Sponsored message
Logged in as
Audience-funded nonprofit news
radio tower icon laist logo
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Subscribe
  • Listen Now Playing Listen
  • Listen Now Playing Listen

The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • The official celebration kicks off in Los Angeles
    A large crowd of people inside a stadium with multiple large screens.
    FIFA Fan Festival Los Angeles at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum begins June 11, 2026.

    Topline:

    The World Cup kicks off today, and so does a four-day fan festival at L.A. Memorial Coliseum.

    What's at the party: The festival features live broadcasts of the games, music and food, and provides a place for fans to celebrate as Team USA plays its first game against Paraguay at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood on Friday.

    Read on... to check out what it's like inside.

    The World Cup kicked off Thursday, and so does a four-day fan festival at L.A. Memorial Coliseum.

    The festival features live broadcasts of the games, music and food, and provides a place for fans to celebrate during the first weekend of the tournament.

    General admission tickets are $10, but today’s event is sold out.

    Gaby Cardona lives in Los Angeles and came to the Fan Festival to root for Mexico.

    “My family is from Michoacan so we're here to support Mexico and you know I'm just so excited to be part of this culture and to be able to represented here in L.A.,” Cardona said.

    Other fans rooting for Mexico said they think the team could make it all the way and win the World Cup.

    Raul Burgos lives in South L.A. and took the bus to the fan festival at the Coliseum.

    “We're taking it all the way!” Burgos said.

    Fans can also purchase tickets at the Coliseum’s box office at Gate 29.

    The first match of the tournament kicks off at noon Thursday, when Mexico plays South Africa. Then at 7 p.m., South Korea will play Czechia. Both matches are in Mexico.

    On Friday, USA plays its first game against Paraguay at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood. Fans at the festival will be able to watch this match.

    Here’s a look inside the festival:

    This is a developing story and will be updated.

  • Trump admin cites mismanagement at local agency
    An aerial view of a street with the downtown L.A. skyline in the distance. A set of red buildings are to the left, in front of a line of tents, canopies and shelters in a homeless encampment. Large piles of trash can be seen on the other side of the encampment along train tracks.
    Large trash piles and sprawling homeless encampment in downtown Los Angeles in 2025.

    Topline:

    Federal authorities say they are immediately suspending funding for the Los Angeles region’s lead homelessness agency, pending an investigation into whether it broke the law in its handling of federal grant money, according to a letter released Thursday.

    Why it matters: The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development sent the letter to the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, or LAHSA, both agencies confirmed. The move could jeopardize tens of millions in federal dollars that flows from HUD to LAHSA each year. It’s a major escalation in a conflict between federal and L.A.-area officials over the region’s approach to its homelessness crisis.

    Why now? HUD claims it has adequate evidence to suspect LAHSA violated its contracts with the agency — in part by repeatedly certifying it had adequate financial controls and conflict-of-interest safeguards when it did not.

    What's next? LAHSA said it will fight the suspension. The agency can contest the suspension by requesting a hearing within 30 days of today’s notice, according to the letter.

    U.S. officials said they were suspending funding for the Los Angeles region’s lead homelessness agency pending an investigation into whether it broke the law when handling federal grant money, according to a letter released Thursday.

    The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development sent the letter to the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, or LAHSA, both agencies confirmed.

    The move could jeopardize tens of millions in federal dollars that flow from HUD to LAHSA each year. It’s a major escalation in a conflict between federal and L.A.-area officials over the region’s approach to the homelessness crisis.

    LAHSA has received $944 million in HUD funding since 2021, according to HUD.

    HUD claims it has adequate evidence to suspect LAHSA violated its contracts with the federal agency — in part by repeatedly certifying it had adequate financial controls and conflict-of-interest safeguards when it did not.

    “HUD cannot ignore LAHSA’s wanton management of public funds,” wrote Andrew Hughes, a deputy secretary at the federal agency.

    “LAHSA’s repeated false statements and its irresponsible actions and failures, including its lack of financial management, internal controls and safeguards against conflicts of interest, pose a threat to HUD, the public, and those living on the streets of Los Angeles,” he added.

