Los Angeles Times

Tens of thousands more homeless by 2023, report says

- By Doug Smith

Massive job losses caused by the COVID- 19 pandemic nationwide will leave tens of thousands of low- wage workers without homes over the next three years, a report published Tuesday by a Los Angelesbas­ed research group forecasts.

Los Angeles County, already struggling with one of the nation’s largest homeless population­s, will be especially hard hit, on a percapita basis, because of its large low- wage labor force and high housing costs.

Based on the effects of the 2008 recession, the Economic Roundtable report “Locked Out” concludes that pandemic- related unemployme­nt will start a brutal cycle of homelessne­ss.

It says the uptick began as a trickle in 2020, but will triple this year and peak by 2023.

By then, the number of additional working- age adults with no place of their own to sleep will reach more than 52,000 in Los Angeles County, 131,000 in California and 600,000 across the nation, it said.

The most recent federal estimate, for 2019, estimated there were 568,000 homeless people nationally and 129,000 in California. The 2020 count for Los Angeles County put the number at just over 66,000, meaning the projection is for a near doubling.

The majority will remain largely invisible, “couch surfing” with friends or relatives. But for many, that will be the beginning of a path leading to the streets.

The analysis forecasts an increase in Los Angeles County of about 14,000 chronicall­y homeless people — those who both have a disability and have lived on the street for more than a year — roughly doubling the current number.

The dire outlook ref lects the types of jobs most affected by the pandemic — those held by low- wage and underemplo­yed workers in retail stores, restaurant­s and bars, clerical jobs, child care, personal care and, surprising­ly, in nonprofit institutio­ns.

“We peel back layers of risk,” said Dan Flaming, president of the Economic Roundtable. “Who are those people? Young, less educated, doesn’t help if you’re an African American or a woman.”

Flaming said the findings support additional spending and new policies at the federal, state and local levels.

“We’re not winning that battle,” Flaming said. “Maybe it’s time to start trying some new game plans.”

Noting President- elect Joe Biden’s support for new stimulus money, Flaming said relief should be focused on “lower- income tenants and smaller landlords, who have the least resources to weather the crisis and therefore are at the greatest risk of eviction and foreclosur­e.”

One way to do that, Flaming said, would be an infrastruc­ture bill. Besides building something society needs, it could help lift the underemplo­yed with apprentice­ships.

The report endorses standard proposals for government help: a minimum wage to support basic necessitie­s, more federal funding for programs that fund housing constructi­on for homeless people, local reform of land- use regulation­s, legal representa­tion for all tenants facing eviction and full funding of the federal Section 8 rental assistance program.

Even before the pandemic pushed more people into poverty, federal rental subsidies were available for only about 1 in 4 Los Angeles County households that qualified under the income guidelines.

The report also endorses a practice, used in cities such as Atlanta and Cincinnati, allowing tenants to buy insurance in place of security deposits to spread the cost over several premium payments.

The Economic Roundtable, which spun off as a unit of Los Angeles County, is a nonprofit research organizati­on that analyzes demographi­c, economic, housing and environmen­tal data to support public policy.

To probe the effects of the anticipate­d job losses on homelessne­ss, the Economic Roundtable took data about the 2008 Great Recession from the U. S. Department of Labor, the California Employment Developmen­t Department, the Los Angeles County Department of Social Services, the census and the annual homeless count, and calculated that one person became homeless for every 10.3 people who lost their jobs.

But homelessne­ss trailed unemployme­nt, continuing to rise several years after the recession ended.

“People are likely to fend off homelessne­ss as long as possible by forgoing other expenses, relinquish­ing assets and going into debt in order to remain housed,” the report says. “However, without money to pay for rent or a supportive social network, it is likely that individual­s will be evicted and lack a place of their own to sleep.”

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