Measures & Propositions
Los Angeles City Council
City Council Could Restrict Camping In a shift, a majority backs rules to limit locations of homeless encampments.
By David Zahniser
and Benjamin Oreskes
The Los Angeles City Council voted Tuesday to draft new rules barring homeless people from camping near schools, parks, libraries and other “sensitive” facilities, a sudden change in direction for a city struggling to address a humanitarian crisis while also restoring access to its public spaces.
On a 12-3 vote, council members asked the city’s lawyers to quickly draw up a law prohibiting sleeping, lying and storing possessions near a variety of public facilities, including public schools and homeless shelters. It also would bar tents and encampments from blocking sidewalks in ways that prevent wheelchair users from traveling on them, in violation of the federal Americans with Disabilities Act.
The proposal, which is expected to face another vote Thursday, had not been included on Tuesday’s council agenda or the accompanying documents. Council members had been scheduled instead to consider another anti-camping measure, one that was drawn up in October but failed to secure council support.
Backers of the new proposed ordinance described it as a humane alternative to the previous measure, saying it would limit the involvement of law enforcement, require 14 days notice that camping is barred in a particular location and seek to have homeless people comply voluntarily. But they also argued that it would help Angelenos regain public spaces currently occupied by tents, furniture or other possessions.
“They want to be able to use their parks and their sidewalks and their libraries,” said Councilman Paul Krekorian, who co-wrote the proposal. “They want to be able to go into the entrance of their business. They want to be able to know that when they pull into a parking lot, they don’t have to worry about running someone over when they’re going through the driveway.”
Three council members — Mike Bonin, Nithya Raman and Joe Buscaino — voted against the measure. Bonin said the city remains short of the 20,000 beds it needs to shelter its homeless population and argued that the council should first be presented a map showing where sleeping and camping would still be allowed.
“I don’t want people living in our parks. I don’t want people living in bike lanes,” said Bonin, who represents coastal neighborhoods. “But if we’re going to say no to that, then we need to be saying where people can go.”
Raman voiced similar fears. “Right now I feel like I’m making a decision on this law without the information I need to understand the impacts of this law,” she said.
Tuesday’s vote comes as council members are working to open shelter facilities, “tiny home” villages and permanent housing. The lengthy discussion, and the repeated calls for urgency from council members, also reflects how potent a political issue homelessness could be in the June 2022 election.
Buscaino, who is running for mayor, called on his colleagues last week to take up its 8-month-old anti-camping measure, saying they needed to act before the start of their monthlong summer break, which begins Friday. His proposal had already been set aside after several council members concluded last year that it was too broad.
Buscaino relied on an unusual procedural maneuver, asking his colleagues to pull the legislation out of the homelessness committee, where it was still up for consideration — a transgressive move at City Hall, where committee chairs wield significant power.
That committee is headed by Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas, who represents a district stretching from Koreatown to the Crenshaw Corridor and is a potential candidate for mayor himself.
Ridley-Thomas countered Buscaino’s request by offering his own anti-camping measure — one supported by Krekorian, Council President Nury Martinez and several others. He argued that their alternative proposal is more compassionate and less punitive than the one favored by Buscaino, which was drafted last year in an attempt to comply with a 2018 federal court decision.
That ruling barred anti-camping laws from being enforced if a city has insufficient shelter.
Buscaino voted against the new measure, saying he doubted that the city’s lawyers would have a final draft ready before the summer break. But he promised to support it if the final legal language is ready on Thursday, the last day before the council’s recess.
Ridley-Thomas said his alternative measure offers the council “a new moment, a new possibility, a new level of decisiveness and enlightenment.”
“While we can all agree that the status quo is untenable, I think we can also agree that there are right ways and wrong ways to disrupt the status quo and improve conditions on the street,” he said in a statement after the vote.