    LAHSA said HUD’s action could result in thousands of formerly homeless people landing back on the street.

    “This appears to be a blatant attempt to pull yet more resources from Los Angeles, a city they have targeted time and again, when it is clear that LAHSA has either corrected or is in the process of correcting nearly all of the issues raised,” LAHSA spokesperson Ahmad Chapman told LAist in a statement.

    The agency can contest the suspension by requesting a hearing within 30 days, according to the letter. If LAHSA fails to respond to the suspension notice, the action will be final.

    Details from HUD

    The letter called LAHSA’s failures “severe and pervasive,” pointing to systemic accountability and compliance failures dating back decades.

    HUD cited a November 2024 L.A. County Auditor-Controller report that found LAHSA paid contractors late and failed to secure repayment agreements with some providers. The letter also cites a March 2025 court-ordered review that found the city of Los Angeles failed to properly track billions in homelessness spending, largely because of problems at LAHSA.

    Following those reports, L.A. County officials voted to pull more than $300 million a year from LAHSA and manage its own homelessness dollars through a new homelessness department at the county.

    The HUD letter also noted other recent documented issues scandals at LAHSA, including continued payment delays, legal settlements over misconduct allegations, and conflict of interest concerns around LAHSA voting to allow its former CEO to authorize more than $2 million to her husband's employer without disclosing it to HUD.

    Though it is not mentioned in the letter, funding through LAHSA also has been at the center of a fraud case against one of its contractors. In January, federal and L.A. County prosecutors charged Alexander Soofer, the director of a South L.A. charity hired by LAHSA, with stealing $10 million of the $23 million he obtained in homeless funds.

    “LAHSA's lack of financial management and internal controls violates HUD's requirements, violates the terms of LAHSA's agreements with HUD, undermines the integrity of HUD programs, and exposes taxpayer funds to heightened risk of fraud and abuse,” Hughes wrote.

    LAHSA is making changes, agency says

    LAHSA said it is already making changes to put a stop to many of the issues HUD raised, including working with the firm KPMG to modernize its payment systems.

    “If HUD’s Inspector General actually conducts a fair review of LAHSA’s current and future practices, they will clearly see how our systems now allow us to clearly track the work and investments that have resulted in LA outperforming the nation by reducing homelessness over the last two years,” Chapman told LAist.

    L.A. city and county officials have been worried about the possibility of HUD cutting off homelessness funding for at least a year.

    Last summer, President Donald Trump signed an executive order aimed to reduce federal support for “housing-first” policies. That same week, HUD officials told local homelessness officials the agency was considering pulling more homelessness funding from L.A.

    The federal housing agency’s investigation into LAHSA is in coordination with the White House Task Force to Eliminate Fraud, according to HUD.

    “While hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars were funneled to LAHSA with little accountability, homelessness skyrocketed,” HUD Secretary Scott Turner posted on X Thursday. “Taxpayers will not bankroll LA’s fraud-filled homelessness industrial complex.”

    While HUD’s review continues, LAHSA said it will explore all available options to ensure that federal funds continue to keep thousands of Angelenos housed. 

    LAist correspondent Nick Gerda contributing reporting.

  • Sponsored message
  • Overhaul of busy, dangerous Orange Ave
    A mural painted on the side of a hollow block fence depicts three orange and black monarch butterflies flying above orange poppies. The mural its on a street corner with a street sign that reads, "Orange Ave."
    The monarch mural stands at the intersection of Orange Avenue and Del Amo Boulevard, which will be revamped as part of an Orange Avenue bikeway project.

    Topline:

    In a unanimous decision, the Long Beach city council approved the next phase of an 8.28-mile bike route along Orange Avenue, a busy north-south thoroughfare.

    About the project: Orange Avenue will be overhauled with protected cycling lanes and intersections, upgraded crosswalks, new bus stops and extensive sidewalk repairs. The project, which began in 2017, is more than halfway finished. This phase will cover roughly another third, from 52nd Street to Wardlow Road and Hill Street to Pacific Coast Highway.

