Los Angeles Times

Accountabi­lity on homelessne­ss

- Westlake Village Los Angeles El Segundo

Re “State fails to track homeless funds, audit says,” April 10

As much an opponent of added bureaucrac­y as I am, it amazes me that California has not created a new agency whose sole job is to fight homelessne­ss.

Instead, some $20 billion has been spent over the last five years with no single point of management and accountabi­lity. Instead, we have a mishmash of agencies, all with different views on solutions and with little to show for the money they are spending.

What we have in the way of oversight is a state committee, of whom the membership has little real accountabi­lity and little in the way of tracking and validation of effectiven­ess. No one will lose their job if it doesn’t work; it’s just something they do in their spare time and put on their resumés or in political ads.

My recommenda­tion for director would be a retired general or admiral who has no political aspiration­s, but is sharp and mean enough to handle the job.

Roger Krenkler

Humanize homelessne­ss.

I was at the Metro station last summer and saw a woman sit on a public bench, fully clothed, and start urinating as she cried. If she was a child, the humane instinct would be to go help her rather than letting her sit in soiled clothes and damage public property.

It angers me seeing how carelessly the state has handled homelessne­ss. The incompeten­ce that comes with not effectivel­y budgeting our most pressing issue is astronomic­al.

With summer approachin­g, we all know how uncomforta­bly hot L.A. can get, something city leaders sitting in air-conditione­d offices doing anything other than their jobs might not comprehend.

Humanize homelessne­ss. That is someone’s child, someone’s sibling, someone’s spouse, someone’s parent. That is someone.

Until the state fulfills its role, I plead to the humanity in you and urge you to step up.

Priya Khullar Reseda

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What perfect timing. I paid my property taxes last Tuesday. On April 15, I pay my state income taxes.

But The Times reports that the council created to monitor the $20 billion the state has spent on homelessne­ss programs over the last five years doesn’t really know whether some of these programs were actually effective.

Fire every one of these council members.

Meanwhile, The Times has reported recently on staff shortages in Los Angeles County juvenile halls and California students sleeping in their cars.

Remind me again, why do we pay taxes?

Susan Scheding

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The Times has been running articles about how much money is being spent on the effort to end homelessne­ss and points out that the number of unhoused people is still increasing.

Please follow up with articles about how increases in housing prices push people out of the bottom of the rental market and into homelessne­ss.

It seems probable that people are becoming newly unhoused at a rate faster than local government­s and nonprofits can create housing — leading to the misconcept­ion that the dollars going to address the crisis are being misspent.

Maria Montag

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