Los Angeles Times

Bright spot in housing homeless

Pandemic relief money jump- starts program to convert motels

- By Benjamin Oreskes

Natosha Johnson sat in a chair in the apartment building lobby, looking exhausted and rubbing her legs as her four children shuttled trash bags full of the family’s possession­s into an elevator and then into their new two- bedroom apartment.

“It’s such a relief to be here,” said Johnson, 41, whose fatigue was a symptom of her lupus. “Our cramped situation was difficult, especially during COVID.”

Johnson and her children are among the beneficiar­ies of a state program, Project Homekey, that has quietly and efficientl­y purchased and rehabilita­ted buildings for homeless individual­s. Before moving into this fourth- f loor apartment in North Hills earlier this month, they had been sharing two beds in a cramped motel room.

They were among 40 families to get a spot in an apartment building

purchased with a combinatio­n of funds from the state and the city of Los Angeles. The opening of the site in early December capped a five- month sprint to use federal coronaviru­s relief funds that had to be spent by the end of 2020.

Local government officials and nonprofit housing providers say they are excited by the speed and cheapness of the acquisitio­ns compared to the usual siting and developmen­t of affordable housing or shelters.

On average, the city spent about $ 230,000 per unit, which is far lower than what it takes to build a unit of permanent supportive housing — the type that is deemed most effective in breaking the cycle of homelessne­ss.

Project Homekey buys motels and other types of buildings, and will eventually retrofit them for permanent housing.

Converting motels is not a new idea, but the speed and f lexibility the state offered local government­s has resulted in one of the largest expansions in shelter for homeless people ever.

Local officials credit a litany of factors, including the simplicity of the f inancing and the waiving of a series of regulation­s, including the California Environmen­tal Quality Act ( CEQA).

The project followed another statewide effort, known as Project Roomkey, to move vulnerable homeless people into rented hotel rooms. As that has wound down, the Homekey purchases ramped up.

In total, a little over 95 projects totaling 6,000 units are planned to be purchased or have been purchased by municipali­ties or housing authoritie­s, according to state officials.

In Los Angeles, the city and county will add about 1,800 units — 1,000 in the city, the rest outside it.

Some, such as the one where Johnson lives, will be immediatel­y used as permanent supportive housing, in which social workers help people adjust to their new life.

Others will start as interim housing, where people can move off the streets for a short time.

Those will later be renovated and converted into permanent housing. The state used about $ 750 million in federal coronaviru­s relief funds and augmented that with about $ 100 million in state money, along with philanthro­pic grants. It then expected municipali­ties to match some of this largesse with their own money.

“We started working on this at the end of July and we will have over 1,000 new units available within f ive months,” said Douglas Guthrie, president and CEO of the city Housing Authority.

“We can do the quick turnaround, and because of the nature of the buildings that we’re working with, and the price points we can acquire them for, it’s significan­tly less expensive than building something new from scratch.”

The purchases of these buildings, which are mostly motels, have not been without struggle. The county was forced to delay purchasing one motel in Commerce for permanent housing because formerly homeless tenants were still living there with nowhere to go.

This episode indicated another reality: that many people who had been living in the newly purchased motels were on the edge of homelessne­ss themselves. In effect, the city and county would be swapping out one population of homeless people for another.

After a review, some motel guests were offered relocation assistance; others were offered space in shelters. None got to stay, and the former motel will now likely open in February after some renovation­s.

In some locales, attempts to purchase properties were stymied or delayed by local opposition.

Jason Elliot, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s senior advisor for homelessne­ss, who spearheade­d the program, credited the fact that the federal relief dollars had to be spent by the end of the year for the speed and success of Homekey. More important, he said, was state legislatio­n that waived the need for CEQA and local land use approvals.

Of the nearly 1,000 units that the city purchased in recent months, about 210 will immediatel­y become supportive housing for recipients of federal Section 8 housing vouchers. The rest will begin as interim housing and eventually undergo renovation­s so they can house people permanentl­y.

In practice that will mean adding kitchenett­es.