    Why it matters: Last year, 32 people were killed while walking, biking or riding an e-scooter in Long Beach — more than the 29 people murdered that year. Orange Avenue is flagged as one of the city’s most dangerous streets. It’s a long and fast arterial, running through multiple neighborhoods with narrow shoulders, poorly lit intersections and too few marked crosswalks that has landed it in the city’s high-injury network.

    Cyclists in Long Beach scored a victory at the City Council meeting Tuesday. In a unanimous decision, the council approved the next phase of an 8.28-mile bike route along Orange Avenue, a busy north-south thoroughfare that will be overhauled with protected cycling lanes and intersections, upgraded crosswalks, new bus stops and extensive sidewalk repairs.

    The project, which began in 2017, is more than halfway finished. This phase will cover roughly another third, from 52nd Street to Wardlow Road and Hill Street to Pacific Coast Highway, leaving the last 16% to be built in future phases, said Public Works Director Josh Hickman.

    If they do not run into any unforeseen hitches, construction should start this fall and finish by fall 2028. Hickman added they will have more information on road closures then.

    Once complete, this phase will bring 2.66 miles of upgraded bike lanes — some parts divided by a sharrow, other parts with a barrier — as well as five protected intersections at major cross streets, 10 upgraded crosswalks with flashing beacons, 15 new or relocated bus stops and 2.5 miles of sidewalk addition or repairs.

    A rendering of a street intersection. Each corner has an outcropping of foliage protecting pedestrian and bicycle lanes painted green.
    A concept design of a revamped intersection on Orange Avenue.
    (
    Courtesy city of Long Beach
    )

    At the request of residents, spot repairs will be made using concrete.

    Tara Riggi, president of the California Heights Neighborhood Association, asked that the project minimize the amount of green paint used in striping between Bixby Avenue and Wardlow Road, and that spot repairs use concrete and not asphalt slurry seal, to preserve the neighborhood’s original aesthetic.

    “We believe that safety improvements and historic preservation can coexist when projects are thoughtfully designed and implemented,” she said.

    The project skips a 1.47-mile segment of road that cuts through the city of Signal Hill.

    There was urgency to get this section of the project approved, considering nearly half of the $29.4 million budget — a $13.2 million Caltrans grant — expires next month if it’s not allocated.

    Marked as a project the city wants finished by the 2028 Olympics, the bikeway is meant to alleviate a sense of dread and discomfort faced by cyclists and pedestrians zigzagging the street each day.

    Last year, 32 people were killed while walking, biking or riding an e-scooter in Long Beach — more than the 29 people murdered that year. Orange Avenue is flagged as one of the city’s most dangerous streets. It’s a long and fast arterial, running through multiple neighborhoods with narrow shoulders, poorly lit intersections and too few marked crosswalks that has landed it in the city’s high-injury network.

    In past coverage by the Long Beach Post, residents have flagged particular issues along Orange Avenue, including the especially dangerous stretch between Seventh Street and Hellman Avenue, and the traffic signal at 36th and Orange Avenue, where drivers speed through to make the light.

    Councilmember Megan Kerr said her office has heard from multiple residents who feel unsafe crossing roads, adding she hopes the plan will “make Orange Avenue a safe street for all.”

    Reducing all types of crashes, city experts say, is possible if Long Beach is willing to dramatically reshape streets by adding medians, widening sidewalks and putting in dedicated bus and bike lanes, at the expense of car lanes.

    Long Beach has yet to see success on that front. Despite a goal of eliminating traffic deaths by 2026, there were 53 deadly car collisions last year, the highest in a decade.

  • Explores what Team Korea means to the diaspora
    Three people sit on a couch wearing different colored jerseys.
    Emanuel Hahn, Ray An and Josh Lee are the creators of "Korea, Away," a documentary series exploring the Korean diaspora through the Korean men's national soccer team ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

    Topline:

    More than two decades after South Korea’s 2002 World Cup run, three friends are aiming to find out what the national team means to Korean Americans.

