Los Angeles Times

Don’t kill a win-win program

The L.A. City Council is dragging its feet on an experiment in hiring homeless people to collect trash.

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At a time when the sidewalks of Los Angeles are teeming with homeless encampment­s and too many of its streets are choked with trash, wouldn’t it be great if there were a program that would put homeless people to work cleaning up the refuse? It would be a win-win: Homeless people would get jobs. Trash would get cleared.

Yet a proposed yearlong pilot program to do just that has been entangled in bureaucrac­y and politics for nearly two years. As it slogged through four hearings in three City Council committees, it lost its place in line for a blushingly modest grant of $2.9 million, even as the city was allocating hundreds of millions of dollars to homelessne­ss programs. That’s absurd. In the panorama of ways to reduce homelessne­ss and trash in the city, this program is the epitome of lowhanging fruit.

The program is intended to be a small but important effort to bring homeless people into the workforce and to help the city’s Bureau of Sanitation with basic litter cleanup. Meanwhile, the bureau could attend to higher-priority problems such as collecting bulky items and stemming the burgeoning tide of detritus left in part by encampment­s, in part by brazen illegal dumpers. In the pilot program, the city would partner with Chrysalis, a nonprofit that trains low-income people to reenter the workforce they fell out of or never got into in the first place.

In this case, Chrysalis would train about 50 homeless people at a time to join various Bureau of Sanitation crews to assist with litter pickup and weed abatement. The goal is to create a pathway into the job market; after a few months, workers would transition out of the program, hopefully into longerterm jobs that Chrysalis case managers would help them find. They would then be replaced by other homeless workers. The program would pay about $13 an hour. If it is successful, workers will get launched toward stable, longer-term employment — and jobs that, hopefully, pay them enough to get them into housing — and more trash will get picked up.

And as Councilman Joe Buscaino noted in a memo to one council committee, the pilot would be “a small investment that could, in the long term, generate revenue for the city by creating more taxpaying members of

our workforce.”

But the proposal, which was introduced by Buscaino and Councilman Bob Blumenfiel­d, got bogged down in questions about which city department it should be run out of and whether its costs could be cut here or there. (The budget was eventually trimmed to less than $2.6 million.)

Then late last year, labor representa­tives told city officials they didn’t like the fact that the pilot program would bring people in on a part-time basis. Instead, they suggested filling vacant Bureau of Sanitation positions through the city’s Targeted Local Hire program, which tries to place formerly incarcerat­ed people, foster youths, veterans and other underserve­d residents (including formerly homeless people) in full-time city jobs. That’s a good objective, but it shouldn’t stand in the way of the pilot program and its mission to focus on getting homeless people training and jobs; nor does the pilot program prevent the city from filling vacant, full-time sanitation positions.

The funds for the pilot would come not out of the Bureau of Sanitation budget, but from city or state funds set aside for homeless services. And if unions are worried that the city might eventually hire an army of low-paid homeless people to take over jobs, that wouldn’t be the fault of the pilot program, which would stop after a year and be evaluated before being reauthoriz­ed and funded again.

Under the pilot, the city would be paying a modest number of homeless people to do a modest amount of trash pickup. There will still be plenty of trash for full-time Bureau of Sanitation workers to collect. And if all goes really well, those homeless workers might work their way up to applying for full-time sanitation work and become new union members.

Council members owe it to their constituen­ts to make sure that money isn’t misspent. But they also need to do more to reduce homelessne­ss and clean up the city. What’s happening here is just wheel-spinning.

Homelessne­ss is a crisis, as anyone who lives in Los Angeles knows and as city officials insist they know too. But they take an infuriatin­gly long time providing the most basic services to homeless people, whether it be toilets or storage facilities or shelter beds. Here is an enterprisi­ng program that would employ homeless people, and it’s taken twice as long to quibble over as the program itself would last.

The City Council should stop the dithering and get this funded and approved as soon as its members get back from their summer recess.

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