Attorney Carol Sobel, who has been advocating for the rights of homeless people for decades, said she opposes both proposals. Most of the elected officials involved in Tuesday’s vote have presided over policies that made the problem worse, she said.
“If they found people safe places to live that didn’t warehouse them, then they wouldn’t need these ordinances,” she said. “But they are so focused on making homelessness a criminal matter, that they cannot think about positive ways to address this issue.”
Ridley-Thomas said his measure would ensure that public agencies thoughtfully engage homeless people and offer them housing options. City officials would need to craft a “street engagement strategy” within 30 days, one that would limit interactions between law enforcement and homeless people except in certain cases, such as when a crime is being committed.
In some ways, the new ruleswould be more aggressive than Buscaino’s proposal, prohibiting sleeping and camping within 1,000 feet of a homeless shelter, instead of the 500 feet previously proposed.
On other levels, the measure backed by Ridley-Thomas would be more permissive. The proposal would eliminate language prohibiting people from sitting, sleeping or lying on a public sidewalk if they have already been offered shelter.
Councilman Bob Blumenfield, one of the authors of the original ordinance, said that provision was one of the reasons he and his colleagues deemed the original proposal too broad.
Tuesday’s vote comes as council members are facing intensifying political pressure over their handling of homelessness.
Activists have been sharply critical of the city’s strategies for sheltering the unhoused, arguing that tiny homes are inadequate and that publicly funded hotels and motels impose curfews and other restrictions that make those facilities resemble prisons.
At the same time, neighborhood groups have voiced growing frustration over the number of encampments that are occupying public parks and, in some locations, stretch along sidewalks for multiple city blocks.
Six council members are running for reelection, and two others are seeking citywide office — Buscaino and Councilman Paul Koretz, who is running for city controller. Krekorian, Martinez and Councilman Kevin de León also have not ruled out a mayoral bid.
Councilman Gil Cedillo, who represents part of the Eastside, said he believed Buscaino’s “sense of urgency” had caused the council to move more aggressively in responding to the homelessness crisis.
Still, even with the new fast-track strategy, the new anti-camping measure may not go into effect for several weeks.
Unless Thursday’s vote is unanimous, the proposed ordinance would require a second vote. At that point, the council’s next meeting wouldn’t occur until the end of July.
By David Zahniser
and Benjamin Oreskes
The Los Angeles City Council voted Tuesday to draft new rules barring homeless people from camping near schools, parks, libraries and other “sensitive” facilities, a sudden change in direction for a city struggling to address a humanitarian crisis while also restoring access to its public spaces.
On a 12-3 vote, council members asked the city’s lawyers to quickly draw up a law prohibiting sleeping, lying and storing possessions near a variety of public facilities, including public schools and homeless shelters. It also would bar tents and encampments from blocking sidewalks in ways that prevent wheelchair users from traveling on them, in violation of the federal Americans with Disabilities Act.
The proposal, which is expected to face another vote Thursday, had not been included on Tuesday’s council agenda or the accompanying documents. Council members had been scheduled instead to consider another anti-camping measure, one that was drawn up in October but failed to secure council support.
Backers of the new proposed ordinance described it as a humane alternative to the previous measure, saying it would limit the involvement of law enforcement, require 14 days notice that camping is barred in a particular location and seek to have homeless people comply voluntarily. But they also argued that it would help Angelenos regain public spaces currently occupied by tents, furniture or other possessions.
“They want to be able to use their parks and their sidewalks and their libraries,” said Councilman Paul Krekorian, who co-wrote the proposal. “They want to be able to go into the entrance of their business. They want to be able to know that when they pull into a parking lot, they don’t have to worry about running someone over when they’re going through the driveway.”
Three council members — Mike Bonin, Nithya Raman and Joe Buscaino — voted against the measure. Bonin said the city remains short of the 20,000 beds it needs to shelter its homeless population and argued that the council should first be presented a map showing where sleeping and camping would still be allowed.
