Los Angeles Times

Homeless in South L.A.

-

Re “Caught in cycle of fear, futility,” June 10

Regarding your article on homeless encampment­s in South Los Angeles, the trouble with the homeless crisis is that it's a national problem that everyone expects cities to solve individual­ly.

People cannot get jobs that pay enough anymore, if they can get jobs at all. Drugs have deeply harmed many communitie­s.

When people run out of options, the only place left to go is somewhere where a person can sleep outside in a tent all year long. Expecting the city to solve a national problem is never going to work. Homelessne­ss is collateral damage in a corrupt system that concentrat­es wealth at the top. Los Angeles and other warmer places make the results of the corruption visible to all.

As the government destroys every New Deal institutio­n that kept people from destitutio­n and turns toward a mafia system of government, the $29 dome tent becomes many people's last best hope. Diane Soini

Santa Barbara

I was glad to see The Times publish its first article starting to acknowledg­e the burden of the 60,000-strong transient community borne by normal, everyday citizens of the Los Angeles area. Yet even then the wording tries to frame the homeless crisis as a humanitari­an tragedy with no clear origin or end, rather than what it actually is (in most cases), a total abdication of responsibi­lity of the part of law enforcemen­t, public health agencies and municipal services.

Phrases like "ease the homeless crisis" and "vulnerable homeless population" are merely dodges, convenient for a distracted mayor and detached City Council who wring their hands and appeal to the public for empathy. We're over this. Fix the problem. Do your jobs. Daniel Cooper

Oak Park

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States