio reporter, amounts to a 20% increase over 2020 deaths.
“This is a life-or-death situation, and it should encourage us to act with urgency and a new sense of direction,” Barger said.
Efforts to count the homeless have been stymied by the pandemic and lockdown orders, but residents are growing increasingly vocal about massive encampments encroaching on public spaces countywide.
Supervisor Janice Hahn said she was worried about residents and other jurisdictions losing patience.
“I am particularly concerned that more and more cities are moving to enforce their anti-camping laws, and there are more calls to criminalize our homeless,” Hahn told her colleagues.
Barger said the proposal did not go far enough and called for a complete overhaul.
“I believe (LAHSA) is broken, and I believe we need to seriously reconsider the structure of this agency,” Barger said, “Putting a Band-Aid on something that needs major surgery is a disservice.”
Barger said input from all 88 cities in Los Angeles County and the local Councils of Government was necessary to make a real difference, though Mitchell’s proposal did call for a mechanism to engage the COGs.
Kuehl pushed back against the idea that the increase in homelessness is LAHSA’s fault and said more focus should be placed on what she sees as the root cause of new homelessness — a lack of affordable housing.
Since Measure H revenue became available in July 2017, the county’s homeless services system has placed nearly 67,000 people in permanent housing and nearly 90,000 people in interim housing, though there is some double- counting of people who move from interim to permanent housing.
Project Roomkey and Project Homekey, which placed unhoused individuals in hotel rooms with supportive services, showed the county’s ability to move at speed.
However, the board’s discussion highlighted a high level of frustration as the county rolls out program after program, builds interim housing and creates new supportive services capacity without being able to stem the tide of homelessness.
An average of 207 people exit homelessness every day in Los Angeles County, but 227 more people fall into homelessness during the same period, according to numbers tracked by the Homeless Initiative.
“Every year, over the last four years, we have dramatically scaled up the housing and services necessary to re-house those who are experiencing homelessness, and to end the inflow into homelessness caused by skyrocketing rents and evictions,” Kuehl said. “This crisis was decades in the making, and every year we are committed to making more progress in building the system that will solve it.”
Highlights of the nearly half-billion dollars in spending approved include:
— $150 million for 5,441 interim housing beds, including emergency shelter beds as well as various types of bridge housing with services geared toward specific needs;
— $132 million for permanent supportive housing, which lifts people out of chronic homelessness and provides them with a rental subsidy and intensive case management services;
— $89 million for rapid rehousing, which enables clients to quickly exit homelessness by helping them pay rent and provides them with supportive services for a limited period;
— $39 million for street outreach teams that aim to connect people living on the street with housing, healthcare, mental health treatment and other supportive services; and
— $23 million for homeless prevention services, like rent subsidies, to help rent-burdened, low-income families and individuals resolve crises that would otherwise cause them to lose their housing.
A new program designed to rapidly increase affordable housing incentivizes owners of multifamily buildings to rent out their entire properties to people experiencing homelessness and provides property management services.
The California Housing Partnership reports that by the end of 2020, L.A. County and local partner jurisdictions had helped developers and service providers leverage state and federal resources to create more than 120,000 affordable homes, a 4% increase from 2019 inventory levels. Yet the same report concluded that the county needs to add approximately 499,430 affordable homes to meet the current demand among renter households at or below 50% of the area median income.
“Homelessness is a deeply rooted and complex societal problem that was decades in the making and cannot be fixed overnight, but Los Angeles County is pulling out all the stops to alleviate the crisis on our streets,” said Cheri Todoroff, interim executive director of the Homeless Initiative.
Hahn said she wanted to see a detailed reevaluation of what’s working and what isn’t. That analysis, already in the works, is likely to come before the board in November, according to Todoroff.
More than 85% of the money to fight homelessness comes from Measure H, a quarter-cent sales tax approved by voters in 2017, and is supplemented by federal stimulus dollars and state grants, among other sources.
Todoroff said making sure current dollars are being used effectively is critical, but said the county would need additional support from the federal and state government to effectively meet the challenges posed by homelessness in L.A. County.
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Beecee says
Go to the LA County recorders office and have a real-estate document recorded.
$12 recording fee
$100 fee for homelessness
$112 dollars to record a real-estate document…..
Good times!
lady fishes says
425 million will go to overseers and employees
Jason ZINK says
I have tried over an over to convince Palmdale & Lancaster to create an AV HUD CoC seperate from LA County, like the cities of Long Beach, Glendale and Pasadena have because LA robs funding/resources from AV. AV has one of the highest homeless counts per capita in the State, maybe the highest. We would have local control and direct funding from Feds, State and County. It’s just Common Sense……Mayor Hofbauer & Parris have none and lack real urgent leadership! Reps McCarthy & Garcia need to make this happen for our Valley.
Tim Scott says
LOLOLOL…Reps McCarthy and Garcia aren’t gonna make anything happen for anyone but Donald Trump. They are so far up his butt they need him to put a viewport in his navel or they will never see daylight again.
William says
That’s for sure. How can elected Republicans be such sellouts?
Of course, this could be the end of the American experiment.
It’s been said that democracies usually last 200 years and we’re on borrowed time.
The GOP has been on a dead watch for years. First the T-party and now The Trump Party.
Sonya says
WeRe aLL GoNNA diE!
Muh DeMOCrAcY
Tim Scott says
some of us took an oath to protect that democracy…for the benefit of lames as it turns out, unfortunately
of all the ways for the American experiment to fail, at the hands of a spoon stuffed moron turned totalitarian dreamer like Donald Trump would be maybe the saddest
Claire says
Jason…Why would Kevin McCarthy or Garcia make this happen for our Valley? Have you been to Bakersfield lately? That wonderful bastion of conservatives filled with crime and homelessness. When Trump was there, no mention of the hard working undocumented workers, only the word “farmers” which completely depend on the back breaking work of undocumented workers. Take a drive down Union St. and that will open your eyes to what hopelessness is all about. No thank you to the so called leadership of McCarthy and Garcia.
GONEZO says
operative word being undocumented workers(aka illegals)Now tell me,why would a sitting U.S. president comment on illegals or “farmers” for that matter. Your post lacks a point.Try HARDER.
Claire says
Because he did, GONEZO.