    Why it matters: Memories like Josh Lee’s sit at the center of Korea, Away, a documentary series exploring the Korean diaspora through the Korean men’s national soccer team. The title, the creators say, refers to the experience of always being the away team, even in your home country.

    The backstory: Behind the series is Lee, a Los Angeles-based creative and member of a Koreatown-based LAFC supporters group; Ray An, founder and creative director of a LA streetwear brand; and Emanuel Hahn, a filmmaker and photographer. Drawing on interviews and reporting from Korean communities across North America throughout the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the three are trying to understand why people support a team from a country they no longer live in — or, in many cases, have never lived in at all.

    Read on... for more on the docuseries.

    This story first appeared on The LA Local.

    In 2002, Josh Lee watched South Korea’s World Cup run from a Korean Pentecostal megachurch in New York.

    Congregants gathered before dawn to watch the matches, packing into a sanctuary normally reserved for worship. When Ahn Jung-hwan scored the golden goal that sent South Korea past heavily favored Italy and into the World Cup quarterfinals, the church erupted.

    “We’re used to people praying in tongues and stuff, but people were going even crazier at like three in the morning,” Lee said. “It literally was in a house of worship and I think that bridged a lot of things for me of how important this is.”

    Memories like Lee’s sit at the center of Korea, Away, a documentary series exploring the Korean diaspora through the Korean men’s national soccer team. The title, the creators say, refers to the experience of always being the away team, even in your home country.

    Behind the series is Lee, a Los Angeles-based creative and member of a Koreatown-based LAFC supporters group; Ray An, founder and creative director of a L.A. streetwear brand; and Emanuel Hahn, a filmmaker and photographer. Drawing on interviews and reporting from Korean communities across North America throughout the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the three are trying to understand why people support a team from a country they no longer live in — or, in many cases, have never lived in at all.

    For An, the question “Why do we support Team Korea?” begins with a contradiction. Many of the people around him are U.S. citizens who don’t closely follow soccer. An, while a soccer fanatic — he’s been to every World Cup since 2014 — was raised in the U.S. Yet every four years, when the World Cup arrives, they find themselves pulling for South Korea.

    Again and again, their interviews returned to 2002, when South Korea stunned the world with a run to the semifinals.

    The 2002 of it all

    Hahn was 12 years old at the time, living in Singapore with his brothers. The family didn’t have cable, so they followed South Korea’s matches through Yahoo Sports’ live updates.

    “I didn’t even understand the significance of winning against a powerhouse like Italy. We were just so ecstatic.”

    For Hahn, who jumped from place to place as he was growing up — Singapore, Cambodia, Saipan, New York and L.A. — soccer was a constant in his life and how he found his identity.

    The tournament left a similarly lasting impression on James Kim, who was 21 and watching matches at Liberty Park in Koreatown.

    “I just remember they were selling ‘Be the Reds’ shirts everywhere,” Kim, 45, said. “I even had the ‘Be the Reds’ and Korean flags attached to my car and you just kind of saw that all over Koreatown and it was a really big, cultural experience.”

    Kim, who is half Korean and half Filipino, was raised primarily in a Korean household by his Korean father and stepmother. He said the tournament also changed the way he thought about himself.

    “I don’t look full-Korean,” he said, “so whether it was at the market or at a restaurant, I never really got treated like I was Korean, and so that was always a little bit of a struggle.”

    “I felt like I was able to be a part of something that everyone else — all the other Korean Americans around me — were also a part of,” he continued. “I think that was probably the first time I felt just very proud to be Korean.”

    Finding a place on Team Korea

    Hahn said many of the people they spoke with described support for the national team in terms of belonging, particularly among immigrants and members of the diaspora navigating questions of identity.

    Many immigrants arrive in the U.S. expecting to assimilate, Hahn said, only to discover that that is often more complicated than they imagined.

    “When that assimilation is thwarted for whatever reason, there is this response to finding a place that they feel like they can belong,” he said.