“I don’t want people living in our parks. I don’t want people living in bike lanes,” said Bonin, who represents coastal neighborhoods. “But if we’re going to say no to that, then we need to be saying where people can go.”
Raman voiced similar fears. “Right now I feel like I’m making a decision on this law without the information I need to understand the impacts of this law,” she said.
Tuesday’s vote comes as council members are working to open shelter facilities, “tiny home” villages and permanent housing. The lengthy discussion, and the repeated calls for urgency from council members, also reflects how potent a political issue homelessness could be in the June 2022 election.
Buscaino, who is running for mayor, called on his colleagues last week to take up its 8-month-old anti-camping measure, saying they needed to act before the start of their monthlong summer break, which begins Friday. His proposal had already been set aside after several council members concluded last year that it was too broad.
Buscaino relied on an unusual procedural maneuver, asking his colleagues to pull the legislation out of the homelessness committee, where it was still up for consideration — a transgressive move at City Hall, where committee chairs wield significant power.
That committee is headed by Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas, who represents a district stretching from Koreatown to the Crenshaw Corridor and is a potential candidate for mayor himself.
Ridley-Thomas countered Buscaino’s request by offering his own anti-camping measure — one supported by Krekorian, Council President Nury Martinez and several others. He argued that their alternative proposal is more compassionate and less punitive than the one favored by Buscaino, which was drafted last year in an attempt to comply with a 2018 federal court decision.
That ruling barred anti-camping laws from being enforced if a city has insufficient shelter.
Buscaino voted against the new measure, saying he doubted that the city’s lawyers would have a final draft ready before the summer break. But he promised to support it if the final legal language is ready on Thursday, the last day before the council’s recess.
Ridley-Thomas said his alternative measure offers the council “a new moment, a new possibility, a new level of decisiveness and enlightenment.”
“While we can all agree that the status quo is untenable, I think we can also agree that there are right ways and wrong ways to disrupt the status quo and improve conditions on the street,” he said in a statement after the vote.
Attorney Carol Sobel, who has been advocating for the rights of homeless people for decades, said she opposes both proposals. Most of the elected officials involved in Tuesday’s vote have presided over policies that made the problem worse, she said.
“If they found people safe places to live that didn’t warehouse them, then they wouldn’t need these ordinances,” she said. “But they are so focused on making homelessness a criminal matter, that they cannot think about positive ways to address this issue.”
Ridley-Thomas said his measure would ensure that public agencies thoughtfully engage homeless people and offer them housing options. City officials would need to craft a “street engagement strategy” within 30 days, one that would limit interactions between law enforcement and homeless people except in certain cases, such as when a crime is being committed.
In some ways, the new ruleswould be more aggressive than Buscaino’s proposal, prohibiting sleeping and camping within 1,000 feet of a homeless shelter, instead of the 500 feet previously proposed.
On other levels, the measure backed by Ridley-Thomas would be more permissive. The proposal would eliminate language prohibiting people from sitting, sleeping or lying on a public sidewalk if they have already been offered shelter.
Councilman Bob Blumenfield, one of the authors of the original ordinance, said that provision was one of the reasons he and his colleagues deemed the original proposal too broad.
Tuesday’s vote comes as council members are facing intensifying political pressure over their handling of homelessness.
Activists have been sharply critical of the city’s strategies for sheltering the unhoused, arguing that tiny homes are inadequate and that publicly funded hotels and motels impose curfews and other restrictions that make those facilities resemble prisons.
At the same time, neighborhood groups have voiced growing frustration over the number of encampments that are occupying public parks and, in some locations, stretch along sidewalks for multiple city blocks.
Six council members are running for reelection, and two others are seeking citywide office — Buscaino and Councilman Paul Koretz, who is running for city controller. Krekorian, Martinez and Councilman Kevin de León also have not ruled out a mayoral bid.
Councilman Gil Cedillo, who represents part of the Eastside, said he believed Buscaino’s “sense of urgency” had caused the council to move more aggressively in responding to the homelessness crisis.
