Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Blue ribbon commission­s can never tie a bow on it

- Susan Shelley Columnist Write Susan at Susan@ SusanShell­ey.com and follow her on Twitter @Susan_ Shelley.

If you're a politician trying to get past your next election, few things are more useful than a blue ribbon commission.

It has the appearance of thoughtful­ness, gravitas, wisdom, collaborat­ion and action, exactly the way a comedian in a gorilla suit has the appearance of being a gorilla. There are two main difference­s between a blue ribbon commission and a comedian in a gorilla suit. The first is that a blue ribbon commission is much more ridiculous. And the second is that it's much more expensive. You could probably remake “Planet of the Apes” and 15 sequels and still spend less than the taxpayers will pay for the recommenda­tions of the Blue Ribbon Commission on Homelessne­ss.

“The Blue Ribbon Commission was charged with taking a hard look at the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority and coming up with a new governance model for L.A. County homeless services,” said L.A. County Supervisor Kathryn Barger after the Board of Supervisor­s cheerfully approved a motion by Barger and Supervisor Hilda Solis to accept the commission's seven recommenda­tions.

The top recommenda­tion of the panel was to create a new bureaucrac­y without eliminatin­g any of the existing bureaucrac­ies.

Yes, it's a new “framework” for a new “governance system” that will include a new county entity to “serve as a centralize­d housing acquisitio­n unit that houses people experienci­ng homelessne­ss and connects them to support services.”

But wait, you may be thinking. What happened to all the other government agencies and nonprofits funded with tax dollars? Weren't they supposed to be housing people and connecting them to support services? And if they're not doing it, shouldn't we stop funding them and try something else?

Some people think so. One of them is independen­t candidate for governor Michael Shellenber­ger, who has proposed a new state agency, Cal-Psych, to replace the duplicativ­e, wasteful, ineffectiv­e, 58-county mess that is spending billions of dollars and not making anything better.

Of course, that would cut off the funding that keeps all the moist-eyed executives current on their car payments.

So here in L.A. County, we're going to have a new “czar” of homelessne­ss to “revamp” the organizati­onal chart.

This new entity will take awhile to get up to speed. Studies will be needed, and consultant­s will have to calculate the office space that will be required. Then there's staffing and training, and important details such as logo design. Finally, when the new entity is ready, it will take on its new challenge, as described in the Board of Supervisor­s' motion: “convene work groups,” “convene stakeholde­rs,” “develop goals, policy and implementa­tion plans” and “lead in the creation of regional committees.”

What about the city-county joint powers authority currently tasked with all of this, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority? Is it abolished?

Don't be silly. People have car payments.

No, the Blue Ribbon Commission on Homelessne­ss recommends “streamlini­ng” LAHSA, which turns out to mean relieving it of the responsibi­lity for “providing direct services.” Your tax dollars will pay for the agency to take your tax dollars.

The Blue Ribbon Commission recommends that the county “support efforts to establish an executive-level action team to drive urgently needed reforms, discuss issues of common interest, and facilitate data developmen­t and sharing.” Naturally, these jobs will have to pay very high salaries to attract the very best people in the fields of driving, discussing and facilitati­ng.

So if you happen to own a BMW dealership, you may see some benefit from the report of the Blue Ribbon Commission on Homelessne­ss. Otherwise, the only people who benefit are the denizens of the homeless-industrial complex, who have been spared from the threat of losing their phony-baloney jobs and sweetheart contracts, and the politician­s who can respond to questions about the persistent tragedy on our streets by pointing harumphing­ly to the commission's report until they are safely past their next election.

What California really needs is a waiver from what's known as the IMD exclusion — a provision of a 1965 law that blocks federal matching funds from reimbursin­g the state for mental health care in facilities with more than 16 beds. The governor could ask for the waiver. Ask him why he hasn't.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? California Gov. Gavin Newsom gestures toward a chart with proposed funding to deal with the state's homelessne­ss as he discusses his revised state budget during a news conference in Sacramento in 2019.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS California Gov. Gavin Newsom gestures toward a chart with proposed funding to deal with the state's homelessne­ss as he discusses his revised state budget during a news conference in Sacramento in 2019.
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