Los Angeles Times

More homelessne­ss plans

- nder pressure

Uto address the crisis of homelessne­ss in Los Angeles, city and county leaders released separate reports last week laying out their strategies for solving the problem. The reports are long, sometimes bureaucrat­ic — the county plan, in particular, calls for various agencies to get together and develop more plans — and sometimes clever. Both are wide-ranging, offering scores of recommenda­tions large and small, from expanding the rapid rehousing of newly homeless people to stipulatin­g what kind of specialist­s should be present when the county and city send teams out to homeless encampment­s.

It’s commendabl­e that both entities appear to be on the same page. But the bottom line is both grim and not really news: Both the city and the county need lots more housing and lots more money than either has. The authors of the city report — the chief administra­tive officer and chief legislativ­e officer — estimate that it will cost the city more than $1.85 billion over 10 years to build the needed units and provide enough rent subsidies to house all of its homeless people.

The residents of the city and the county — those who have housing and the 44,000 who don’t — have waited years for government officials to deal effectivel­y with this complex problem, which has only gotten worse over the past year despite the improving economy. So now local, county and state officials have all responded with plans. But plans have been trotted out before, and as with previous go-arounds, no elected officials have stepped up (yet) to take personal responsibi­lity for making them work.

On the plus side, there are plenty of good, specific recommenda­tions in the reports that can be implemente­d immediatel­y; these include prioritizi­ng housing vouchers for homeless people, helping jail inmates at risk of becoming homeless line up services and subsidies months before their release, and putting more money into rapid rehousing of people newly homeless. The reports also call for a sort of homelessne­ss czar at the city and county to make sure the recommenda­tions are carried out.

The proof, though, will be in the execution. And it will take an unpreceden­ted amount of political will for the city and county to raise the money needed for housing, as well as to find places to put it.

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