Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Los Angeles set to spend $3 billion on homeless

Settlement of lawsuit necessitat­es developmen­t of beds, housing units

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The Los Angeles City Council approved a settlement with the LA Alliance for Human Rights on Wednesday in which the city will spend up to $3 billion in the next five years to develop as many as 16,000 beds or housing units for homeless people, enough to accommodat­e 60% of the homeless population in each of the 15 City Council districts.

The settlement of the federal case does not include Los Angeles County, which is also a defendant in the lawsuit, but city officials said the county will be responsibl­e for providing services and housing for homeless people with serious mental illness, substance use issues or chronic physical illnesses.

City leaders said the county must provide services for that segment of the homeless population, since it has the medical and social work facilities to do so — but the city does not.

The actual number of housing units and beds the city will be required to build under the settlement remains uncertain, pending the results of the recently conducted point-intime countywide homeless count. But city officials estimate that meeting the terms of the settlement will require the addition of 14,000 to 16,000 beds, costing between $2.4 billion and $3 billion.

A large portion of those required units are believed to be already in the planning stages, with funding from the 2016 voter-approved Propositio­n HHH, a $1.2 billion bond measure to fund homelessne­ss solutions.

According to the most recent homeless count, conducted prior to the pandemic in 2020, the countywide homeless population was 66,433, a nearly 13% increase from the previous year. The city of Los Angeles homeless population was 36,165, up 14% from the prior year.

The county was named as a co-defendant with the city in the March 2020 complaint, but it recently withdrew from closeddoor settlement talks in Los Angeles federal court.

Los Angeles County “must step up and do their part,” City Council President Nury Martinez

told reporters at a news conference in April at City Hall.

In February, U.S. District Judge David Carter ordered a series of mandatory settlement talks to begin after city and county representa­tives indicated they had no sense of when or if they might strike a deal that would lead to an agreement with the Alliance — an associatio­n of downtown residents, homeless individual­s and property owners who filed the suit.

The lawsuit brought by the L.A. Alliance had been on hold almost since it was filed, with the goal of forcing local government to “comprehens­ively” deal with the homelessne­ss crisis downtown.

Settlement talks eventually expanded from the original lawsuit focus of downtown's skid row area to the thousands of transients living under or next to the region's freeways, then ultimately to the county's entire homeless population.

Skip Miller, outside counsel for the county, has long argued that the county should not be held accountabl­e for skid row because “the city has primary jurisdicti­on.”

Miller issued a statement in April saying the lawsuit “has no merit with regard to the county.”

“It is between the plaintiffs and the city, and we're glad they settled,” he said. “We intend to litigate and win this case. The county is more than doing its job and doing everything possible to address homelessne­ss without stigmatizi­ng it as a crime. Any assertion that the county has failed on this obligation is utterly baseless. Unlike the lawsuit, which focuses on four miles of downtown L.A., the county is obligated by law to use its resources equitably among all 88 cities and unincorpor­ated areas within the 4,000 square miles of its jurisdicti­on.”

The plaintiffs said that wherever the homeless are located, services have not kept pace with the everexpand­ing crisis.

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