Los Angeles Times

County urged to alter aid rules

Board of Supervisor­s should change rules that deny aid to many mentally ill homeless people, report says.

- By Gale Holland gale.holland@latimes.com Twitter: @geholland

Mentally ill homeless people are illegally bumped from welfare rolls, activists say.

Civil rights lawyers asked the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s on Tuesday to change rules that they say illegally and systematic­ally knock mentally ill homeless people off the welfare rolls.

Lawyers from the Disability Rights Legal Center and other groups submitted a report to the board contending that tens of thousands of the county’s mentally ill homeless people are denied meager monthly cash benefits of $221 or dropped from the general relief program because of bureaucrat­ic barriers.

The report argues that the county is violating state and federal disability laws. Civil rights attorney Gary Blasi said lawyers had negotiated unsuccessf­ully with the county for more than a year and filed the document in a final effort to avoid litigation.

A county spokesman did not respond to messages seeking comment.

The 12-page report said many people with mental disabiliti­es “cannot bear” the long wait times, security procedures and noisy and crowded conditions in county welfare offices. Those with schizophre­nia and post-traumatic stress disorder are scared off by security guards and checkpoint­s, and many are unable to read or follow the stacks of applicatio­n papers required to sign up, the report said.

Others are dropped for missing deadlines, or are required to work even though their disabiliti­es make them unemployab­le, the groups said in the report.

Although 30% to 40% of the county’s 44,000 homeless people are seriously mentally ill or developmen­tally disabled, only 8% receive special assistance from the county to navigate a daunting “labyrinth” of requiremen­ts, the report says.

“For example, one person applying for [general relief] was wearing a laminated paper crown, tight golf shorts, a T-shirt that was so small his belly button was exposed, and a different shoe on each foot,” the report said. “Yet no county worker even asked whether he needed help during the visit.

“Though they may seem like mundane annoyances to us, the barriers deter many with mental disabiliti­es from even trying to obtain benefits. Many who do try fail.”

Leland Goley, 47, said he was autistic and suffered anxiety. He was dropped from the general relief rolls after the transmissi­on went out on the van where he sleeps, and he could not pay $35 for his private postal box.

A county welfare clerk, speaking through an opening in a plexiglass window, told Goley his benefits would be restored in five to seven days, but he worried he’d lose his insurance, and possibly his vehicle, in the meantime.

“I don’t put any faith in the system to function,” he said.

The Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles, the Western Center on Law & Poverty and the law firm Morrison & Foerster are also involved in the case.

 ?? Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times ?? UP TO 40% of homeless people are seriously mentally ill or developmen­tally disabled, the report says. Above, a homeless encampment.
Katie Falkenberg Los Angeles Times UP TO 40% of homeless people are seriously mentally ill or developmen­tally disabled, the report says. Above, a homeless encampment.

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