Los Angeles Times

Racism cited for homelessne­ss

Agency’s count finds Black people make up 8% of L.A., but 34% of homeless population.

- By Gale Holland

A report finds that Black people are four times more likely to be homeless than white people.

No one can walk past block after block of tents on skid row, or lift the tarps clinging to Hollywood’s freeway offramps, and fail to notice the outsized presence of Black people living on Los Angeles’ sidewalks and encampment­s.

But despite official acknowledg­ments that systemic racism is driving homelessne­ss — and a major study on how to address it — the persistent and staggering over-representa­tion of Black people in L.A.’s homeless ranks barely budged this year, according to the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority’s homeless count report released Friday.

According to a draft report, 21,509 Black people were without permanent, habitable housing during the count in January — 34% of Los Angeles’ homeless population of 64,000 (Pasadena, Long Beach and Glendale do their own counts, bringing the county homeless total to 66,000).

The Black share of homelessne­ss has hovered for years around that percentage point, in a county where only 8% of residents are African American.

The draft report on the count found that about 16,000 homeless people were white and 23,000 were Latino.

The homeless authority says that Black people are four times more likely to be homeless than white people; retired UCLA law professor Gary Blasi, a homelessne­ss expert, said the likelihood for Black people to become homeless is 10 times greater than for white people.

The numbers released Friday predate the coronaviru­s crisis, which has unleashed a cataract of unemployme­nt and potential evictions that Blasi said could hurl 36,000 primarily Latino and Black households, including 56,000 children, into homelessne­ss.

The deluge would come when the Judicial Council of California lifts an eviction moratorium imposed April 6 and scheduled to last until 90 days after the state’s COVID-19 state of emergency ends.

Black and Latino families in Los Angeles will be hit hard because even before COVID-19, many spent much

of their incomes on rent, and they are self-employed, rely on informal employment such as street vending or are in the U.S. illegally and aren’t getting unemployme­nt insurance or other aid.

“If you are Latino, you have the highest probabilit­y of being unemployed because of this crisis, and Latinos make up half the population in the county,” said former L.A. City Administra­tive Officer Miguel Santana, who is heading a committee to guide the region out of the pandemic crisis.

Santana has also led the Citizens Oversight Committee, which oversees Propositio­n HHH homeless housing bond spending.

“For us, COVID has unmasked the underlying realities that exist within these communitie­s and exposed how significan­t the disparitie­s are and how our institutio­ns are failing to respond to them,” Santana said. “Homelessne­ss is the most deadly and stark example of institutio­nal failure that exists.”

City Councilman Marqueece Harris-Dawson, whose district includes historical­ly Black neighborho­ods in Southwest L.A., issued a statement that also connected the pandemic and homelessne­ss.

“The disproport­ionate impact COVID-19 is having on Black communitie­s has revived much-needed conversati­ons around the cost of racism in this country,” he said. “We desperatel­y need to reinvest our resources into Black communitie­s to prevent the types of disparitie­s we continue to see when it comes to homelessne­ss.”

He called for passage of a resolution declaring racism as a public health crisis in Los Angeles, but also said the problem “cannot be solved quickly or locally. We need the federal government to acknowledg­e and address how slavery and systematic racism contribute to these outcomes.”

In a presentati­on on the count, Heidi Marston, the homeless authority’s executive director, repeatedly said systemic racism is behind

the inequities in homelessne­ss.

A 2018 report by a homeless authority-appointed commission on Black people without housing called homelessne­ss “a byproduct of racism” and detailed structural barriers in education, criminal justice, housing, employment, healthcare and access to opportunit­ies.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti cited a string of legislatio­n, propositio­ns and educationa­l reforms targeting Black and Latino communitie­s that he backed to

help address the imbalance but said the city, and the homeless services system, can’t fix the problems on their own.

“I don’t think that we’ll see huge percentage changes by asking people at the end of the line to clean up every wrong that’s happened along the line,” Garcetti said.

But Santana and Pete White of the Los Angeles Community Action Network, a skid row anti-poverty group, said government hasn’t mustered sufficient urgency and political will to root out homelessne­ss policy failures.

White, a member of the LAHSA commission on Black people and homelessne­ss, said the way authoritie­s prioritize people for homeless housing disadvanta­ges his community. “It doesn’t check for the fact that African Americans still have problems talking about our mental health issues,” he said.

The commission found it took longer for Black people to get housing, and less time for them to be evicted for breaking rules, White said. Authoritie­s have never invested to bring the capacity and infrastruc­ture of nonprofit agencies in South Los Angeles to levels seen in Santa Monica and Venice, despite the neighborho­od’s large Black homeless population, White said.

Those groups don’t lack “the passion for doing everything they can to take care of folks,” White said. “They don’t have the infrastruc­ture to do the bureaucrat­ic things asked of them by government sources.”

This year, local officials launched Project Roomkey to place thousands of homeless people in L.A. hotels and motels to shelter them from the pandemic.

The selection process for the rooms appeared to be shorting Black and Latino people, Santana said, so the homeless authority changed its methodolog­y and brought the numbers into alignment with the region’s racial makeup, Santana said.

“But that was done in the interest of the general public, not of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss,” he said.

“At this point there’s a big failure on the part not just of LAHSA,” White said. “It’s a failure of political leadership to activate things.

“We are duty bound to move now, not to try to study it some more, not to figure out the best way forward, but to make some definitive steps in fulfilling the goals we have.”

‘We desperatel­y need to reinvest our resources into Black communitie­s to prevent the ... disparitie­s we continue to see.’

— MARQUEECE HARRIS-DAWSON, Los Angeles City Council member

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? A PROTESTER hands a water bottle to a homeless man who identified himself as Isaac D. in the 2nd Street Tunnel in Los Angeles during a June 4 march against police brutality in the wake of George Floyd’s death.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times A PROTESTER hands a water bottle to a homeless man who identified himself as Isaac D. in the 2nd Street Tunnel in Los Angeles during a June 4 march against police brutality in the wake of George Floyd’s death.

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