Los Angeles Times

Down and up in the streets

Homelessne­ss declines in Long Beach but rises in O.C. in latest counts.

- By Ruben Vives

For the first time in seven years, the city of Long Beach saw local homelessne­ss decline year over year — but officials in next-door Orange County were disappoint­ed to learn their unhoused population had continued to grow.

The divergent trends were documented in pointin-time counts conducted in January. Those surveys are meant to provide on-theground snapshots of homeless population­s to help identify the needs of particular communitie­s and shape local response efforts.

Long Beach officials said there were 3,376 people experienci­ng homelessne­ss tallied during the latest count — down 2.1% from the 3,447 in 2023.

It was the first drop in homelessne­ss seen since 2017, when the city’s homeless population stood at 1,863, records show.

Mayor Rex Richardson said he was encouraged by the results of the annual count, which is required by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t for cities that have their own continuum of care, a governing body that coordinate­s funding for housing and homeless services. Long Beach, Glendale and Los Angeles each have their own continuum of care.

“It’s clear that the work the city has done in addressing homelessne­ss is beginning to turn the tide,” Richardson said during a news conference last week. “These numbers let us know we’re on the right track and must continue on in the

work.”

The homeless count found that more than 70% of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss in Long Beach are unsheltere­d, meaning they live in a tent, makeshift shelters or a vehicle.

A little more than half the people surveyed reported being on the streets for the first time. Most listed family issues, mental health and eviction as contributi­ng factors.

The city saw about a 50% reduction in homelessne­ss for those between the ages of 18 and 24, a 37% decrease for minors and a 9.4% decline for those ages 54 through 64. Increases were seen in other age groups, however.

Declines were also recorded among women and Black and Latino residents — among the groups at highest risk of falling into homelessne­ss.

City officials said an emergency declaratio­n on homelessne­ss issued last year helped boost outreach services, shelter bed capacity and mental health counseling. It also helped streamline the approval process for affordable housing projects — from a year to 60 days, officials said.

Although that emergency proclamati­on expired in February, city officials said it provided a model for how the city should tackle homelessne­ss in the long run.

As a result, Deputy City Manager Teresa Chandler announced the formation of an Office of Homeless Strategy, which will serve as a “connecting point” for various department­s, external agencies, service providers and community stakeholde­rs who are focused on addressing homelessne­ss.

Richardson said he hopes the city can maintain its momentum.

“We have to maintain focus,” he said. “Now is not the time to switch strategies, now is the time to double down on the results we’ve seen and continue to make meaningful difference.”

Meanwhile, just east of the port city, Orange County officials recorded a 28% increase in homelessne­ss in the region.

The point-in-time results, conducted every other year by the county, showed that there were 7,322 people experienci­ng homelessne­ss in January, up from 5,718 in January 2022.

Increases were noted both in the number of unsheltere­d homeless individual­s, 37%, as well as those in shelters, 18%.

Doug Brecht, director of the county’s Office of Care Coordinati­on, attributed the increase in part to the end of COVID-era initiative­s that provided financial support to families and housingrel­ated protection­s such as eviction moratorium­s.

County officials took some solace in the fact that chronic homelessne­ss decreased in the region for the first time since 2019 and that the growth rate of its homeless population over the last five years has remained below those of the state and surroundin­g counties — a developmen­t Brecht said was aided by more investment into the county’s homeless services system.

County officials said they plan to further increase shelter bed capacity, expand outreach services and build more affordable housing.

In a statement, Donald Wagner, chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisor­s, expressed mixed reaction about the results.

“While there has been an increase in the homeless population in Orange County, it is only a relatively minor 7% increase over the last five years,” he said. “Still, we recognize much work left to do.”

Supervisor Doug Chaffee expressed disappoint­ment, but said the homeless count also provides vital informatio­n about how the county can do better.

“The point-in-time is not just counting heads, it’s an assessment of how well we’re doing,” he said. “It’s easy to say, ‘We need more housing.’ We do, but there’s other components.”

Chaffee said one area that the county will need to further examine is how to prevent people from falling into homelessne­ss in the first place — while also trying to boost housing production in the region.

“It’s a cork in the bottle,” he said. “That’s how we’ll address the increase.”

 ?? City of Long Beach ?? LONG BEACH Mayor Rex Richardson said he was encouraged by the results of the annual count.
City of Long Beach LONG BEACH Mayor Rex Richardson said he was encouraged by the results of the annual count.

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