01.01.2021
Page 1 of 4 1234 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 53

Thread: L.A. County homelessness jumps a 'staggering' 23%

  1. #1
    {>____<}
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Age
    37
    Posts
    11,462
    Rep Power
    73

    Exclamation L.A. County homelessness jumps a 'staggering' 23%

    Los Angeles County’s homeless population has soared 23% over last year despite increasing success in placing people in housing, according to the latest annual count released Wednesday.

    The sharp rise, to nearly 58,000, suggested that the pathway into homelessness continues to outpace intensifying efforts that — through rent subsidies, new construction, outreach and support services — got more than 14,000 people permanently off the streets last year.

    “Staggering,” Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn said in a statement. “It is clear that if we are going to end the homeless crisis, we need to stem the overwhelming tide of people falling into homelessness.”

    Said Leslie Evans, a West Adams resident active in efforts to combat homelessness in South Los Angeles: “These are scary numbers.”

    The startling jump in homelessness affected every significant demographic group, including youth, families, veterans and the chronically homeless, according to the report. Homeless officials and political leaders pointed to steadily rising housing costs and stagnant incomes as the underlying cause.

    Homelessness also increased sharply in the city of Los Angeles, where the count of just over 34,000 was up 20% from 2016.

    “There's no sugarcoating the bad news,” Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said at a news conference Wednesday where the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority released its report. “We can’t let rents double every year. I was particularly disappointed to see veteran numbers go up.”

    Garcetti called homelessness a problem that has persisted “through administrations, through recessions,” adding, “Our city is in the midst of an extraordinary homelessness crisis that needs an extraordinary response. These men, these women, these children are our neighbors.”

    The Homeless Services Authority linked the worsening problem to the economic stress on renters in the Los Angeles area. More than 2 million households in L.A. and Orange counties have housing costs that exceed 30% of income, according to data from Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies included in the report.

    According to the nonprofit California Housing Partnership Corp., median rent, adjusted for inflation, increased more than 30% from 2000 to 2015, while the median income was flat.

    Currently, the median asking price for rentals countywide is $1,995 for one-bedroom apartments and $2,416 for all multifamily units, according to the real estate website Zillow.

    “I am deeply concerned that over the next few years we will continue to be overwhelmed by people for whom rents are simply unsustainable,” Supervisor Sheila Kuehl said in a statement. She called for changes in land use and rent control regulations to boost affordable housing.

    Mirroring last year’s count, only one of every four homeless people in both the city and across the county were classified as [“sheltered”,] meaning they were counted in an emergency shelter or longer-term transitional program. That left three of every four, or just under 43,000 countywide, living on the street.

    The chronic homeless population — defined as those who have been on the streets at least a year or multiple times and suffering mental illness, addiction or physical disability — increased 20% to more than 17,000, despite increasing numbers placed into housing.

    There were few exceptions to the bad news.

    Even the homeless veteran population jumped in 2017, marking a backsliding of the gains made last year by city, state and federal programs that slashed the number of homeless veterans by a third. With the number of veterans placed into housing slightly down, the count of 4,828 homeless veterans was up 57%.

    The only hopeful sign of homeless initiatives making headway was the strong increase in the number of homeless families being sheltered. Though the population of homeless families increased nearly 30%, those without shelter dropped 21%.

    The 2017 count, conducted in January, will become the baseline for a multibillion-dollar homeless program funded by two successful ballot measures.

    Proposition HHH, approved by Los Angeles voters in November, will provide $1.2 billion in bond proceeds over a decade to build permanent housing. Measure H, approved by county voters in March, will provide an estimated $3.5 billion over 10 years for rent subsidies and services. The county Board of Supervisors is scheduled to vote on budgets for the first three years on June 13.

    The combined initiatives aim to create or subsidize 15,000 housing units and pay for services to support those living in them.

    Voters “have afforded us opportunity we never had … to step forward and confront the problem of homelessness in Los Angeles,” said Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas. “I am not at all discouraged by this data. We knew intuitively there was an uptick. ... Now we have the resources to stand up to it.”

    Ridley-Thomas called on the community to “put your war clothes on and get ready to fight.”

    The Los Angeles count, the largest in the nation, is an estimate based on a street tally conducted by 7,700 volunteers over three days and nights. For the last dozen years, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has required cities, counties and other regions to conduct a count in order to receive federal homelessness aid.

    The numbers give an imperfect snapshot of the highly fluid homeless population at a point in time. The number of people who lose their homes over the course of a year is more than three times greater on a given night, homeless officials say.

    Because the homeless authority has refined its methodology over the years and expanded its volunteer base, year-over-year comparisons can be misleading.

    Officials acknowledged, for example, that last year’s 11% increase at least partially resulted from the introduction of a special effort to locate hard-to-find youth.

    But the scale of this year’s increase left little doubt that homelessness was on the rise.

    Earlier this month, Orange County reported an 8% increase in its homeless population over two years. More than half of the county’s nearly 4,800 homeless people were living without shelter.

    A 26% increase toppled years of stagnant or declining numbers in Santa Monica, bringing its homeless population to nearly 1,000, the highest number in a decade. City officials said more than half the homeless people came from other parts of the county.

