Los Angeles Times

COSTS GROW FOR HOMELESS PLANS

New figures put L.A.’s tab near $2 billion over 10 years

- By Gale Holland, Peter Jamison and Abby Sewell

Los Angeles has struggled for decades to conquer homelessne­ss, only to see the problem grow worse in recent years as tent-and-tarpaulin shantytown­s have taken root in neighborho­ods from Venice to Boyle Heights.

Elected city officials have said that solving nation’s worst homelessne­ss crisis is among their top priorities, but they have devoted comparativ­ely little money toward housing and services, including $30 million this fiscal year.

On Thursday they were presented with a much larger tab for getting 26,000 men, women and children into homes: at least $1.85 billion over the next 10 years, according to longawaite­d recommenda­tions from the city’s top budget analysts.

The report — prepared by City Administra­tive Officer Miguel Santana and Chief Legislativ­e Analyst Sharon Tso — comes after months of collaborat­ion between the city and county to craft the region’s first comprehens­ive plan for curbing homelessne­ss in more than a decade.

The report’s principal — and most expensive — suggestion is the expansion of long-term housing for the homeless.

It concludes that homelessne­ss in L.A. is in part “the result of underfundi­ng and under-building affordable housing over an extended period of time, while failing to build adequate capacity to serve and house existing homeless Angelenos.”

The analysts suggest improving the city’s short-term shelter options and creating a centralize­d case-management system for the homeless.

The report offers dozens of options for raising the money needed to carry out this plan, such as state and federal grants and the use of fees on real estate transactio­ns and developmen­t. For such a large sum, however, the report noted that city voters may also have to approve a bond or tax increase.

The analysts’ recommenda­tions could reverberat­e powerfully at City Hall. With its premise that homelessne­ss can be reduced only through long-term government spending on housing and social services, the report places the responsibi­lity for one of L.A.’s most recognizab­le social ills squarely on the city’s political class.

The city’s report appeared on the same day as a county blueprint for spending $150 million in the near term on its own homelessne­ss strategies.

The budgetary implicatio­ns for the county are not as stark, however, since county officials already have ongoing sources of funding for addressing homelessne­ss. The county plan also did not identify an overall dollar figure needed to address homelessne­ss, as the city plan did.

In relying heavily on permanent housing coupled with medical and social services and expanded outreach, the city and county reports largely hewed to practices espoused by homeless advocates across the country.

But Santana and Tso were unusually frank in acknowledg­ing that only a massive expenditur­e of public funds, perhaps needing the approval of city voters, would suffice to underwrite that vision.

“While costs to fully address homelessne­ss are significan­t, the cost of inaction will continue to grow,” the report states.

The report also notes that the estimated $1.85 billion the city must spend to combat homelessne­ss includes primarily the price of building or leasing new housing units — not the cost of many supportive services for the homeless or for expanding the city’s system of outreach workers, as the report also recommends.

It is unclear how warmly the report’s strategies and and spending recommenda­tions will be received by the council and Mayor Eric Garcetti.

In a statement, Garcetti said the report “gives us the blueprint we need to guide our decision-making process, and its recommenda­tions will help us allocate the critical funding we need to address this issue over the next decade.”

Council President Herb Wesson said in a statement that the council “rolled up its sleeves and crafted a strategic plan that not only creates a blueprint for Los Angeles, but also complement­s the county and state’s efforts.”

Councilman Mike Bonin, whose Westside district has seen one of the sharpest increases in homeless encampment­s, suggested that he supported the long-term approach recommende­d in the report but would like to see it coupled with more immediate action.

“I am grateful, encouraged and tremendous­ly impatient,” Bonin said in a statement, adding that the city needs “… immediate action that will reduce the number of encampment­s in our neighborho­ods and get people living on our streets the support and services they need and deserve.”

Elected officials did not address the report’s details.

Should city officials choose to follow the report’s recommenda­tions, they could potentiall­y lean on either the state or federal government for financial help.

Earlier this week, state senators proposed spending $2 billion to build or rehabilita­te permanent housing for mentally ill homeless people across California.

The reports come at a time when the risks to L.A.’s homeless have been aggravated by El Niño storms that bore down on Southern California this week.

Last fall, the council set aside $12.4 million for emergency relief, especially for those who live in areas prone to flooding.

Teams were sent to warn more than 1,000 people living in watersheds and riverbeds to move to winter shelters or at least high ground.

In its separate report, the county proposed launching 12 initiative­s now, and studying others.

The priorities set for this year include spending $26 million to rapidly rehouse families that fall into homelessne­ss; allocating 35% of federal housing vouchers that become available to people who are chronicall­y homeless; and giving $11 million for shortterm housing such as shelters and group homes for people coming out of county institutio­ns such as jails and hospitals.

County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl said the county, which has a $28-billion annual budget, has more resources than the city to put toward addressing homelessne­ss and will have to make a larger commitment in the long term.

“The county is going to be called on to do the heavy lifting, and I think we are making an unpreceden­ted commitment to do that,” she said.

 ?? Irfan Khan ?? LOS ANGELES COUNTY Sheriff’s Deputy Michael Galvan, left, warns a couple living under the 5 Freeway near the San Gabriel River in Pico Rivera about the dangers of f looding from rainstorms.
Irfan Khan LOS ANGELES COUNTY Sheriff’s Deputy Michael Galvan, left, warns a couple living under the 5 Freeway near the San Gabriel River in Pico Rivera about the dangers of f looding from rainstorms.
 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? REYNALDO “RAY” GONZALEZ,
homeless for five years, walks back to his encampment on the 1st Street Bridge in Los Angeles.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times REYNALDO “RAY” GONZALEZ, homeless for five years, walks back to his encampment on the 1st Street Bridge in Los Angeles.

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