    The team’s reputation as an underdog resonates with many immigrants who see parallels in their own experiences.

    “When they see the South Korean team, especially in 2002, overcoming the odds to go on this sort of Cinderella run, it’s hard not to be romantic about that,” Hahn said.

    The interviews also revealed very different relationships to Korean identity.

    One of the earliest interviews featured in the project was with Meeja Richards, a biracial Korean and the child of an adopted Korean parent.

    Lee said Richards described supporting the national team as a way to connect with a culture she did not grow up around.

    “The Korean national team became this choice that she made in adulthood as a way to be like, ‘hey, I want an extension, I want an extra branch, I want a bridge to the Korean culture that I’m not very familiar with,'” Lee said.

    Another interviewee, Lee said, considers it his “birthright” to support South Korea despite being a U.S. citizen.

    The project tries to understand what lies beneath those convictions, An said.

    The interviews also revealed generational differences, Hahn said.

    While younger interview subjects grew up surrounded by Korean cultural exports such as BTS, Blackpink and Son Heung-min, older interview subjects often viewed the success of the national team through the lens of immigration and sacrifice.

    “What I gathered from these interviews was it’s very gratifying, I think, for them to see the success of the Korean men’s national team and to see someone like Sonny, it almost feels like a validation of all the hard work that they’ve done,” he said.

    While the docuseries focuses on Korean identity, An, Hahn and Lee say that diversity is central to the series.

    “We want to highlight just how diverse the diaspora is,” Hahn said. “How can soccer be a tool to inform the parts of yourself? We want to build a big tent where hopefully people can see a bit of themselves in the interviews that we do.”

    The series is expected to be released after the World Cup, likely in late summer or early fall. Follow the project on Instagram, @korea.away, for updates.

  • Over 250 tax-paid units sit empty in Bass strategy
    A woman with medium skin tone with short curly light brown hair wearing black-rimmed glasses and a black jacket with the seal of Los Angeles stands behind a podium speaking into a microphone.
    Mayor Karen Bass speaks at a press conference before LAHSA's annual homeless count at El Rio Community School on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025, in Los Angeles.

    Topline:

    L.A. taxpayers have been paying for more than 250 empty apartments as part of an initiative Mayor Karen Bass introduced years ago to make housing readily available to unhoused people, according to official data reviewed by LAist. That’s just over a third of the units in the strategy, known as master leasing, the data show.

    Why it matters: The vacancies have been tying up tax dollars that could house hundreds of people in other approaches, according to official financial data. At the county’s direction, LAHSA now plans to issue termination notices for seven of the master leases.

    What the mayor says: “It is unfortunate that LAHSA couldn't get this to work,” Bass spokesperson Ilanna Morales said in a statement.

    ‘A moral failure’: In a statement, L.A. County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath said: “Apartments sitting empty and taxpayer dollars wasted while nearly 70,000 people live without safe shelter is financially reckless and a moral failure.” She led the charge a year ago to have the county pull its funds from LAHSA over accountability concerns.

    How it compares: Some level of vacancies are expected in long-term housing programs for unhoused people, due in part to repairs and an often-lengthy paperwork process for someone to move in. But at one-third of units, the vacancy rate for L.A.’s master leasing program is far higher than in other programs. It’s nearly four times as high as the 9% vacancy rate for San Francisco’s long-term housing for unhoused people.

    L.A. taxpayers have been paying for more than 250 empty apartments as part of an initiative Mayor Karen Bass introduced years ago to make housing readily available to unhoused people, according to official data reviewed by LAist. That’s just over a third of the units in the strategy, known as master leasing, the data show.

    The vacancies have been tying up tax dollars that could house hundreds of people in other approaches, according to official financial data.

    Under master leasing, a local agency uses tax dollars to rent entire apartment buildings, then subleases individual units to unhoused people whose rent is paid with tax-funded subsidies and grants. But local policies have restricted who can move in, leaving units vacant despite taxpayers continuing to pay for them.

