Los Angeles Times

L.A. tallies those without homes

Volunteers sift streets to update city’s data on homelessne­ss, this year probing its link to time in jails, hospitals.

- By Gale Holland

The annual Los Angeles homeless count ended early Friday amid disappoint­ment that the street encampment­s rankling residents across the city are still on the rise.

The three-day event, which marshaled 7,700 volunteers for a street-by-street individual tally of homeless people and encampment­s, was held to update Los Angeles County’s homeless count, which stood at 47,000 in 2016. Population­s in shelters, transition­al housing and other facilities are also counted.

New York City traditiona­lly reports the most homeless people in the country, primarily in its extensive shelter system. But Los Angeles has the highest number by far of what are called “unsheltere­d” homeless people, living on sidewalks, in cars, campers, tents and lean-tos.

Their expansion into neighborho­ods from Malibu to San Pedro has become a potent political issue for local elected officials, and source of outrage to homeowners.

“I am not optimistic,” Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority Commission­er Mike Neely said Thursday. “It appears the unsheltere­d are still a problem.”

Peter Lynn, the homeless authority’s executive director, said it would be “premature” to draw conclusion­s about any facet of the count.

“Any anecdotal conclusion­s about an increase in these categories could be countered by people who report a decrease,” Lynn said in a statement.

Mayor Eric Garcetti pointed to the $1.2 billion voters approved at the city’s behest to build 10,000

homeless and low-income housing units in the next decade.

“Homelessne­ss in Los Angeles will not be solved overnight — it is a long-term crisis that calls for long-term solutions,” Garcetti said in a statement.

The count is required to receive funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t, which sent more than $100 million in 2015-16 to combat the county’s homelessne­ss problem. Total funding for that year was $173 million, including infusions from the city and county.

The LAHSA budget for 2016-17 is $230 million, including $65 million from the county and $60 million from the city, both big increases from the year before. The city and county spend other money separately on supportive services, mental health and housing.

Los Angeles police on Feb. 6 plan to begin enforcing a new ban on living in vehicles near parks, homes and schools. Judging by the count in the Vermont-Slauson neighborho­od of South Los Angeles on Thursday night, the new law could cause significan­t upheaval.

People appeared to be living in cars and vans along multiple streets — some with their heaters running against the chilly night air.

Bobby Trawick, 66, was standing outside his van eating dinner off the driver’s seat when the counting crew came by Thursday.

Trawick said he had left a skid row mission for South L.A. because he could earn a little cash working odd jobs in the neighborho­od.

“The mission was not productive. It’s just sitting around watching TV all day,” Trawick said.

Yasmin Scott-Halcromb, 41, a USC social work and business graduate student and a count volunteer, awakened a couple sleeping under a pile of blankets pushed up against a concrete block wall in the neighborho­od park. They were counted.

A woman came out of a motel and said she had been in the streets with her five children and grandchild­ren the night before but had scraped together enough money for a room Thursday night. The family didn’t qualify as homeless under federal rules and were not marked on the official tally sheet.

A woman who described herself as an addict rolled her wheelchair franticall­y down the street to relieve herself in a nearby alley. Another two people lay wrapped in blankets on the grass parkway of a purely residentia­l street.

“That shocked me,” Scott-Halcromb said.

The homeless authority this year is trying to gauge how many people are released into homelessne­ss from institutio­ns such as jails, hospitals and nursing homes. Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Capt. Paula Tokar, who heads the force’s population management bureau, said the jail count on any given night has been as high as 3,000 but appears to be leveling out at around 2,000.

Metro officials also will be counting homeless people in train and bus stations. None of these special tabulation­s will be part of the official federally reported count but will help shape local policy, officials said.

“It’s been known for many years that institutio­ns such as hospitals and jails and foster care are a feeder into homelessne­ss,” said Sarah Mahin, director of policy and planning for the homeless authority.

Also this year, USC is taking over the survey that produces race, gender and other demographi­c informatio­n for the count.

Karen Lincoln, associate professor in the school of social work, said the USC team plans to reach more families and youths, in part through schools. The schools use a broader definition of homelessne­ss than federal housing officials, and report youth homeless numbers vastly greater than those of the federal agency.

The homeless count results will be released in the spring.

 ?? Photograph­s by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? VOLUNTEER YASMIN SCOTT-HALCROMB, a graduate student at USC’s schools of business and social work, walks through a South L.A. alley Thursday with Sarah Mahin, right, of the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority for the city’s annual count of its...
Photograph­s by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times VOLUNTEER YASMIN SCOTT-HALCROMB, a graduate student at USC’s schools of business and social work, walks through a South L.A. alley Thursday with Sarah Mahin, right, of the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority for the city’s annual count of its...
 ??  ?? SCOTT-HALCROMB, left, and Mahin work on their tally. A woman who was staying in a motel couldn’t be counted, though she’d been homeless the day before.
SCOTT-HALCROMB, left, and Mahin work on their tally. A woman who was staying in a motel couldn’t be counted, though she’d been homeless the day before.

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