Los Angeles Times

Mayor’s goal for getting people off street is 2028

Garcetti says homelessne­ss can be halved in 5 years

- By Dakota Smith and Doug Smith

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti knows the perils of offering bold pronouncem­ents about taming homelessne­ss in L.A.

During his first mayoral campaign in 2013, he vowed to end chronic homelessne­ss. Once in office, Garcetti said he would find housing for the city’s homeless veterans, first by 2015 and then 2016, before scrapping a timeline altogether.

Garcetti now seeks to cut the city’s “unsheltere­d” population in half in the next five years and reduce it to “functional zero” by 2028 — the final year of funding from the Measure H and Propositio­n HHH ballot measures, spokeswoma­n Anna Bahr said this week.

“The mayor set goals that establish a realistic timeline to end homelessne­ss,” Bahr said in an email.

Functional zero means that there will “always be people who are homeless or at risk of becoming homeless” but they are quickly identified and provided housing, Bahr said.

Bahr said the mayor establishe­d the goals last fall. But they drew little notice until he began discussing them at public events this year. Some City Council members said Tuesday that they were unaware of the target dates.

The mayor’s timetable

comes at a crucial moment, as public anger is rising over why City Hall has failed to make more progress in solving the crisis.

The city and the county are beginning to spend the voter-approved funds on new homeless housing and services, but encampment­s remain a fact of life in neighborho­ods throughout the city.

Garcetti is talking about the goals as he considers a run for president in 2020. If he runs, the grim conditions on L.A. streets could be a political liability.

The unsheltere­d population in Los Angeles — those living on the street — is 25,237, according to the latest count. Garcetti aims to get 12,500 of that group into shelter or housing by 2022 — the year Garcetti’s tenure as mayor would end because of term limits.

“We can cut this problem in half in five years. And in 10 years … we can end life on the street,” Garcetti said in January at the beginning of the annual homeless count.

Bahr said Garcetti has made public statements regularly about his goals for cutting the unsheltere­d population, noting that he has been quoted in The Times about the timetable.

Councilmen Mike Bonin, Mitchell Englander and Mitch O’Farrell said Tuesday they hadn’t heard about the plan.

“I haven’t been updated,” O’Farrell said of the mayor’s targets.

“Goals are laudable,” Englander said.

Establishi­ng a timeline for solving homelessne­ss is not new for Los Angeles politician­s.

More than a decade ago, when he was a councilman, Garcetti served with then Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa and then-county Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsk­y on a panel for Bring Los Angeles Home, a plan to end homelessne­ss in 10 years.

In another ambitious proposal, Los Angeles County supervisor­s announced a $100-million initiative that included opening regional shelters for the homeless. The shelter part of the plan was shelved in 2007.

In 2014, Garcetti offered a full-throated pledge to end homelessne­ss among veterans. He appeared alongside then-First Lady Michelle Obama, accepting the Obama administra­tion’s challenge to tackle the problem — an event that generated headlines.

Kerry Morrison, who has led efforts to address homelessne­ss in Hollywood and serves as executive director of the Hollywood Property Owners Alliance, said she didn’t know about the new timeline until contacted by The Times this week but praised Garcetti’s decision to set goals.

“It gives you something to work for,” Morrison said.

She said in a recent interview that the mayor is generally being more assertive and vocal about the homelessne­ss crisis compared with a year ago.

“We were having a hard time getting people to talk about it,” Morrison said. “I’ve been here for 20 years, so I have the credibilit­y to say, ‘It has never been this bad.’ ”

The pitfalls of optimistic pronouncem­ents about homelessne­ss are illustrate­d in the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority’s 2016 analysis of how much new housing would be needed to attain functional zero.

Under the best scenario, the analysis found, thousands would be homeless at any point because of the growing influx of newly destitute people.

Also, it takes a long time — an average of three months — for a homeless person to obtain housing in the area’s tight market, the report said.

“Fully meeting the housing gaps detailed in this report would only be able to lower the [homeless count] below 15,000,” the report concluded.

Even that unvarnishe­d projection, based on the 2016 assumption that the homeless population could be reduced by 14% annually, turned out to be unrealisti­c. From 2015 to 2017, homelessne­ss rose more than 30% in the city.

Chastened by the discrepanc­y, the agency included no projection­s when it updated the analysis this year.

Whether the mayor is able to achieve his goals hinges on the success of the county’s rollout of funds raised through Measure H. The city is unable to tackle homelessne­ss on its own, city leaders have acknowledg­ed.

Los Angeles County Supervisor Mark Ridley Thomas, who has worked closely with the mayor on homelessne­ss, didn’t respond to a request Tuesday for comment on Garcetti’s timeline.

Bahr said the mayor’s long-term plan includes relying on general-fund dollars, money from Measure H and Propositio­n HHH, and private and philanthro­pic funds.

In addition, his “shortterm strategy centers on erecting as many emergency shelters as possible near homeless encampment­s across Los Angeles,” including one in a parking lot near El Pueblo de Los Angeles, Bahr said.

Philip Mangano, former homelessne­ss czar for President George W. Bush and president of the American Round Table to Abolish Homelessne­ss, last year called Garcetti’s two yardsticks for ending veterans homelessne­ss a “well-intentione­d misjudgmen­t.”

However, on Tuesday, he called the mayor’s latest goals “ambitious.” He said their success would be contingent on building enough housing so people aren’t just shuttled between shelters.

“He is putting himself on the front line of another numerical commitment, which has proven to be very difficult to keep in general in Los Angeles,” he said.

‘We can cut this problem in half in five years. And in 10 years … we can end life on the street.’ — Eric Garcetti, L.A. mayor, in January at the beginning of the annual homeless count

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? LOS ANGELES’ homeless population is 25,237, according to the latest count, and encampment­s remain a fact of life in neighborho­ods throughout the city. Above, homeless people on North Spring Street.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES’ homeless population is 25,237, according to the latest count, and encampment­s remain a fact of life in neighborho­ods throughout the city. Above, homeless people on North Spring Street.
 ?? Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times ?? MAYOR Eric Garcetti’s spokeswoma­n said he set new homelessne­ss goals last fall. They drew little notice until he began discussing them this year.
Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times MAYOR Eric Garcetti’s spokeswoma­n said he set new homelessne­ss goals last fall. They drew little notice until he began discussing them this year.
 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? MAYOR Eric Garcetti tours homeless camps around the Sepulveda Basin in 2016. Public anger is rising over why L.A. hasn’t made more headway against the crisis.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times MAYOR Eric Garcetti tours homeless camps around the Sepulveda Basin in 2016. Public anger is rising over why L.A. hasn’t made more headway against the crisis.

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