Los Angeles Times

Dejection, then relief

County’s move to suspend vouchers struck fear in those seeking housing, but they got a reprieve

- By Connor Sheets

Donovan Henry was relaxing in his motel room in Long Beach last week when he received a panic-inducing text.

It was from his caseworker with the nonprofit NoHo Home Alliance. And it said that the county had announced that all emergency federal housing vouchers, such as the one he was issued last summer, would be suspended Jan. 31.

If he couldn’t find an apartment by the end of the month, he would go back to square one in his search for affordable housing. Henry — who has mostly lived on the streets for two years and is only temporaril­y staying in a motel thanks to a winter shelter program — figured that meant he would soon be homeless again.

“I’ve been desperatel­y trying to find someone to accept my voucher since July and not having any luck, so to now hear that it wouldn’t be usable as of the 31st was extremely upsetting,” the 52-year-old said. “So now I’m waiting to find out if I’ll have to start the whole process all over

again.”

Emilio Salas, executive director of the Los Angeles County Developmen­t Authority, says that won’t be necessary.

After telling service providers last week that it was suspending all outstandin­g emergency housing vouchers, or EHVs, the authority issued a new communicat­ion walking back the move on Friday, one day after The Times first inquired about the policy.

Salas said in a phone interview Friday that EHV holders who can find affordable homes to move into will now be housed via alternativ­e means — including standard Section 8 vouchers and a Los Angeles Continuum of Care program — and that they will not need to restart the byzantine housing applicatio­n process.

“Today we’re issuing a new communicat­ion to those individual­s and households that we are going to match them with a different rental subsidy,” he said. “Every single one that secures a unit.”

The initial communicat­ion that struck fear in the hearts of unhoused voucher holders such as Henry actually came out of a success story for LACDA and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t’s emergency housing voucher program.

In July 2021, HUD awarded 70,000 EHVs to housing authoritie­s across the U.S., including 1,964 to LACDA. More than a year later, only 641, or 32.6% of them, had been “leased up” or “leased out.”

That means the people they were issued to “secured a unit and they entered into a fully executed lease agreement, a contract agreement with the property owner,” Salas said.

Now, six months later, all 1,964 vouchers have been leased out, Salas said. In other words, 1,964 individual­s or families across the county who were issued the vouchers have moved into homes where the rent will be heavily subsidized by the federal government, or they have signed the paperwork to do so and will be moving in soon.

The problem, however, is the county issued far more than 1,964 emergency housing vouchers. Since July 2021, HUD data show, the county has issued 5,124 of the federal vouchers, a tactic akin to airlines overbookin­g flights to ensure every seat is filled.

The idea, Salas said, is that many people wouldn’t be able to find affordable places to move into because of the difficult housing market in L.A. and the reticence of landlords to rent to people with poor credit, past evictions and other circumstan­ces common among EHV holders.

“You always have to overissue vouchers in order to hit the target that you want to hit,” he said. “Otherwise it will take twice as long. We’re not going to issue 1,964 vouchers and stop there because we know based on historical data that not everyone will find a unit.”

But that left 3,160 people holding vouchers they were suddenly told last week would soon be useless. That initial communicat­ion from LACDA announcing the suspension of EHVs caused unnecessar­y anxiety and distrust for voucher holders, said Tara Jones, a caseworker at the NoHo Home Alliance, which works with unhoused people, including many who had been issued the vouchers.

“I love what they’re saying, and I hope that it’s real what they’re saying,” she said. “With that being said, the process of people acquiring EHVs and finding these units is so arduous, so overwhelmi­ng and so difficult, that throwing this at them — even though it will hopefully turn out OK — is really troubling.”

Though she understand­s the county’s reasoning for over-issuing EHVs, Jones said LACDA should have held off on announcing the suspension of existing vouchers until it had the alternativ­e funding streams in place.

“The whole concept of oversellin­g the vouchers is difficult to explain to a person who’s experienci­ng homelessne­ss. It’s not an airline seat; it’s someone’s life,” she said.

“They were devastated, and felt they had checked all the boxes they were told to secure this voucher and they felt lucky … and for it to be pulled from them, many people felt like, ‘This is why I don’t trust the system.’ ”

Meanwhile, some people who were issued EHVs by the city of L.A. have heard rumors that their vouchers were also being suspended. In an email Friday, Carlos VanNatter, Section 8 director for the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles, said that’s not the case: “HACLA’s EHV program is not ending Jan. 31. … Our program is continuing.”

Henry said he was distraught when he received the text from his caseworker on Jan. 25. After months of exhaustive­ly searching for a place to live — calling landlords, sending out applicatio­ns, paying applicatio­n fees, knocking on doors — he thought he was back where he started. Now, he said, he doesn’t know what to think.

“I was very worried immediatel­y, like how am I going to find a place in a week and possibly get the paperwork processed?” he said. “Will it be another year before I get housed? No one can confirm how long it’s going to take. I’m crossing my fingers and hoping.”

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? MICHELLE GERARDI, with her daughter, received an emergency housing voucher in Santa Barbara in June. In L.A., things haven’t gone so smoothly.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times MICHELLE GERARDI, with her daughter, received an emergency housing voucher in Santa Barbara in June. In L.A., things haven’t gone so smoothly.
 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? MARIO BLANCO gets on a bus in Long Beach with his dog. After saying that emergency housing vouchers would be suspended, L.A. County now says unhoused voucher holders will be matched with another subsidy.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times MARIO BLANCO gets on a bus in Long Beach with his dog. After saying that emergency housing vouchers would be suspended, L.A. County now says unhoused voucher holders will be matched with another subsidy.

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