Los Angeles Times

Mayors urge statewide homelessne­ss strategy

Big-city leaders call for concerted effort to lift restrictio­ns on affordable housing.

- By Patrick McGreevy patrick.mcgreevy @latimes.com Twitter: @mcgreevy99

SACRAMENTO — With California gripped by a homelessne­ss crisis, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti and mayors of three of the state’s other largest cities called Friday for a statewide effort to remove obstacles to affordable housing and give cities more help in getting people off the streets.

The issue was the focus of a panel discussion in Sacramento that also included San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf and Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg.

“There must be a statewide strategy and approach,” Steinberg said during the forum hosted by a group of nonprofit media organizati­ons.

Schaaf and Garcetti said that there is momentum to tackle the homelessne­ss problem and that they are hopeful because Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom has made housing and homelessne­ss issues a priority.

“Is there the will there? Absolutely,” Garcetti said. “Because any caring California­n knows that this is the issue, and it is everywhere in our state.”

California had, by far, the most homeless people of any state —134,000 — in 2017, according to the last annual estimate by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t. A quarter of the nation’s homeless live in the Golden State, the report found.

About 23,000 people are living on the streets in Los Angeles, Garcetti said, calling the problem “the greatest moral and humanitari­an crisis the state faces.”

Schaaf was highly critical of the state’s current approach to homelessne­ss, using an expletive as she angrily recounted how an Oakland police officer recently had to save a woman who was living in her car when she went into labor and gave birth.

“This is a fundamenta­lly broken system that needs to be reimagined from the getgo,” Schaaf said.

But, she added, “I am full of hope. There is more political will, more political courage than we have ever seen in California at this moment.”

Faulconer, the only Republican mayor on the panel, said the state can remove red tape delaying housing constructi­on. And he called for the Legislatur­e to restore redevelopm­ent programs with the ability to use some property tax revenue to build affordable housing.

“This is a statewide problem,” he said.

Steinberg said the current, cumbersome system for getting funding and planning approval of shelters makes it unlikely there will be permanent shelters soon for the thousands of people left homeless by the recent Camp fire in Butte County.

Despite the failure of a statewide initiative on rent control, Garcetti said the issue of making sure people can afford rents should not go away.

“It is still absolutely a problem,” Garcetti said. Steinberg and Schaaf said the state can do more to prevent rent gouging.

The mayors also said more needs to be done on mental health issues in California. Garcetti predicted Los Angeles County will take advantage of a new state law that allows authoritie­s to force severely mentally ill people into treatment through conservato­rships.

Garcetti was asked by moderator and CALmatters reporter Laurel Rosenhall whether his ability to make progress on the homelessne­ss issue will be a factor in his decision on running for president in 2020. “No, not at all,” he said.

“One thing I will say is this better be a national conversati­on,” he said of homelessne­ss. “If one of us were president, or a mayor were president, or somebody struggling with this were president, this would be a priority in this country.”

Garcetti said he is seeing a change in public attitudes about affordable housing, with people supporting his efforts to provide more clustered housing around transit corridors and stations.

“We are seeing all these millennial­s and others who are not working for a developer, who are not ginned up by City Hall, turning out to public meetings now saying, ‘Densify the city. I want to have something I can afford,’ ” Garcetti said.

 ?? Peggy Peattie San Diego Union-Tribune ?? A MAN SLEEPS on the street in San Diego, where a hepatitis A outbreak struck the homeless community. San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer asked the state to remove red tape delaying housing constructi­on.
Peggy Peattie San Diego Union-Tribune A MAN SLEEPS on the street in San Diego, where a hepatitis A outbreak struck the homeless community. San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer asked the state to remove red tape delaying housing constructi­on.
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? ALLA GAVORKAN sits at her makeshift encampment in Los Angeles, where Mayor Eric Garcetti is pushing several new emergency homeless shelters.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ALLA GAVORKAN sits at her makeshift encampment in Los Angeles, where Mayor Eric Garcetti is pushing several new emergency homeless shelters.

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