Los Angeles Times

A plan to create shelters, clear streets

L.A. is nearing settlement of a federal suit that would entail beds for homeless people across the city.

- By Benjamin Oreskes and Doug Smith

The Los Angeles City Council appears to be heading toward a settlement of a federal lawsuit by agreeing to provide new housing or shelter for thousands of homeless people, while being able to use anti-camping laws to clear anyone remaining on the streets.

The new beds would be spread across the city, based on the number of homeless people estimated to be living in each City Council district in 2020, and could require every council member to find locations for hundreds of new beds.

It’s unclear how much the city might have to spend to fund this ambitious expansion, although it’s a question council members have asked city finance officials. It’s also unclear what the balance would be between permanent housing and homeless shelters, which are designed to be temporary stops.

Spokesmen for Mayor Eric Garcetti and City Atty. Mike Feuer declined to comment.

Late last month, the City Council deliberate­d more than four hours in closed

session on a deal that would have it create enough shelter over the next five years for 60% of the homeless people in each council district, according to multiple sources familiar with the matter and documents obtained by The Times. It also calls for the “decompress­ion” of skid row by 33%, by attracting people to other parts of the city, to rectify the city’s past policy of containing homelessne­ss downtown.

Council President Nury Martinez said the discussion­s are “moving in the right direction.”

“L.A. is never going to get out of this crisis unless we’re all committed to this,” she said. “There needs to be full participat­ion from all parties, elected officials and even residents for us to be truly effective in our goals.”

An agreement does not appear to be imminent, and the talks between the city and lawyers for a group of business owners and residents who filed the lawsuit last year could still break down. Still, most council members seem willing to accept the 60% figure — modeled after a settlement in an Orange County case overseen by U.S. District Court Judge David O. Carter, who is also in charge of the Los Angeles case. In that settlement, more than a dozen cities agreed to create enough shelter for a specific percentage of the local homeless population. As a result of the lawsuit, shelter or housing was created for more than a thousand people — some in cities that once resisted shelters.

The 60% threshold was based on the experience in Orange County, where the 40% who did not go into shelters or housing “migrated away from the areas, reunited with family, resolved homelessne­ss on their own, entered into substance abuse or mental health facilities, or other unknown result,” according to the proposal.

“There’s a model that Judge Carter used in Orange County, and I see great promise in that kind of a mode,” San Fernando Valley Councilman Bob Blumenfiel­d said.

The proposal would “allow” council members to first clear the homeless camps they find most problemati­c in their districts as soon as space is available for the people in those camps, and then expand to other parts of the district over time, according to a copy of a proposed settlement, which was obtained by The Times.

It was given to the council before its last confidenti­al session and will be discussed again Wednesday when it meets again in closed session.

Once the council offices had identified certain “designated areas,” such as large encampment­s under freeway overpasses, outreach would be conducted and a date would be set when people would be asked to relocate.

After an area is cleared, the city’s anti-camping ordinances would be enforced to prevent people from returning, according to the proposed settlement. Enforcemen­t of those laws has been limited by legal rulings that prohibit the ticketing or arrest of homeless people unless the city can provide them an alternativ­e place to live. The proposal calls for a dispute resolution process if homeless people are unhappy with the housing or services they are offered.

“This lawsuit presents a historic opportunit­y to make a difference on an issue that is a blight not just on our community, but sort of on the soul of the community here,” said Matthew Umhofer, one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs group, the L.A. Alliance for Human Rights. It is a coalition of business owners, downtown residents and others who are demanding solutions to what they call unsafe and inhumane conditions in encampment­s.

It is, he added, “the best opportunit­y the city and county have had for decades to actually resolve this issue and to actually take care of our homeless and unsheltere­d brothers and sisters.”

Umhofer, who is with the law firm of Spertus, Landes & Umhofer, wouldn’t discuss the details of the settlement offer or his conversati­ons with city officials, citing confidenti­ality.

The L.A. Alliance filed the lawsuit in March 2020 just before it became clear how serious the COVID-19 pandemic would be and how much of a danger it would be for homeless people.

The 92-page lawsuit cited state and federal law in 14 allegation­s, accusing the city and county of breaching their duty to abate a nuisance, reducing property value without compensati­on, wasting public funds and violating the state environmen­tal act and state and federal acts protecting people

with disabiliti­es.

