Los Angeles Times

Build, build, build

Re “L.A. sees ‘staggering’ rise in homeless count,” June 1

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When lots of people want to live here and there aren’t enough homes, there is a shortage. And in a market economy, the way that shortage manifests itself is through price increases as people compete for housing. The prices go up for everyone, and the people at the bottom of the economic ladder find themselves pushed onto the streets. This does not take into account people who are homeless because of substance abuse and other issues, but it explains part of the problem.

So how do we fix it? We build more housing, and not just subsidized dwellings for the poor. Without a sustained increase in the amount of housing of all kinds in Los Angeles County, prices will continue to rise and more people will fall into homelessne­ss. We live in a single market for housing, where an increase in supply anywhere in Los Angeles ultimately affects everyone.

So why isn’t enough housing built? Because numerous requiremen­ts placed on builders in this area make constructi­on very costly, stopping new projects that would be economic to build in most parts of the country. Furthermor­e, antiquated parking requiremen­ts (in this era of Uber and Lyft) further drive up costs for developers.

If we are serious about solving homelessne­ss, our leaders must take a critical look at the costly obligation­s placed on developers and figure out how we can make it easier to build in Los Angeles. Joel Levin, Los Angeles

We who work in homeless services were shocked to hear the results of the latest count, which revealed a 23% increase in the number of homeless people in L.A. County. Astonishin­gly, the number of homeless veterans grew by 57%.

This depressing news comes after a five-year, intensive, nationwide push to end homelessne­ss among veterans, and it forces us to confront some hard truths.

With more than 2.7 million servicemen and women deployed to war zones since 2001, we have more veterans than ever in harm’s way. These people return to civilian life in desperate need of housing, jobs and, in many cases, intensive mental health services — and we have not built a strong enough safety net to help them through their crises.

With the passing of the city’s Propositio­n HHH and the county’s Measure H, we have a real opportunit­y to lead the way in addressing veteran homelessne­ss. We need to call upon our community leaders to ensure dedicated housing funds for veterans who not only stepped up to defend our country, but who can become

true leaders in our community if we help them in their time of need. Stephen Peck

Los Angeles The writer, a Marine Corps veteran, is president and chief executive of the nonprofit organizati­on U.S. VETS.

Of course the homeless population continues to grow in L.A. Over the last 25 years, I have met and talked to homeless people from Seattle, Albuquerqu­e, Chicago, St. Louis, Indianapol­is, Las Vegas, Detroit and other places.

Why do they come to Los Angeles? For the same reason so many of us came: Because life is better here than it is in most other places. It is easier to be homeless in Los Angeles than Chicago in January.

The reality is that as places such as Los Angeles invest more in combating the homeless problem, even more people from afar will find their way to our streets. It is akin to digging a hole in the middle of the ocean. Carter C. Bravmann

Los Angeles

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? MIKE ALBRIGHT, 58, reads a book at a Pomona shelter. The county homeless population surged in 2016.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times MIKE ALBRIGHT, 58, reads a book at a Pomona shelter. The county homeless population surged in 2016.

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