Los Angeles Times

‘Bridge’ to nowhere?

-

Re “The uproar in Koreatown,” editorial, July 1

The “bridge housing” planned for Koreatown may prove to be a bridge to nowhere.

If Los Angeles City Council President Herb Wesson and Mayor Eric Garcetti had bothered to consult any homeless people, they would recognize the majority of these unfortunat­es strongly resist the idea of sleeping in group sites. That’s understand­able given the amount of untreated mental illness that could lead to attacks.

Instead, why not spend all the funds on low-income housing? This time, there shouldn’t be such a concentrat­ion of units that replicates the alienating mistakes of project housing. Rather, the aim should be small blocks of modest units with social welfare and mental health offices onsite or nearby. If 5,000 units could be built each year over the next decade, we just might be able to celebrate having made a great dent in this problem by the time we host the Summer Olympics in 2028.

As for additional sources to help fund this kind of housing, why not tax all short-term rentals at 20%, since the surge of such rentals has pinched the housing stock? Sally Stein Los Angeles

It’s time to address homeless encampment­s as they are rather than just considerin­g the billions of dollars available to spend on long-term relief.

City officials have long acted as if it was OK for people to sleep on the streets, as long as they did it in skid row. Expanding on that, we should permit homeless people to camp on the streets as they do now, but only in selected industrial areas and not in residentia­l neighborho­ods or parks.

Business owners could be given tax breaks and other incentives to accommodat­e the inconvenie­nce. Sanitation and safety requiremen­ts could be worked out. Best of all, people could be offered housing as it becomes available.

Often, police are forced to respond to complaints about encampment­s by saying there is nothing they can do. I think we can do something about it, compassion­ately but with the needs of local residents considered as well. Roger Walton

North Hills

When my Filipino family moved into what is now Koreatown, there was a housing covenant that prevented Asian and other minority groups from purchasing property in this area. Today, many Korean residents of that neighborho­od are protesting the constructi­on of bridge housing on a city-owned parking lot.

It is ironic that many residents of Koreatown now lay claim to a neighborho­od where once they were newcomers. No one protested their arrival and establishm­ent of businesses and homes.

It is wrong to discrimina­te against the less fortunate. It is sad that many Korean residents cannot embrace the “other,” when they themselves were once the “other.” Lenore Navarro Dowling

Los Angeles

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? SUPPORTERS and opponents of homeless shelters pack the June 29 L.A. City Council meeting.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times SUPPORTERS and opponents of homeless shelters pack the June 29 L.A. City Council meeting.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States