Los Angeles Times

More vets on L.A. streets

A rise in the homeless veteran population suggests the city faces challenge in cutting numbers to 2016 goals.

- By Gale Holland gale.holland@latimes.com

A rise in the homeless veteran population suggests the city will not meet its timetable for housing them all.

The population of homeless veterans in Los Angeles rose 6% in the last two years, according to figures released Wednesday, casting doubt on whether Mayor Eric Garcetti can meet his pledge to get every former service member off the streets by year’s end.

“We’re behind,” said Vince Kane, special assistant to U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert A. McDonald. “In L.A., we got off to a slow start.”

In January, 18 months into his first term, Garcetti said he was more than halfway to his goal. But the new numbers show how difficult it will be to reach it.

The county has long had the largest concentrat­ion of homeless veterans in the country — 4,343 in the latest count. Two-thirds of them, or 2,733, live in the city.

Garcetti said in a written statement that Los Angeles had housed thousands of veterans this year, and he remains confident he can achieve his goal by 2016.

Figures released Monday by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority showed homelessne­ss overall had risen 12% in both the city and county since 2013.

The figures provide a snapshot, based largely on a three-day street count in January. But it is not a static population — thousands of people, including veterans, fall in and out of homelessne­ss throughout the year.

Officials said they failed to take into account how fast new veterans were landing on the streets.

“In 2013, three veterans were becoming homeless each day,” said Christine Margiotta, head of Home for Good, a public-private homeless services partnershi­p. “Now, as we look at these figures, we recognize 10 become homeless each day.”

The county has housed 7,500 veterans since 2013, Kane said, but it hasn’t been enough to stanch the rising tide.

“It’s fair to say we didn’t make the right assumption­s,” he said, “but it doesn’t change what we have to do.”

Since the count, the Obama administra­tion has roughly doubled funding to the county, offering $105 million in homeless grants and services, according to the VA.

“Now is the real push,” Kane said.

While the city’s homeless veteran numbers went up, the countywide total dropped 6%. Much of the decline came in Long Beach, which reported a 58% decrease.

Susan Price, who runs Long Beach’s homeless services, said the city has a central service intake center and a 26-acre former naval base property, called Century Villages at Cabrillo, with 500 emergency, transition­al and permanent beds where homeless veterans can be placed.

“When there’s a vacancy we can place somebody there right away,” she said.

Margiotta said a push is underway to get landlords in the city to rent to veterans. Veterans with federal vouchers in hand can’t find places that will rent at subsidized rates, she said.

Gary Blasi, a retired UCLA law professor who is working on the VA land settlement, said local elected officials aren’t pushing hard enough on the homelessne­ss issue.

“I have seen local government act when there is a sense of urgency, and I don’t see evidence of that,” he said Wednesday. “Nor have I seen a motion by the City Council to have the huge amount of apartment constructi­on going on include low-income housing.”

More than 400 mayors, seven governors and other local officials have signed on to the Obama administra­tion’s challenge to end veteran homelessne­ss by 2016. In January, New Orleans became the first to declare success.

Some activists dismissed the pledge as a PR ploy. “It’s a marketing gimmick,” said General Jeff Page, a skid row activist.

 ?? Brian van der Brug
Los Angeles Times ?? NAOMI KUHLMAN, who volunteers with a nonprofit aimed at ending veteran homelessne­ss, talks with a homeless man on downtown L.A.’s skid row in December. Recent figures show the city has seen a 6% increase in the homeless veteran population since 2013.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times NAOMI KUHLMAN, who volunteers with a nonprofit aimed at ending veteran homelessne­ss, talks with a homeless man on downtown L.A.’s skid row in December. Recent figures show the city has seen a 6% increase in the homeless veteran population since 2013.

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