Progress Updates
July 1, 2021
LA City Council Ordinance Limiting Homeless Encampments Delayed
The LA City Council on Thursday voted 13-2 in favor of adopting a new city ordinance banning homeless encampments from public sidewalks and parks in the city of Los Angeles.
The draft ordinance required a unanimous vote to be adopted on its first consideration.
Councilmembers Mike Bonin and Nithya Raman voted no in the 13-2 vote.
The ordinance will be tabled until July 28, when another vote will take place.
Bonin and Raman expressed concern about the number of beds available for homeless individuals, stating that the ordinance might not solve the problem but would instead move encampments other places.
LA City Council Ordinance Limiting Homeless Encampments Delayed
The LA City Council on Thursday voted 13-2 in favor of adopting a new city ordinance banning homeless encampments from public sidewalks and parks in the city of Los Angeles.
The draft ordinance required a unanimous vote to be adopted on its first consideration.
Councilmembers Mike Bonin and Nithya Raman voted no in the 13-2 vote.
The ordinance will be tabled until July 28, when another vote will take place.
Bonin and Raman expressed concern about the number of beds available for homeless individuals, stating that the ordinance might not solve the problem but would instead move encampments other places.
June 9, 2021
Big City Mayors Coalition Praises $4 Billion State Plan to Combat Homelessness
LOS ANGELES (CNS) – As California legislators work to finalize the state’s 2021-22 budget, Mayor Eric Garcetti joined a coalition of mayors from California’s 13 largest cities today to show support for a proposal to give local governments $1 billion a year over the next four years to combat the homelessness crisis.
The Big City Mayors coalition, which initially called for $4 billion a year for five years, praised the Senate and Assembly joint budget plan to allocate $4 billion in flexible funding to local communities over the next four years.
The coalition includes mayors from San Diego, San Jose, San Francisco, Fresno, Sacramento, Long Beach, Oakland, Bakersfield, Anaheim, Riverside, Santa Ana and Stockton. The 13 cities account for 11 million people, 29% of the state’s population but 59% of the state’s unsheltered population.
“We never could have expected the year we’ve lived through, but then to see this moment where California not only came back, it has roared back with the largest surplus in our history of the state,” Garcetti said. “Usually when the crisis comes, the resources aren’t there — when the resources are there the crisis isn’t there. This is actually a match made in heaven.”
The state has a $75.7 billion budget surplus. The final agreement for state homeless funding to cities has not yet been determined, Garcetti said, but could be finalized any day. The vote is expected by July 1, but cities may not receive any funding until August or September, according to Garcetti.
The coalition emphasizes that the homelessness problem is larger than individual cities in California and needs a consistent state response to be properly addressed. While about 568,000 people in the United States are experiencing homelessness, about 151,000 are in California, according to 2019 data from the National Alliance to End Homelessness.
“When will we finally make the sustained commitment and recognize while it won’t happen overnight, it will only happen with the depth and the breadth that we need,” Garcetti said.
Copyright 2021, City News Service, Inc.
CNS-06-09-2021 16:02
Big City Mayors Coalition Praises $4 Billion State Plan to Combat Homelessness
LOS ANGELES (CNS) – As California legislators work to finalize the state’s 2021-22 budget, Mayor Eric Garcetti joined a coalition of mayors from California’s 13 largest cities today to show support for a proposal to give local governments $1 billion a year over the next four years to combat the homelessness crisis.
The Big City Mayors coalition, which initially called for $4 billion a year for five years, praised the Senate and Assembly joint budget plan to allocate $4 billion in flexible funding to local communities over the next four years.
The coalition includes mayors from San Diego, San Jose, San Francisco, Fresno, Sacramento, Long Beach, Oakland, Bakersfield, Anaheim, Riverside, Santa Ana and Stockton. The 13 cities account for 11 million people, 29% of the state’s population but 59% of the state’s unsheltered population.
