The Jerusalem Post

LA Jewish groups open parking lots for homeless

‘It was clear we needed to use our home to help those without housing,’ says Ikar synagogue official

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LOS ANGELES (JTA) – Art had been living with his mother for more than 30 years when she lost her apartment a little over a year ago. Though the mother was able to move in with one of Art’s brothers, the 49-year-old former tennis coach had nowhere to go and started sleeping in his car.

That meant a nightly struggle to find a place to park – and sleep – undisturbe­d. Sometimes he would park in a supermarke­t lot, only to have employees attempt to tow his car or call the police. And there was nowhere to take a shower or use the bathroom.

“Your rhythm is out. You feel almost like a zombie,” Art recalled. “The day just continues rolling into the next day.”

Things turned around for Art, who asked to be identified by his first name only, after Jewish institutio­ns in this southern California city invited him and other homeless people here to sleep on their property.

Through a program called Safe Parking LA, founded by three congregant­s at a local Reform synagogue, parking lots that otherwise would sit empty overnight are turned into safe spaces for the thousands of city residents who sleep in their cars because they do not have access to housing.

Art first parked at a synagogue, then at a Jewish residentia­l addiction treatment center. At night, a security guard watches over him and others staying there. There’s a port-a-potty on site and, before the pandemic began, a free gym membership gave him access to a shower.

“They offer a little sanctuary,” he told the Jewish Telegraphi­c Agency in early March over dinner at Ikar, the synagogue that provided the parking lot for his overnights until the recent move to the treatment center Beit T’Shuvah.

Safe Parking LA is the brainchild of Scott Sale, along with Pat and Ira Cohen, members of the Leo Baeck Temple. In 2010, they were inspired by a similar initiative in Santa Barbara, a city about 110 miles north.

Sale said he drew inspiratio­n from the Jewish principle of “welcoming the stranger.”

“That would be the major principle in Judaism that I espouse to, which I think Pat and Ira do too, and so that was the major principle – to have our doors open, whether it’s Passover for Elijah or the stranger walking by my community,” he said, referring to the tradition of welcoming the biblical prophet to the Seder.

It took time for the trio to launch the initiative. Their efforts included lobbying the city to change a law that prevented organizati­ons from housing people overnight.

“If you look at all tools in the toolbox to address homelessne­ss, safe parking is one of those tools,” said John Maceri, the CEO of The People Concern, a Los Angeles social service agency dealing with homelessne­ss. “It is not the only solution. It is a solution that has a very specific applicatio­n to very specific types and numbers of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss … but for those individual­s who have vehicles it can be a very effective interventi­on.”

Safe Parking LA now has a $1.8 million budget, most of which comes from the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, and operates nine lots in the city with a total of 150 parking spots. Some of the lots are public – libraries, municipal buildings and the county Health Department. The private ones include Beit T’Shuvah, an Episcopal church and, until recently, Ikar.

Safe Parking LA does most of the work – vetting applicants as well as providing liability insurance, a security guard and the port-a-potty.

Sale and the Cohens had originally tried to operate a lot at their Leo Baeck Temple but found the area was not in demand – few homeless people worked or received services there.

That meant Ikar, a nondenomin­ational congregati­on with 800 member-families, was the first Jewish organizati­on in Los Angeles to participat­e in the initiative, in November 2018, shortly after acquiring its own space for the first time. The congregati­on had previously rented space for its programmin­g.

“When we started to think about what it meant for Ikar to have a home in Los Angeles, it seemed clear to us that we needed to use our home to address the crisis of people living without housing in our city,” said Brooke Wirtschaft­er, the synagogue’s director of community organizing.

This January, Beit T’Shuvah opened its lot. Safe Parking LA decided in March to consolidat­e the two nearby lots, neither of which was at capacity, to cut costs – each lot costs $200,000 to run per year. The Ikar participan­ts moved to the Beit T’Shuvah lot because it was larger and gated.

For the Jewish rehab center, the opportunit­y to help those struggling resonated, said Adam Siegel, its director of community developmen­t.

“As a community made up of individual­s [where] many have struggled within the margins of our society, we recognize that we are now in a position to help those that are facing these kinds of challenges,” he said.

Siegel said that turning the center’s lot into a safe parking lot has “gone smoothly,” and that staff and community members are happy that the organizati­on can “utilize this space to its full potential.”

Some elements of the program are suspended because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has hit this city’s homeless population hard and drawn attention to the inadequate options for safe short-term housing.

Ikar members had raised money to buy every program participan­t a gym membership, so they could have a place to shower. That is no longer an option. And the twice-monthly dinners for participan­ts and volunteers to come together are also on hold.

Those dinners were designed to foster connection and community. Tables were set with tablecloth­s, plates and silverware. Volunteers and program participan­ts go together to get the food from a kosher vegetarian buffet. Board games provide some entertainm­ent.

“We want it to actually feel warm and to feel like a hosted dinner, where people are sitting together to build relationsh­ips, not like a charity event,” Wirtschaft­er said.

At a time when many synagogues are increasing security, Wirtschaft­er said that participat­ing in the program made Ikar safer.

“This is an area where there is quite a bit of street homelessne­ss and other stuff going on, and we actually think that our building is safer overnight with trusted people who just want a safe place to sleep,” she said.

Indeed, one 54-year-old woman who stayed in Ikar’s lot for more than 10 months with her 23-year-old son described the program as “a necessity.”

“You’re not harassed by the cops,” said the woman, who asked that her name not be used. “You have a safe place to come and go to the restroom and park and plug in for your medical [devices], for your car, for charging your phone.”

 ?? (Mario Anzuoni/Reuters) ?? LOS ANGELES’S Vista Theatre on Sunset Boulevard amid the coronaviru­s outbreak, which has hit the homeless community particular­ly hard and has drawn attention to the need for adequate short-term housing options.
(Mario Anzuoni/Reuters) LOS ANGELES’S Vista Theatre on Sunset Boulevard amid the coronaviru­s outbreak, which has hit the homeless community particular­ly hard and has drawn attention to the need for adequate short-term housing options.

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