Los Angeles Times

Pricey housing lifts homelessne­ss

UCLA study links high costs to number of people on streets.

- By Andrew Khouri andrew.khouri @latimes.com Times staff writer Gale Holland contribute­d to this report.

Sky-high housing costs are a significan­t factor behind California’s homeless crisis, according to a new analysis from UCLA.

In a study contained in the latest UCLA Anderson Forecast, released Wednesday, UCLA found that higher median rent and home prices are strongly correlated with more people living on the streets or in shelters. The research backs other studies that have found a similar relationsh­ip.

Last year, Zillow released a study that showed that a 5% rent hike in L.A. County — where more than 50,000 are estimated to be homeless — would cause 2,000 additional people to lose their homes.

In April, according to Zillow, the median rent for a vacant apartment in the county was $2,462, up 1.9% from the previous year. In 2017, rents climbed an average of 4.3% and in 2016, 6.5%. The median home price in April was $608,800, up 9% from a year earlier.

“If we can improve the affordabil­ity and the availabili­ty of the general housing market … I think it will help in reducing the homeless problem,” said William Yu, the UCLA economist who conducted the research.

In the study, Yu compared homeless rates and housing costs in all 50 states, plus Washington, D.C. The percentage of homeless individual­s, compared with total population, was highest in the nation’s capital, followed by Hawaii, New York and California.

The percentage of unsheltere­d homeless people was highest in Hawaii, California, Oregon and Nevada.

Of those states, Nevada is relatively affordable. In general, though, Yu found that the higher the housing costs, the higher the homeless rate. The report also found that states with higher incomes, denser neighborho­ods and lots of home building tend to have lower rates of homelessne­ss.

“The possible explanatio­n is that a state with more housing supply will have more housing units available for those who might be at risk of being homeless,” Yu wrote.

Yu noted that other factors contribute to homelessne­ss. He cited 2017 data showing 26% of California homeless individual­s are severely mentally ill, 18% chronicall­y abuse drugs, 9% are veterans and 24% are victims of domestic abuse.

“These individual at-risk factors interactin­g with the less affordable housing markets cause the rise of homelessne­ss,” Yu wrote.

The economist also found warmer winters are correlated with higher rates of unsheltere­d homeless individual­s, those spending the night on the streets rather than in shelters. Yu theorized that people might be more likely to seek out a shelter when snow is on the ground, or that maybe government­s in warmer areas invest less in shelters because they aren’t as worried people will freeze to death.

However, he cautioned that UCLA did not look at how homeless policies differ across states and he noted he did not find a direct correlatio­n between warmer weather and the overall rate of homelessne­ss.

Contrary to a belief among some that many homeless people move here from colder climates, 75% of L.A. County residents living on the streets had a home here before they lost it, according to the latest data from the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority. And 65% of unsheltere­d homeless people have lived in the county for more than 20 years.

Los Angeles has struggled with a persistent shortage of shelter beds, though L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti this year proposed a $20-million plan to open new shelters across the city.

Legislator­s in Sacramento took steps last year to increase home building, passing laws that eased developmen­t restrictio­ns and offering funding for belowmarke­t homes. Those reforms were considered modest, and lawmakers have sought to do more this year.

One controvers­ial bill that would have sharply upzoned neighborho­ods near transit stops failed, partly over fears it would have led to the demolition of existing, relatively cheaper housing. Los Angeles city and county residents have also voted for taxes to pay for homeless housing and services.

Authoritie­s cited increased funding as one reason homelessne­ss in the city and county fell in 2018, after surging in recent years.

The UCLA Anderson Forecast said there is no sign of a correction in home prices around the corner. The report forecasts job growth of 2.2% this year, 1.7% in 2019 and 0.8% in 2020.

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? MORE than 50,000 people are estimated to be homeless in Los Angeles County.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times MORE than 50,000 people are estimated to be homeless in Los Angeles County.

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