Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

LA mayor conflates county’s and city’s homeless deaths

- Andy Nguyen

Hoping to address homelessne­ss, newly elected Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass unveiled a plan to move swaths of unhoused people from encampment­s into hotels and motels during her first 100 days in office.

In a national TV interview, Bass said her “Inside Safe” housing plan will be voluntary and will not involve sweeps, where city officials forcibly clear out encampment­s.

“This is not coercing people. This is not ticketing people or incarcerat­ing people,” Bass said during a Dec. 18 interview on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

Bass said during the interview that Los Angeles has around 40,000 unhoused people, and homelessne­ss is so severe “literally five people a day die on our streets.”

Bass’ number for deaths is not entirely accurate.

Count of unhoused

Bass’ office didn’t immediatel­y respond to our query about her source for the figure on daily deaths. So we looked through a report from the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, which released its 2022 point-in-time count of the unhoused population in Los Angeles County in September. The agency coordinate­s housing and services for individual­s and families in the county experienci­ng homelessne­ss.

Its count found that 69,144 people in the county lived without a permanent home. Of those numbers, around 41,980 people experienci­ng homelessne­ss were in the city of Los Angeles.

Although a count was not conducted in 2021 because of COVID-19, the agency said policies enacted during the pandemic including eviction moratorium­s and a statewide initiative to provide emergency housing for unhoused people to stem the spread of the virus helped slow the growth of homelessne­ss in Los Angeles.

The city saw a 1.7% rise from the last count in 2020, which saw 41,290 people living without a permanent home. The population of unhoused people in the city was 35,550 in 2019.

‘Five people die a day on our streets’

Bass’ statement on five unhoused people dying a day is a bit shakier than her estimate for the city’s unhoused population.

The figure appears to come from a recent study that looked at deaths of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss across Los Angeles County one year before and after the start of the pandemic. The report did not include a city-by-city breakdown of where the deaths occurred.

The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health found that 1,988 unhoused people died across the region from April 2020 through March 2021, averaging about five deaths per day. Drug overdoses caused a majority of the deaths among the county’s unhoused population, about 715 deaths.

The report found 309 people died of coronary heart disease, 179 of COVID-19, 150 of traffic injury, 104 of homicide, 64 of suicide and 57 from unintentio­nal injuries.

Los Angeles County has a population of about 10 million. The population of the city of Los Angeles is closer to 4 million.

While COVID-19 was the third-leading cause of death among the unhoused population, the report said the pandemic “may have exacerbate­d stressors already present in the lives of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss, leading to increases in other causes of death.”

Jennifer Hark Deitz, CEO of the local nonprofit People Assisting the Homeless, told PolitiFact in a statement that the homelessne­ss crisis has existed hand-in-hand with the housing crisis in the city for decades, with one feeding the other. A coordinate­d outreach effort to move people from encampment­s into housing is a necessary step to avoid further traumatizi­ng unhoused people, Dietz said.

Our ruling

Bass said “literally five people a day die on our streets” from homelessne­ss.

The estimate Bass used appears to be drawn from a study looking at homeless deaths across Los Angeles County, not just the city.

The study found 1,988 unhoused people in all of Los Angeles County died from April 2020 through March 2021 — about five deaths per day.

The study is the most recent informatio­n the county has on homeless deaths, comparing death rates one year before and after the start of the pandemic, and may not reflect the current trend in the city of Los Angeles, where Bass is mayor. We rate this claim Mostly True.

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