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LA clears Hollywood encampment, brings people into motels after delay over payment problems
L.A. officials moved forward with an encampment clearing in Hollywood on Friday, after payment problems to homeless service providers caused a week-and-a-half delay. Over 25 people accepted motel rooms from the encampment as part of Mayor Karen Bass’ Inside Safe program, according to a spokesperson for the mayor.
An LAist reporter was there for the first hour of the operation in front of the Sunset Sound recording studio early Friday, and spoke with unhoused people, Mayor Karen Bass and other city officials.
Unhoused people said they were feeling hopeful and looking forward to moving indoors.
“I'm pretty excited about this. This is looking pretty promising,” said Sean Caffey, a sculptor and cancer survivor who’s been living on the streets with his dog. He was missing almost all of his teeth, and said they were knocked out when he was beaten up by people who stole his sculpting tools.
“It's harder than you think to get housing,” he said. “I've been trying to get a house for like a minute, like at least a year.” Bass told him the city would make sure he gets dental care.
“I'm excited to shower and to have a bed and clean clothes,” said another man, who gave his first name as Adam and didn’t provide a last name.
Bass was there for over an hour, going tent to tent to talk with unhoused people, as well as outreach workers and reporters, and waved goodbye to the first bus of unhoused people who left for the motels.
“No human being should live like this,” the mayor said of the city’s encampments.
“Even though it takes a while [to move people indoors], and even though it's expensive, it is far more expensive in terms of human lives compromised, and in terms of the businesses, the safety, everything else, to leave people on the street,” she added.
Bass announced to the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce earlier this week that a series of large encampments in the area would be going away over the next month.
How many people have come inside under the mayor’s program?
Bass acknowledged challenges around service providers being stretched to their limits, which the nonprofits say stems from being shortchanged and paid late by the city and county’s homelessness agency, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority.
“We've been working so fast, we've done so many of these [Inside Safe operations], that we've really pushed to the limit the community based organizations,” Bass told reporters Friday.
L.A.’s homeless population has surged in recent years, with the latest count showing 32,680 people living outdoors. The latest report posted by the city, with data through March 15, shows the Inside Safe program has brought 2,482 people indoors since the mayor started it in December 2022. Among them, the report says 78% are still sheltered or housed.
As part of the current fiscal year budget, approved a year ago, the city council required two data reports about Inside Safe each month. The latest report on the city’s website is two months old.
Judge David O. Carter has scheduled a hearing for next Thursday to press for more frequent public updates about Inside Safe spending. Carter is overseeing L.A.’s biggest homelessness case, in which downtown business and property owners are pushing for faster city action to shelter people and clear encampments.
A delay over payment problems
The Hollywood encampment clearing was delayed by a week and a half over late payments by the city and county’s joint homeless services agency — a problem that exploded into public view recently.
At the county Board of Supervisors’ meeting last week, multiple homeless services providers said they have to take out loans, and are at risk of not being able to pay their staff, due to delayed payments from the agency for contracted services. They warned officials last week that they’re at the “breaking point” over the problem and faced possible cuts to staff and services. The supervisors and Mayor Bass vowed to work quickly to fix the issue.
The Sunset Sound operation was scheduled for last Tuesday, but the nonprofit that would serve people at motels indicated it would be unable to serve people at the motels because of the payment delays by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority.
That issue has since been worked out, according to PATH and city officials.
LAist asked the mayor about the payment problems delaying Friday’s operation.
“This system is broken in a lot of different ways, and it has been for years. What I believed when I came in office, and I believe today, this is an emergency. We have to get people off the streets immediately, while at the same time we're fixing the system,” she responded.
“But we did come to a little bit of a crisis point, because again we had stretched the system so far. So we had to take a step back for a minute, fix the financing, make sure that the community based organizations got their payments.”
What services will people receive?
The people who accepted motel rooms Friday were bused to two motels served by PATH under a city-funded contract.
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How did we get here? Who’s in charge of what? And where can people get help?
- Read answers to common questions around homelessness in the L.A. region.
There, people will get three meals a day, on-site security and have access to case managers on site every day from 7 a.m. to 11:30 p.m., said Sasha Morozov, who oversees that work as PATH’s regional director.
The case managers, she told LAist, build relationships and help people with what they need, like getting an ID and other documents together to qualify for permanent housing, or access to a vaccine for their pet.
“Our goal at PATH is to end homelessness,” she said. “That's our mission.”
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