Daily Breeze (Torrance)

A ‘Right to Housing’ is urged

More help for renters is requested to help region address homeless crisis

- By City News Service

LOS ANGELES » Los Angeles City Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas spoke Tuesday about the need for federal aid and a “Right to Housing” ahead of the City Council’s approval of a resolution to support any legislatio­n that increases rental assistance resources, including housing vouchers, to help the region address its homelessne­ss crisis.

“We need to aggressive­ly seek a new paradigm of federal legislatio­n that would effectivel­y support our attempt to scale up our response to this crisis. I think all of us recognize and appreciate that we have to do more, but we cannot and nor should we be expected to do it alone,” he said.

Ridley-Thomas, who has called

“Weneedto aggressive­ly seek a new paradigm of federal legislatio­n that would effectivel­y support our attempt to scale up our response to this crisis.” — Mark Ridley-Thomas, Los Angeles City Councilman

for the city to enact a “Right to Housing” policy, introduced the resolution with fellow councilmem­bers Nithya Raman and Gil Cedillo. The resolution passed on a 14-0 vote, with one member absent.

Ridley-Thomas called on the federal government to support Los Angeles with resources to combat the homelessne­ss crisis through rental assistance, citing President Joe Biden’s statement that “housing should be a right — not a privilege.”

“Essentiall­y, if you’re part of the working class, if you’re a part of those who we have traditiona­lly defined as the working poor, you have to practicall­y win the lottery to live in housing that you can afford … We won’t change this if we don’t work with our colleagues in the nation’s capital to double down on this voucher program that is embedded in this (resolution),”

Ridley-Thomas said.

On April 13, Ridley-Thomas released a video campaign to show the public what “Right to Housing” could mean for Los Angeles.

Ridley-Thomas’ office cited a poll that found 60% of California­ns support having a legally enforceabl­e right to housing. About 568,000 people in the United States are experienci­ng homelessne­ss, with 151,000 in California, 66,436 in Los Angeles County and 41,290 in Los Angeles, according to the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority’s most recent homelessne­ss count conducted in 2020. The 2021 count was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Every day, 207 people find their way back into housing, either with help or on their own, but 227 additional people fall into homelessne­ss, according to Ridley-Thomas.

In March, he proposed a motion that was unanimousl­y approved by the City Council to have the city explore establishi­ng a “Right to Housing” policy. That motion also calls for

the city to identify resources, propose a strategy and timeline for a “Right to Housing” framework and consult with community leaders, nonprofits, academics, philanthra­pists, businesses, government officials, legal advocates, tenants and people who have experience­d homelessne­ss themselves.

Some critics of a “Right to Housing” say that the policy has had unintended consequenc­es in New York, where instead of solving homelessne­ss, it has pushed homeless people out of sight and into temporary shelters.

“If West Coast cities follow in New York’s footsteps, the same Bureaucrac­y 101 outcome could ensue: ‘temporary’ shelters become a self-perpetuati­ng industry with no incentive to change course,” Deborah Padgett, a professor at the NYU Silver School of Social Work, wrote in a December 2019 Ozy article. She noted that New York City’s annual homeless budget was more than $3 billion, with 80% of it going to shelter providers.

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