Still, even with the new fast-track strategy, the new anti-camping measure may not go into effect for several weeks.
Unless Thursday’s vote is unanimous, the proposed ordinance would require a second vote. At that point, the council’s next meeting wouldn’t occur until the end of July.
Measure H and Proposition HHH are the two ballot measures passed in 2017 and 2016 that fund key aspects of L.A. County’s plan to end homelessness. L.A. County voters passed two ballot initiatives in 2016 and 2017 to fund supportive housing and services–Proposition HHH in the City of L.A. and Measure H in L.A. County.
Measure JJJ - Affordable Housing and Labor Standards Related to City Planning
Passed by the voters on November 7, 2016, Measure JJJ provides that development projects with 10 or more residential units may only receive general plan amendments or certain zoning changes if the project (a) includes a component of affordable housing or the Developer pays in-lieu fees into the City’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund, and (b) complies with Labor Standards regarding using licensed contractors, paying prevailing wages and hiring workers from local and disadvantaged areas and state-approved – and in the case of a project which receives federal funds – federally-approved Apprenticeship Programs. Administrative responsibilities for the Labor Standards required by the Measure are placed on the Department of Public Works, Bureau of Contract Administration (BCA). These Labor Standards include both the monitoring and enforcement of the payment of prevailing wages by contractors working on any residential housing projects created under the measure, as well as the employment of Apprentices and a 30% Local Hire and 10% Transitional Hire requirement on said projects.
Measure JJJ aims to create more affordable housing by requiring developers to designate a certain percentage of condos and apartments in new residential buildings for low-income tenants. The mandate would apply to buildings that need special city approval or zoning changes to get built, typically because they’re bigger than what codes allow.
Measure JJJ aims to create more affordable housing by requiring developers to designate a certain percentage of condos and apartments in new residential buildings for low-income tenants. The mandate would apply to buildings that need special city approval or zoning changes to get built, typically because they’re bigger than what codes allow.
A Bridge Home - Confronting The Crisis
Los Angeles is uniting to end the greatest moral and humanitarian crisis of our time. Homelessness will not be solved overnight — but the City and County of L.A. are working more closely together than ever to bring unsheltered Angelenos back inside with homes, healing, and hope.
People sleeping on the streets tonight can’t wait for new housing to become available, but existing shelter beds in Los Angeles simply do not meet the growing need. More than 25,000 of our homeless neighbors — from the streets of Koreatown to the banks of the L.A. River — will not sleep under a roof tonight.
Measure H is generating $355 million each year to provide a wide range of services to help people in desperate need. Proposition HHH is giving the City $1.2 billion to build thousands units of supportive housing over the next decade — units that will be paired with those same services, so that unsheltered Angelenos can go home for good.
But while we ramp up the work of building those permanent units, we must be equally impatient about finding safe places to sleep for people who are on the streets now. That’s why Mayor Garcetti has launched a new plan called A Bridge Home — to give homeless Angelenos in every neighborhood a refuge in the community they already know and love, until they can be connected with a permanent home.
People sleeping on the streets tonight can’t wait for new housing to become available, but existing shelter beds in Los Angeles simply do not meet the growing need. More than 25,000 of our homeless neighbors — from the streets of Koreatown to the banks of the L.A. River — will not sleep under a roof tonight.
Measure H is generating $355 million each year to provide a wide range of services to help people in desperate need. Proposition HHH is giving the City $1.2 billion to build thousands units of supportive housing over the next decade — units that will be paired with those same services, so that unsheltered Angelenos can go home for good.
But while we ramp up the work of building those permanent units, we must be equally impatient about finding safe places to sleep for people who are on the streets now. That’s why Mayor Garcetti has launched a new plan called A Bridge Home — to give homeless Angelenos in every neighborhood a refuge in the community they already know and love, until they can be connected with a permanent home.