Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

L.A. County pitches retooled deal over homelessne­ss

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After an initial settlement proposal “fell short” in the eyes of a federal judge, Los Angeles County officials announced on Wednesday that they have reached a new proposed deal to resolve a long-standing lawsuit filed by a coalition of businesses and residents claiming government response to the area's homelessne­ss crisis has been historical­ly lax.

According to the county, the new proposed settlement would commit an additional $850.5million to fund beds, services, outreach efforts and interim housing. That money is on top of $293 million the county previously had committed in hopes of providing 6,700new beds in response to the lawsuit by the L.A. Alliance for Human Rights.

The new settlement proposal would include 1,000 new mental health and substance abuse beds for the homeless — up from 300 in the original proposed resolution — along with 450 housing subsidies for those at risk of falling into homelessne­ss.

County officials also said the new proposal would increase the number of county outreach teams, spread out among all 15 LosAngeles City Council districts, and also provide medical and social services for the more than 13,000beds the city has agreed to provide as part of its separate settlement with the L.A. Alliance.

“We are locking arms with our partners at L.A. city and doubling down on our resolve to address this crisis of homelessne­ss together, with the shared aim of saving lives, alleviatin­g suffering and finding truly regional solutions to move us forward,” county Board of Supervisor­s Chair Janice Hahn said in a statement.

U.S. District Judge David Carter approved the city's settlement with the L.A. Alliance for Human Rights last June, but he said during a hearing in January that the county's pledge to provide 300 additional beds for homeless people with mental health or substance use disorders “fell short.” The judge also appeared irked at the proposal's lack of a judicial oversight requiremen­t. Without the court's ability to closely monitor the settlement, the proposal is “absolutely worthless,” Carter said.

“You can't put a tuxedo on a pig,” the judge said from the bench.

That sent county attorneys back to the drawing board, leading to the revamped settlement proposal unveiled Wednesday.

Hahn said she hopes the new settlement proposal wins Carter's approval.

“The county is committing to a significan­t increase in resources and we are happy to put this litigation behind us so we can devote our full attention to helping people and communitie­s that need our assistance,” she said.

In its March2020 lawsuit, the L.A. Alliance accused the city and county of failing to do enough to address the crisis. The city's settlement with the coalition was announced in April of last year, but the county waited until September to announce its preliminar­y agreement with the coalition of LosAngeles business owners and sheltered and unsheltere­d residents.

In November, Carter declined to approve the county's part of the settlement, suggesting that more work needed to be done to have a stronger impact on homelessne­ss in the region.

In January, the judge said the L.A. Alliance's lawsuit came about after “decades of inaction” resulted in “a spiraling crisis on our streets.” As a result of attempts to settle, the “antagonism” that “apparently goes back decades” between local government­s has dissipated, Carter said.

Carter in January urged the county to increase its proposed number of mental health and substance abuse beds, noting that 40% of the homeless population suffers from such issues.

According to the most recent homeless count by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, there are 69,144 unhoused people living in Los Angeles County, 41,980 of them within the city.

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