    Some level of vacancies are expected in long-term housing programs for unhoused people, due in part to repairs and an often-lengthy paperwork process to move in. But at one-third of units, the vacancy rate for L.A.’s master leasing program is far higher than in other programs. It’s nearly four times as high as the 9% vacancy rate for San Francisco’s long-term housing for unhoused people.

    “It is unfortunate that LAHSA couldn't get this to work,” Bass spokesperson Ilanna Morales said in a statement. She added that it’s “now critical” that an upcoming transition to the county of services at the sites “is focused on preventing people from returning to the street.”

    Bass appoints half of LAHSA’s governing commission, which she has served on since appointing herself to it in October 2023. She is the only elected official on the commission.

    In a statement, L.A. County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath called the situation a “moral failure.”

    “Apartments sitting empty and taxpayer dollars wasted while nearly 70,000 people live without safe shelter is financially reckless and a moral failure,” said Horvath, who led the charge a year ago to have the county pull its funds from LAHSA over accountability concerns. “This is exactly why Los Angeles County is leaving LAHSA. Angelenos are begging for accountability, transparency, and financial oversight, and the County is delivering that.”

    LAist’s review of official records and questions to officials found:

    • For over a year, the L.A. Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA) has been master leasing 14 buildings with a total of 758 housing units, according to a presentation prepared by LAHSA management. 
    • Nearly a third of those units — 226 altogether — did not have anyone living in them as of April, according to the presentation. Taxpayers pay for all units regardless of how many are vacant.
    • Vacancies increased by mid-May to 259 units — just over a third of the total — according to figures from the agency.

    LAHSA officials said the high vacancy rate is due to local policies restricting master leased apartments to people who have taxpayer-funded subsidies, which have been cut back by the state. A new person only goes in if they have a taxpayer-funded housing subsidy and choose to move there, they said, and one of the most successful subsidy programs was paused a year ago due to the state cuts.

    “Master-leased units will only see new occupants if the new [subsidy] holders wish to move into a master-leased unit,” said a statement provided by Ahmad Chapman, a spokesperson for LAHSA Interim CEO Gita O’Neill’s administration.

    LAHSA pays an average of about $3,400 monthly for each master leased, single-person apartment — about half of which is for rent — according to figures in the presentation. At that rate, the vacant units would be costing taxpayers about $880,000 a month in homelessness funds, or $10.6 million a year.

    Each of the 14 master leases is for five-year terms, with very limited options for LAHSA to terminate early. All but one of the properties is in the city of L.A., mostly in south L.A. and near downtown.

    In the meantime, an agency report shows officials are using taxpayer funds to pay for vacant units — funds that could otherwise be housing hundreds of people. LAHSA has to pay for the leases, security and other costs regardless of how many units are occupied.

    At the county’s direction, LAHSA now plans to issue termination notices for seven of the master leases, according to a LAHSA statement. “The notices will be issued prior to June 30 and take effect at various times throughout the upcoming fiscal year, depending on the specific agreement,” the statement added.

    The five-year lease deals give LAHSA only narrow options to cancel early:

    • They can cancel at the three-year mark
    • If LAHSA’s funding is terminated, the agency has five days to notify the building owner that it’s ending the lease at a date at least six months out. In that case, LAHSA pays an early termination penalty equivalent to three months of rent
    • If the building owner is in breach of the lease, such as failing to fix hazardous conditions after being given an opportunity to fix them.

    Master leasing background

    When she took office more than three years ago — after winning an election driven by voters wanting homelessness addressed — Bass announced master leasing as a key focus of her promise to quickly make housing available for unhoused people.

    “The only way to make this work is to have housing solutions lined up and ready to go,” Bass said when announcing the master leasing strategy in late 2022. “They must be immediately available."

    Auditors recently found that LAHSA had committed itself to more than $70 million in total payments over the coming years on “non-cancelable” leases. Master leases have been "primarily" responsible for the increase in LAHSA’s lease liabilities, auditors wrote.