Several City Council members interviewe­d by The Times said they sense a general desire among their colleagues to reach an agreement, but there are still divisive issues that would need to be resolved.

Some don’t like that a deal of such great consequenc­e is being hashed out behind closed doors.

Councilman Kevin de León, whose district includes skid row, said he is concerned that the 60% standard could allow council members whose districts have fewer homeless people and would have an easier time meeting that threshold to drive out their remaining homeless people, who might then head for skid row.

De León was on board with the decompress­ion of skid row, but acknowledg­ed it is a contentiou­s issue. He said his priority is finding better locations for women, families and children and giving them a chance to be housed and reestablis­h their lives elsewhere.

“Skid row is no place for women and for children,” he said. “I made it very clear that I don’t want women and children in skid row. I want them in Silver Lake. I want them in Echo Park. I want them in Hancock Park. I want them in Sherman Oaks.”

Councilman Curren Price, whose South L.A. district abuts De Leon’s district, said he could support the requiremen­t for new shelter in proportion to the homeless population, but worried about the proposals related to decompress­ing skid row.

“I support providing more resources for skid row,” he said. “Shifting the homeless population from one council district to another is the wrong approach.”

Pete White, executive director of the Los Angeles Community Action Network and an intervenor in the case, said he was unaware of the specifics of the proposal until it was described to him by The Times.

He decried it as “a smokefille­d backroom deal, where property owners and politician­s sat around negotiatin­g away houseless people’s civil rights.”

White said the proposal allows too much money to be spent on shelters and in the process criminaliz­es homelessne­ss.

The terms “would force the city to sink hundreds of millions of dollars into incredibly expensive temporary Band-Aids that admittedly will not reach all who need them,” White said. “In exchange, the LAPD gets to arrest houseless people and banish them from public spaces.”

While the city is moving toward a settlement, Los Angeles County has gone in the opposite direction, petitionin­g the court to dismiss it from the lawsuit. Multiple city officials said that even if the city were to agree to a deal, it would require some financial support from the county. Some were leery of the city making a commitment to build beds without first knowing whether the county would participat­e.

The county has participat­ed in prior proceeding­s in the lawsuit and agreed in a partial settlement to provide services for shelters the city committed to creating for 6,700 people estimated to be living near freeways.

“We need to have the county on board,” Blumenfiel­d said. “They need to be part of this. I don’t think the judge is going to let them go.”

In a motion filed late in March, lawyers for the county asserted that it should never have been named as a defendant.

The lengthy motion argued that the county has aggressive­ly responded to homelessne­ss without any direction from the court by adopting a comprehens­ive plan, spending hundreds of millions of dollars annually through the Measure H sales tax and developing innovative strategies such as Project Roomkey in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Project Roomkey is a state program that provides temporary funding for cities and counties to rent hotel rooms for homeless people during the pandemic.

Skip Miller, a partner with the Miller Barondess law firm who represents the county, said it decided to contest the fundamenta­l basis of the lawsuit after lawyers for the plaintiffs said they planned to file a preliminar­y injunction asking that the court be given more authority over the county’s homelessne­ss response.

The plaintiffs filed a motion for a preliminar­y injunction Monday.

“Who do you want opining on and resolving who gets housing first, lawyers and the courts?” Miller said. “Or do you want the experts, front-line profession­als and county officials, who have more than met their legal obligation­s in tackling this complex problem? The answer should be obvious”

Both the plaintiffs and members of the City Council have criticized the county’s move to extricate itself from the case, arguing that it is using legal arguments to circumvent a historic opportunit­y to address homelessne­ss.

“This is much bigger than any litigation tactic,” Umhofer said.

‘L.A. is never going to get out of this crisis unless we’re all committed to this.’ — Nury Martinez, L.A. City Council president

 ?? LOS ANGELES Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? is exploring a plan that would shelter 60% of homeless residents and clear encampment­s.
LOS ANGELES Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times is exploring a plan that would shelter 60% of homeless residents and clear encampment­s.
 ??  ?? THE PLAN would require new shelter beds to be built across the city. Above, a 232-unit homeless housing project in downtown Los Angeles in December.
THE PLAN would require new shelter beds to be built across the city. Above, a 232-unit homeless housing project in downtown Los Angeles in December.

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