Los Angeles Times

‘ Stunned’ official calls for ways to cut tiny- shelter costs

Councilman Koretz wants agencies to lower the price, which can hit $ 130,000 each.

- By Doug Smith

A Los Angeles councilman Tuesday introduced a motion asking city agencies to f ind ways to reduce the costs of building “tiny home” villages to house homeless people.

Councilman Paul Koretz said he was “stunned at the price tag ” reported by the Los Angeles Times on Sunday for the city’s f irst tiny home project, being built in North Hollywood at a cost of $ 130,000 for each 8- by- 8- foot shelter,

Koretz said he was exploring locations for tiny homes in his Westside district, but thought the cost and structural requiremen­ts of the city’s six currently approved villages would preclude those plans.

One of the requiremen­ts — concrete pads for each structure — “will probably make this a nonstarter at every location we have looked at,” he said. “With a couple of the property owners, we tried to sell the fact that they can just be picked up and moved and a couple days later you would never know they were there.”

The city is considerin­g tiny homes, sometimes called Pallet shelters, as one solution to providing 6,700 new shelter beds to settle a federal lawsuit alleging it is not doing enough to get homeless people off the streets.

Given that goal, Koretz’s motion said, “the city should be looking for ways to fashion a more economical solution.”

“We envisioned this as housing going on pallets and all being done inexpensiv­ely,” he said in an interview. “While we’d love to provide more amenities for people experienci­ng homelessne­ss, I think we’d prefer getting more people sheltered.”

The motion asks the city administra­tive officer, the Bureau of Engineerin­g, the Department of Building and Safety and any other relevant department­s and agencies to “develop alternativ­es which can bring the per unit cost down to the $ 17,00022,000 range cited in The Times report that other California communitie­s have been able to utilize the same equipment for in service of the same purpose.”

That could be accomplish­ed, it said, by “reduced constructi­on costs, alternativ­e approaches to structural stability and safety, pareddown amenities, permit and fee waivers, and involvemen­t of village residents in maintenanc­e and operationa­l tasks when feasible and appropriat­e.”

The council referred the motion, which asks for a report in 30 days, to the Homelessne­ss and Poverty Committee for considerat­ion after the holiday recess.

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