Los Angeles Times

L.A. housing chief announces he’ll step down

Agency has drawn fire over cost of homeless units

- By Emily Alpert Reyes

Rushmore Cervantes will exit at month’s end. The agency has drawn fire over the cost of homeless units.

Los Angeles housing department chief Rushmore Cervantes, who has worked with the department for more than a decade, is stepping down at the end of March.

Cervantes said in a statement Wednesday that he had decided to leave his post after years of service and called it “a privilege to work with a pool of talented public servants during challengin­g times.” In a message to employees this week, Cervantes said he was leaving with “mixed emotions.”

Cervantes told employees that they had “collective­ly accomplish­ed many things,” including tripling the amount of homeless housing under developmen­t, undertakin­g programs to stabilize neighborho­ods and resell foreclosed properties, expanding shelters for people who had suffered domestic violence or human traffickin­g, and getting a new “linkage fee” approved to fund affordable housing.

“Notwithsta­nding these efforts, there is much more on the horizon and it is time for new leadership to enable the city to successful­ly address the homeless and housing crisis as well as the creation of one of the largest accessibil­ity programs in the country,” Cervantes wrote in his message to employees.

Alex Comisar, a spokesman for Mayor Eric Garcetti, said that Assistant City Administra­tive Officer Yolanda Chavez would serve as the acting general manager of the department.

When asked why Cervantes was leaving, Comisar said simply, “He’s stepping down.” Comisar said that after Cervantes leaves, he will “be advising our office on several key housing and homelessne­ss initiative­s.”

Los Angeles City Councilman Mitch O’Farrell, who heads a council committee focused on homelessne­ss, said Cervantes “has been instrument­al in keeping Los Angeles on a pathway to building desperatel­y needed low income and permanent supportive housing” and done so “with efficiency and a sense of urgency.”

“Whomever is appointed to replace him must continue moving aggressive­ly on the city’s implementa­tion of our housing goals as seamlessly as possible,” O’Farrell said.

The Housing and Community Investment Department facilitate­s the funding of housing projects with federal, state and local money, inspects and enforces city codes meant to prevent shoddy conditions in apartment complexes, and oversees programs to assist poor Angelenos, among other responsibi­lities.

It has faced criticism over the high cost of building supportive housing for homeless people under the $1.2billion bond measure, Propositio­n HHH, which drew scrutiny from City Controller Ron Galperin in a recent audit. The housing department said reassessin­g projects that had gotten preliminar­y approval, as Galperin had suggested, would delay constructi­on, create “a chilling effect on the developmen­t industry and damage the city’s reputation.”

The department also had a dispute with the federal government over allegation­s that the city failed to provide affordable housing that was properly accessible to tenants who are in wheelchair­s or have other disabiliti­es, as required by law.

In August, L.A. officials reached an agreement with the Trump administra­tion to build or retrofit more than 4,000 apartments for disabled residents. Nearly three years earlier, the city agreed to spend $200 million to settle a lawsuit over complaints about accessibil­ity problems in hundreds of projects approved over nearly three decades.

Tenant activists have also complained that the department has been slow to move on new policies to protect tenants, including a proposed law to better defend tenants from harassment by landlords. L.A. Tenants Union organizer Trinidad Ruiz said it hadn’t been “a consistent­ly reliable institutio­n — and in this housing crisis we can’t afford that.”

“The department has gotten better at being responsive to the needs of tenants,” but that was due to persistenc­e of renters and their advocates, said René Moya, director of Housing Is A Human Right, an advocacy division of the AIDS Healthcare Foundation. “We hope the new person takes a more proactive stance — and is willing to have the hard conversati­ons with City Council to make sure they have the funding they need to protect tenants the way they should.”

Stephanie KlaskyGame­r, executive director of the nonprofit affordable housing developer LA Family Housing, called Cervantes “a strong leader during a time of extraordin­ary growth for our city.”

 ?? Richard Derk Los Angeles Times ?? CERVANTES KEPT
L.A. on track toward its housing goals, said one councilman.
Richard Derk Los Angeles Times CERVANTES KEPT L.A. on track toward its housing goals, said one councilman.
 ?? City of Los Angeles ?? “IT IS TIME for new leadership,” said the outgoing housing chief, Rushmore Cervantes.
City of Los Angeles “IT IS TIME for new leadership,” said the outgoing housing chief, Rushmore Cervantes.

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