“We never could have expected the year we’ve lived through, but then to see this moment where California not only came back, it has roared back with the largest surplus in our history of the state,” Garcetti said. “Usually when the crisis comes, the resources aren’t there — when the resources are there the crisis isn’t there. This is actually a match made in heaven.”
The state has a $75.7 billion budget surplus. The final agreement for state homeless funding to cities has not yet been determined, Garcetti said, but could be finalized any day. The vote is expected by July 1, but cities may not receive any funding until August or September, according to Garcetti.
The coalition emphasizes that the homelessness problem is larger than individual cities in California and needs a consistent state response to be properly addressed. While about 568,000 people in the United States are experiencing homelessness, about 151,000 are in California, according to 2019 data from the National Alliance to End Homelessness.
“When will we finally make the sustained commitment and recognize while it won’t happen overnight, it will only happen with the depth and the breadth that we need,” Garcetti said.
Copyright 2021, City News Service, Inc.
CNS-06-09-2021 16:02
June 9, 2021
On Location: The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES - The sheriff of Los Angeles County dispatched deputies Tuesday to Venice Beach to assess the homelessness problem, a day after he called out city officials for failing to adequately address the growing number of people sleeping outdoors along the famous strand.
Venice is the jurisdiction of the Los Angeles Police Department, not the Sheriff's Department. But Sheriff Alex Villanueva said he was moved to act because of “the failures of local politicians in regard to the homelessness crisis.”
Villanueva tweeted Monday that he was sending the Sheriff's Department's Homeless Outreach Services Team to the beach, where encampments have proliferated along the popular boardwalk and in surrounding neighborhoods.
The sheriff said the goal was to clear the area of homeless encampments by July 4.
News reports showed nearly two dozen sheriff's deputies along with social workers and volunteers talking to some of the dozens of people living in tents and makeshift shelters near the famous boardwalk.
“What we saw was human misery,” Lt. Geff Deedrick, head of the sheriff's team, told KNBC-TV.
“This isn’t a one-size-fits-all issue,” he said. “This is individual conversations. We need to know who’s here and what their individual needs are.”
“They’re going to start interfacing with the homeless, start doing their assessments and figuring out where everybody is in their transition from being homeless to being housed,” he told CBS 2 News.
Villaneuva told CBS 2 News that he was not trying to start a turf battle with the Police Department, but instead was trying to help.
“I’m not going to blame LAPD whatsoever,” he said. “I think they can definitely do the job. They’re more than capable, have good leadership. However, if they’re hamstrung by politicians that don’t want them to do their job, well then they’re left in a very, very bad situation.”
“The Los Angeles Police Department is committed to working with all of our public safety partner agencies and elected officials to improve the safety of our communities," the LAPD said in a statement Tuesday. ”Including efforts to increase outreach and provide needed housing and supportive services in the Venice Beach community and elsewhere.”
Police Chief Michel Moore also called on the City Council to end a moratorium that he said wouldn't allow his officers to enforce city no-camping laws, KNBC-TV reported.
“The conditions in the encampments on the Venice boardwalk are not safe or healthy for anyone,” Alex Comisar, spokesman for Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, told the station.
But he added: “The courts have been clear about how we’re allowed to enforce camping laws in public spaces, and the mayor is more interested in pressing ahead with the difficult work of ending homelessness than in political theater.”
City Councilman Mike Bonin, who represents the district that includes the area, accused Villanueva of making political hay out of a serious problem.
“He didn’t call to offer services or housing, which would help," Bonin said in a tweet Tuesday. “He went on a PR blitz, promising his own notorious brand of justice. To anyone familiar with Villanueva and LASD, that’s incredibly ominous."
Villanueva's move comes as the county struggles with ways to deal with a homeless population estimated at more than 60,000.
On Tuesday, the county Board of Supervisors ordered homeless and public health agencies to look into a plan for providing housing to an estimated 600 women and 55 families now living on skid row in Los Angeles.
