Los Angeles Times

Inviting ‘Everyone In’ to help homeless

New coalition rallies community support to provide housing and services in county.

- By Emily Alpert Reyes emily.alpert@latimes.com

At an Echo Park kickoff event headlined by politician­s, philanthro­pists, business representa­tives and labor leaders, the United Way of Greater Los Angeles announced the launch Friday of a new coalition fighting to end homelessne­ss.

The “Everyone In” coalition will train and organize people to advocate for new housing and services for homeless people in their neighborho­ods, track progress toward countywide goals, educate the public and give them other opportunit­ies to get involved, officials said.

“This is an army for good, an army that is fighting the injustices of poverty and the indignitie­s of homelessne­ss,” said Los Angeles County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas. “In this war, there can be no conscienti­ous objectors.”

The new effort to rally community support for homeless housing and services comes amid growing frustratio­n with a crisis that has left tens of thousands of people on the streets.

More than a year has passed since Los Angeles voters overwhelmi­ngly passed a $1.2-billion bond for new housing and a county tax. The bond funds are supposed to usher in 10,000 new units with supportive services for the homeless, while the tax will bankroll services, rental subsidies, outreach, and strengthen­ing and expanding the shelter system.

“This is a pivotal moment for our community,” said Elise Buik, president and chief executive of the United Way of Greater Los Angeles, citing an “unpreceden­ted amount of funding” to build housing, fund services and try to prevent people from becoming homeless.

But “the funding was probably the easy part,” Buik said.

The new campaign will help Angelenos monitor progress on those programs, focusing on goals of approving 5,000 units of supportive housing, getting 45,000 people into homes and preventing 30,000 people from sliding into homelessne­ss by July 1, 2022.

Buik also said the campaign would mobilize the “silent majority” who support homeless housing. L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti called on the crowd to turn out for hearings to build housing in their neighborho­ods, to help scout out parking lots where vehicle dwellers can spend the night, and hire people who have been homeless.

Each time, the crowd chanted in response, “Count me in!” Hundreds of people attended the Friday event near Echo Park Lake many holding up signs that said “Are you in?”

Besides government and philanthro­pic leaders, the event drew celebritie­s such as former profession­al football player Eric Dickerson and “This is Us” actor Jon Huertas, who spurred a flurry of smartphone photos from people stepping up to the microphone­s.

Not far from the stage, a small group of activists from the local chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America held up a spraypaint­ed banner reading “House keys not handcuffs.”

Jed Parriott, an organizer, said the group wanted to draw attention to the rising numbers of arrests of homeless people and urge the city to stop handing out citations for “quality of life” offenses such as sleeping on the sidewalk.

“While we wait for housing to be built, we can’t be punishing them while they’re forced to live on the streets,” Parriott said. “Until they actually build housing, this is all show.”

‘This is an army for good, an army that is fighting the injustices of poverty and the indignitie­s of homelessne­ss.’ — Mark Ridley-Thomas, L.A. County supervisor

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