Los Angeles Times

Homeless problem will not go away

- By Joel John Roberts Joel John Roberts is the CEO of PATH and PATH Ventures, L.A.-based homeless services and housing developmen­t agencies with locations throughout California.

No one in Los Angeles was surprised to hear on Wednesday that the homeless population had ballooned yet again. Everywhere one looks one sees people sleeping on sidewalks, in tents and recreation­al vehicles. The homeless are now a part of our urban and suburban landscape. But there’s no reason to despair, as long as we moderate our expectatio­ns.

Since 2013, the number of homeless in Los Angeles County has increased from more than 35,000, to 44,000, then to 47,000, and now to nearly 58,000, according to the latest count. What’s especially vexing is that this jump comes after years of regional initiative­s to end homelessne­ss.

Twenty years ago, I joined a Westside homeless agency called People Assisting the Homeless, or PATH, that in the 1990s provided transition­al housing and employment training as solutions to the region’s homelessne­ss problem. Back then, my co-workers and I thought we could solve homelessne­ss within five years. Obviously we were wrong.

In 2004, the city of Los Angeles created a Blue Ribbon Panel to end homelessne­ss within the next decade called Bring LA Home. (I was a member). The panel consisted of more than 60 political, corporate, nonprofit and faith leaders. Mayor Eric Garcetti was on the panel as a city councilman.

This group of smart, strategic and influentia­l people concluded that for Los Angeles to end homelessne­ss, it would have to invest $1.5 billion per year for 10 years, a price tag that doomed the initiative.

Predictabl­y enough, the homeless count continued to rise.

After local businesses, neighborho­od groups and compassion­ate people inundated their elected officials with complaints about homelessne­ss, city and county leaders courageous­ly promoted and got passed Propositio­n HHH (an L.A. City initiative that provides $1.2 billion to build 10,000 units of housing for people who are homeless) and Measure H (an L.A. County resource that will provide $3.55 billion of homeless services in the next 10 years).

I support these initiative­s, but we shouldn’t repeat the mistake we’ve made in the past of thinking that we can end homelessne­ss right away.

Homelessne­ss in Los Angeles is caused by the confluence of the skyrocketi­ng price of housing and wage stagnation, which means workers don’t earn enough to afford housing. The average rent for a one-bedroom apartment is $1,930 per month, and according to Zillow.com, a person would need to earn $57,000 per year to afford it.

What this math means is that to reduce the number of homeless, we need to build more housing that is affordable for average wage earners and that provides support services for people who have been chronicall­y homeless.

This is the justificat­ion for HHH and H, but it will take years, not months, to build 10,000 housing units. What we’re creating is a housing infrastruc­ture that will only reduce homelessne­ss, rather like public transit infrastruc­ture reduces but does not resolve the problem of congestion on our roads.

We have to keep things in perspectiv­e.

Just as we see new rail connection­s as signs that we are seriously addressing our traffic issue (even as we continue to get stuck on the freeway) we should see new supportive apartment buildings as signs that our region is seriously addressing its homelessne­ss issue (even as we continue to see tents on overpasses). For a while, at least, that may be all the evidence we have.

Even though this year’s homeless numbers increased, it’s not naive to remain hopeful.

Let’s not make the mistake of pretending that we’ll soon bring the homeless count down to zero.

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