“What I think was so extraordin­ary about this process was the ability to achieve pace and scale and open up units so quickly,” said LA Family Housing’s president and CEO Stephanie KlaskyGame­r.

Her organizati­on provided the supportive services to people such as Johnson. It will also own and manage four other sites that will start off as interim housing and likely transition into permanent supportive housing in several years after renovation­s.

Klasky- Gamer and other local government officials said they hoped in the future more federal or state dollars could be allocated to buy more buildings.

The county purchased about 10 locations and 850 units and all but one of these locations will start as interim housing. This came at a cost of about $ 105 million.

Acquiring these hotels and turning some into interim housing immediatel­y came with an added benefit: They already had people in them.

That was a problem for permanent housing developmen­ts, but a plus for interim housing. In recognitio­n of the urgency of the crisis, not only did the state require that the deals go through before the end of the year, they said that in most cases people had to be staying in these locations within 90 days of closing.

A usual affordable housing developmen­t involves multiple layers of f inancing progressin­g on differing timelines, adding complicati­ons and expenses to the constructi­on of a building.

“This process illustrate­s the challenge that we have in affordable housing developmen­t — when you are navigating eight, nine different funding streams, it simply adds complexity and time to the process. It’s not like typical constructi­on in the private market where you have perhaps a single loan from the bank, and you’re basically off to construct immediatel­y. With most affordable housing constructi­on, you’ve got other timelines that you’re dependent on,” said Emilio Salas, the acting executive director for the Los Angeles County Developmen­t Authority.

The ownership of some of the Homekey buildings will be transferre­d to nonprofits while others will be managed by housing authoritie­s.

The North Hills building holds families who will only have to pay a portion of their rent.

It was a hive of activity as staff from LA Family Housing helped the newcomers navigate the the documents they needed to sign. New residents placed their possession­s in trash bags for 20 minutes in the subterrane­an garage to ward off bed bugs and staff constructe­d cabinets and ripped the packing off new mattresses.

The mood among the residents was a mix of celebratio­n, relief and being overwhelme­d by how drasticall­y their lives would change now that they had a permanent roof over their head. Some like Johnson only found out Monday that they were moving in Wednesday.

The Georgia native had moved to California partially to be closer to her husband, who is currently incarcerat­ed.

Her four children had struggled to keep up their grades as they tried to study in a cramped motel room. Now Johnson will share a room with her youngest daughter, and her three other children will bunk together across the hall.

They’ll have some more space to do their work, and Johnson can feel some sense of relief knowing their situation is more stable.

“I won’t get excited until I can lay down and close the door to my bedroom,” Johnson said. “I’m just going to tell them to give me 10 minutes and close the door.”

 ?? Photog r aphs by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? NURSES April McFarland, left, and Tiffany Robbins close the body bag for a COVID- 19 patient who died at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in Mission Hills. L. A. County had 291 COVID deaths on Thursday.
Photog r aphs by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times NURSES April McFarland, left, and Tiffany Robbins close the body bag for a COVID- 19 patient who died at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in Mission Hills. L. A. County had 291 COVID deaths on Thursday.
 ??  ?? KHALIA SANDERS, 16, unpacks in her new apartment in North Hills in a converted motel under a state project being labeled a success.
KHALIA SANDERS, 16, unpacks in her new apartment in North Hills in a converted motel under a state project being labeled a success.
 ?? Photog r aphs by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? NATOSHA JOHNSON and her four children moved into their new two- bedroom apartment in North Hills this week as part of Project Homekey. “It’s such a relief to be here,” said Johnson, 41. “Our cramped situation was diff icult, especially during COVID.”
Photog r aphs by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times NATOSHA JOHNSON and her four children moved into their new two- bedroom apartment in North Hills this week as part of Project Homekey. “It’s such a relief to be here,” said Johnson, 41. “Our cramped situation was diff icult, especially during COVID.”
 ?? THE NORTH HILLS ?? building was opened after a f ive- month sprint to use federal coronaviru­s relief funds that had to be spent by the end of 2020.
THE NORTH HILLS building was opened after a f ive- month sprint to use federal coronaviru­s relief funds that had to be spent by the end of 2020.

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