    Justin Szlasa, a LAHSA commissioner appointed by county Supervisor Kathryn Barger, raised questions about the master lease strategy last summer, a few months into his time on the commission.

    “I was concerned because there was not a lot of transparency around the economics,” Szlasa told LAist in an interview. “My concern was that we’re getting ourselves into long term liabilities without funding sources to be able to cover that."

    Szlasa said his questions started after he visited a master leasing site and heard that residents with disabilities had to be carried up and down stairs because the elevators were broken in the relatively new building. He said it wasn’t clear who had responsibility for fixing problems.

    “I have questions about, what are we getting for that [spending], and how much is it costing us, and do we have the funds to operate them?” Szlasa said.

    “When I hear that we are 30% vacant,” he added, “it is very troubling.”

    Officials at the county’s new homelessness department have been working to take over responsibility of services at master leased sites from LAHSA, as the county prepares to take over county homelessness spending from LAHSA starting July 1. The leases themselves will continue to be held by LAHSA, with the new department overseeing services for people housed there, according to the county.

    “If any lease is changed or terminated, the County will provide support to all tenants so they can remain in their units where possible or transition to other housing options if needed,” said a statement from the county Department of Homeless Services and Housing, which is led by Sarah Mahin.

    Councilmember Nithya Raman, who chairs the L.A. City Council’s homelessness committee and made the runoff against Bass for this year’s mayoral election, has been in a key financial oversight position over city homelessness spending for years.

    In a statement, she said master leasing is a “compelling option,” but that the problems LAist flagged about its management “are serious.”

    “Vacant units representing underutilized public dollars, long-term lease obligations entered into despite declining revenues — these are not acceptable outcomes,” Raman said.

    Raman said she’s been working to strengthen city oversight of homelessness dollars through a new city Bureau of Homelessness Oversight. More than a year after the City Council created and funded the bureau, three of its 10 positions have been filled, according to a city spokesperson. The city has a notoriously long hiring process.

    The new bureau’s staff are focusing on ensuring that contracts for the upcoming fiscal year are in place, as well as processing invoices for this fiscal year, said Sharon Sandow, a spokesperson for the L.A. Housing Department, which oversees the bureau. The staff also are responding to matters that come up at the City Council’s housing and homelessness committee, Sandow said.

    LAHSA transparency issues

    The information about the master leasing vacancies was in presentation slides originally attached to the public meeting agenda for the April 17 meeting of LAHSA’s finance committee.

    The presentation was canceled and its contents deleted from the public agenda after LAist asked LAHSA’s management about the program. They later confirmed the information was accurate.

    The April 2026 presentation would have been the first time LAHSA staff would have notified the commission of the many vacant units in master leasing, according to LAHSA.

    LAHSA’s city- and taxpayer-funded contracts, including the master leases, are not posted online or included in the online searchable database of city contracts. That’s because it’s officially a separate agency from the city, even though it's partly funded by the city and has taken direction from the mayor’s office on who to issue contracts to.

    Szlasa, the LAHSA commissioner, said there should be transparent tracking of what’s been happening with the money and what taxpayers are getting for it.

    “I think we need to have a full, detailed financial accounting and performance accounting, that’s laid clear to the commission, on our master lease program. And frankly that’s what I called for [for] several months,” Szlasa said. “It still hasn’t been provided."

    How to reach me

    If you have a tip, you can reach me on Signal. My username is ngerda.47.

    What’s next?

    Starting July 1, day-to-day operations at all master-leased properties will transition to the county’s new Department of Homeless Services & Housing (HSH).

    The department “has been coordinating closely” to “ensure this transition is as smooth as possible,” said a statement from the department.

    As for the seven properties where the leases are being canceled, the residents' leases “will automatically shift to being directly with the property owner” and resident will be able to stay in their units.

    “In some cases, HSH is seeking alternate arrangements with owners to allow for more of an onsite presence from providers and other support for residents,” the statement said. “The buildings will continue to receive supportive services from HSH-funded providers as well as their rental subsidies, which come from a variety of sources.”