Los Angeles Times

Fostering poverty

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Re “Without a home,” editorial series, Feb. 25 - March 2

The editorials touch on the root cause for the increase in homelessne­ss in Los Angeles, dealing a glancing blow to an overlooked issue that’s a major factor: the 30,000 children in our county’s foster care system.

The facts are incontrove­rtible. Systemic homelessne­ss is an outcome for many of the 5,000 children on the streets currently, who will join adults who were products of the foster system, lost in the transition from child to adult.

For youth who have spent years in group or foster homes or who are exiting foster care, the risk is substantia­l. More than 25% of former foster children become homeless within two to four years of leaving the system. About half of those exiting foster care and juvenile justice systems will be homeless within six months.

CASA [Court Appointed Special Advocates] of Los Angeles volunteers serve youth who are transition­ing from foster care into adulthood, with a main priority of helping them find and maintain stable housing. The measures mentioned in your editorials will aid this effort, but until fundamenta­l changes are made to how our community takes care of our foster children, it will continue to operate as a pipeline into homelessne­ss. Wende Nichols-Julien Los Angeles The writer is president and chief executive of the group CASA of Los Angeles.

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? A 17-YEAR-OLD at David and Margaret Youth and Family Services, a shelter for girls in La Verne.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times A 17-YEAR-OLD at David and Margaret Youth and Family Services, a shelter for girls in La Verne.

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