Los Angeles Times

MORE PEOPLE LIVING ON THE STREETS

The population of chronicall­y homeless residents in L.A. city and county is now the largest in the nation.

- By Gale Holland

Los Angeles city and county have the most chronicall­y homeless people in the country, and nearly all of them sleep on the streets, according to figures released Thursday by the U.S. Housing and Urban Developmen­t Department.

L.A.’s chronicall­y homeless population has grown 55%, to 12,536, since 2013, accounting for almost 15% of all people in that category, HUD reported. More than one-third of the nation’s chronicall­y homeless live in California, the agency added.

L.A.’s spike outpaced New York City’s one-year increase, the second largest, 3 to 1, the report said. The number of chronicall­y homeless people nationwide remained basically flat, rising 1%, the report said.

“We have a long way to go,” HUD Secretary Julian Castro said during a conference call with reporters.

The spread of long-term homelessne­ss in L.A. County has alarmed communitie­s from Sylmar to San Pedro, where residents complain that their quality of life is threatened by crime and trash from unsightly encampment­s.

“I have found out that my homeless neighbors can move in and set up their shelters on the sidewalk outside of my house,” San Pedro resident Elaine Jenkins told the City Council during a hearing this week on the homeless crisis. “They can drag up old mattresses, sofas and spread trash everywhere. They can use the streets as their public restroom.”

The nationwide numbers came as a disappoint­ment to HUD, which had extended a goal of ending chronic homelessne­ss from the end of the year to 2017.

“We are aggressive­ly pursuing every tool, including actively engaging our state and federal partners, to help save lives with El Niño on the horizon,” Mayor Eric Garcetti said in a statement.

The government classifies disabled people who go without housing for a year, or who land in the street several times over three years, as chronicall­y homeless. These individual­s are the most vulnerable and visible among the ranks of the homeless. They are also the most expensive and the most difficult to dislodge.

Some bounce back and forth between ambulance trips, hospital jailings or mental health confinemen­ts. Outreach workers can spend months coaxing them out of the street life to which they have adapted, and counseling, substance abuse treatment and case management can be required for months or even years to keep them in housing.

The HUD data were largely derived from a street count conducted over three days last January. Castro and U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert A. McDonald joined Garcetti in taking part in the skid row count.

L.A. city and county figures exclude statistics from Pasadena, Long Beach and Glendale, which administer their homeless programs separately.

Castro blamed the agency’s failure to reach its target on rising rents and federal funding cutbacks.

“The U.S. is experienci­ng an affordable housing crisis and shrinking federal budgets,” Castro said. “These resource constraint­s have slowed down the progress.”

Mike Neely, a commission­er with the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, said the city had fallen behind on building affordable housing.

“We’re working very hard to get these units developed, but man,” Neely said. “Who is taking up all the units are the millennial­s, the middleclas­s and upper middleclas­s individual­s.”

The City Council this week declared a shelter crisis, and laid plans for expanding its winter shelter program and for authorizin­g people who live in their cars and RVs to sleep in church parking lots.

Garcetti ruled out an immediate declaratio­n of a state of emergency, which some council members had sought. Garcetti said he was waiting for more informatio­n from the city attorney.

Subject to council approval, an emergency declaratio­n would empower the mayor to requisitio­n resources and issue orders that he deems “necessary for the protection of life and property,” according to a report from City Atty. Mike Feuer’s office. The city twice declared emergencie­s in the 1980s to provide shelter to homeless people.

The mayor could also call on the governor and the president to issue emergency proclamati­ons for Los Angeles, but officials said that requesting more state and federal funding to address the homeless problem was a long shot. The city attorney said his office had not found one instance of a presidenti­al declaratio­n in response to a “chronic, ongoing situation such as the homeless crisis.”

 ?? Irfan Khan
Los Angeles Times ?? ALMOST 15% of the nation’s chronicall­y homeless — disabled people who have spent a year on the streets or have frequently returned over three years — live in Los Angeles, according to the federal housing agency.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ALMOST 15% of the nation’s chronicall­y homeless — disabled people who have spent a year on the streets or have frequently returned over three years — live in Los Angeles, according to the federal housing agency.

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