“A lack of stable housing increases women’s vulnerability to violence, exacerbating the trauma many unhoused women have already experienced," the motion said.
On Location: The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES - The sheriff of Los Angeles County dispatched deputies Tuesday to Venice Beach to assess the homelessness problem, a day after he called out city officials for failing to adequately address the growing number of people sleeping outdoors along the famous strand.
Venice is the jurisdiction of the Los Angeles Police Department, not the Sheriff's Department. But Sheriff Alex Villanueva said he was moved to act because of “the failures of local politicians in regard to the homelessness crisis.”
Villanueva tweeted Monday that he was sending the Sheriff's Department's Homeless Outreach Services Team to the beach, where encampments have proliferated along the popular boardwalk and in surrounding neighborhoods.
The sheriff said the goal was to clear the area of homeless encampments by July 4.
News reports showed nearly two dozen sheriff's deputies along with social workers and volunteers talking to some of the dozens of people living in tents and makeshift shelters near the famous boardwalk.
“What we saw was human misery,” Lt. Geff Deedrick, head of the sheriff's team, told KNBC-TV.
“This isn’t a one-size-fits-all issue,” he said. “This is individual conversations. We need to know who’s here and what their individual needs are.”
“They’re going to start interfacing with the homeless, start doing their assessments and figuring out where everybody is in their transition from being homeless to being housed,” he told CBS 2 News.
Villaneuva told CBS 2 News that he was not trying to start a turf battle with the Police Department, but instead was trying to help.
“I’m not going to blame LAPD whatsoever,” he said. “I think they can definitely do the job. They’re more than capable, have good leadership. However, if they’re hamstrung by politicians that don’t want them to do their job, well then they’re left in a very, very bad situation.”
“The Los Angeles Police Department is committed to working with all of our public safety partner agencies and elected officials to improve the safety of our communities," the LAPD said in a statement Tuesday. ”Including efforts to increase outreach and provide needed housing and supportive services in the Venice Beach community and elsewhere.”
Police Chief Michel Moore also called on the City Council to end a moratorium that he said wouldn't allow his officers to enforce city no-camping laws, KNBC-TV reported.
“The conditions in the encampments on the Venice boardwalk are not safe or healthy for anyone,” Alex Comisar, spokesman for Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, told the station.
But he added: “The courts have been clear about how we’re allowed to enforce camping laws in public spaces, and the mayor is more interested in pressing ahead with the difficult work of ending homelessness than in political theater.”
City Councilman Mike Bonin, who represents the district that includes the area, accused Villanueva of making political hay out of a serious problem.
“He didn’t call to offer services or housing, which would help," Bonin said in a tweet Tuesday. “He went on a PR blitz, promising his own notorious brand of justice. To anyone familiar with Villanueva and LASD, that’s incredibly ominous."
Villanueva's move comes as the county struggles with ways to deal with a homeless population estimated at more than 60,000.
On Tuesday, the county Board of Supervisors ordered homeless and public health agencies to look into a plan for providing housing to an estimated 600 women and 55 families now living on skid row in Los Angeles.
“A lack of stable housing increases women’s vulnerability to violence, exacerbating the trauma many unhoused women have already experienced," the motion said.
June 2, 2021
CIRCLE teams, equipped with an outreach worker, a licensed behavioral health clinician, and a community ambassador, will be dispatched through the LAPD 911 communications center for calls related to homelessness or behavioral health. The pilot’s initial target will be non-emergency calls to 911 involving a person experiencing homelessness and/or a mental health crisis.
CIRCLE teams, equipped with an outreach worker, a licensed behavioral health clinician, and a community ambassador, will be dispatched through the LAPD 911 communications center for calls related to homelessness or behavioral health. The pilot’s initial target will be non-emergency calls to 911 involving a person experiencing homelessness and/or a mental health crisis.