    A brighter picture emerged from Long Beach, which conducts its own count. The city recorded a 21% decline in its homeless population, crediting a nearly 200% increase in permanent housing there. But the actual decrease — 482 people — barely affected the regional totals.

    In Los Angeles County, the most drastic increase — 48% — occurred in the San Gabriel Valley district of Supervisor Hilda Solis, where the count rose to just under 13,000.

    Ridley-Thomas’ district remained the most affected with nearly 19,000 people counted, a 22% increase.

    Surveys conducted with the Los Angeles count provided demographic breakdowns for the portion of the county excluding Long Beach, Pasadena and Glendale, cities that conduct their own counts.

    These showed increases of 20% or more for every type of improvised shelter — cars (2,147), vans (1,862), campers and recreational vehicles (4,545), tents (2,343) and makeshift shelters (3,516).

    Youths made up the fastest growing homeless age group with those 18 to 24 up 64%, followed by those under 18 at 41%.

    Those numbers didn’t surprise Heidi Calmus, who works in the Hollywood branch of Covenant House, an international homeless services agency.

    Calmus said the agency sees 100 to 150 new homeless youth in Hollywood every month. All the shelters have waiting lists, and permanent housing is impossible to find, even with a rent voucher.

    “The system is overwhelmed,” Calmus said.

    While blacks remained the largest racial/ethnic group, making up 40% of all homeless people, the number of Latinos grew by almost two-thirds. Whites declined by a modest 2% and Asians, though remaining only 1% of all homeless people, increased by nearly a third.

    Three-fourths of homeless people reported they had been in the county for five years or more, while 12% had been residents for less than a year.

    http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/l...530-story.html
    Sickening. San Francisco is going through the same thing. At the end of the day, it isn't worth it. $2,000 for a one bedroom apartment.
    Last edited by IrOnMaN; 06-24-2017 at 02:40 PM.

  2. #2
    Banned
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Blackula's pad
    Age
    58
    Posts
    19,365
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    lol.

  3. #3
    Banned
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
    Age
    19
    Posts
    16,773
    Rep Power
    96

    Default

    $2000 for a one bedroom apartment. If that's a month that's a fucking bargain compared to here
    Posts by The Hound are signed TH.

    Quoting ≠ Agreement.

  4. #4
    Balls Deep food for thought's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    SHAKA ZULU BOBO SHANTI NYABINGHI MAN A MAU MAU WARRIOR
    Posts
    18,202
    Rep Power
    128

    Default

    Boohoo

    Lmao. Read the title and was like I bet this is an Ironman thread and whaddayaknow

    You need to go out bro. Get your dick sucked or something.
    We do it for the people.





  5. #5
    'The Fourhorsemen' TSA's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Age
    36
    Posts
    40,179
    Rep Power
    167

    Default

    This article is misleading and clearly written by a ex-rich kid trying to be deep. LA has a lot of homeless ppl cause homeless people nation wide migrate there to avoid winter, not cause of fucking rent.

  6. #6
    {>____<}
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Age
    37
    Posts
    11,462
    Rep Power
    73

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by TSA View Post
    This article is misleading and clearly written by a ex-rich kid trying to be deep. LA has a lot of homeless ppl cause homeless people nation wide migrate there to avoid winter, not cause of fucking rent.
    Hmm. Is that so?

  7. #7
    Wu Vatican Rame's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    NL
    Posts
    9,963
    Rep Power
    57

    Default

    I would love to be homeless in L.A.


    De mijne is 4x duurder!

  8. #8
    Banned
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Outside your house
    Posts
    17,867
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Is Iroman still pretending he was homeless when he was yournger because when he was 10, he ran away from home for a couple hours?

  9. #9
    Banned
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
    Age
    19
    Posts
    16,773
    Rep Power
    96

    Default

    Ironman was actually 27 when he ran away from home
    Posts by The Hound are signed TH.

    Quoting ≠ Agreement.

  10. #10
    420 the Hedgehog JASPER's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    GeoCities
    Age
    39
    Posts
    12,931
    Rep Power
    75

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by The Hound View Post
    $2000 for a one bedroom apartment. If that's a month that's a fucking bargain compared to here


    Where is that?
    "I hate them and I wish death among them!" - Mahatma Gandhi

  11. #11
    The ABBOTT noel411's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Location
    Australia
    Age
    41
    Posts
    7,905
    Rep Power
    77

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by The Hound View Post
    Ironman was actually 27 when he ran away from home
    lolz

  12. #12
    nada ignorante
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Brazilian Jungle
    Posts
    3,170
    Rep Power
    39

    Default

    lmaoo u still live with ur parents Ironman?
    N.I.


  13. #13
    {>____<}
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Age
    37
    Posts
    11,462
    Rep Power
    73

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by hotnikks View Post
    lmaoo u still live with ur parents Ironman?
    (Here we go)

    No. I've been on my own since 18. Both parents were deceased by the time I was 19. So, guys, please don't talk smack because you know nothing. If you want, lock the thread. My intention was just to inform.

  14. #14
    Banned
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Outside your house
    Posts
    17,867
    Rep Power
    0

    Default

    Ironman's E.T. dick was ok the side of a milk carton.

  15. #15
    '
    Guest

    Default

    Which one of you whipper snappers ate my last butter scotch candy?


Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •