Next Up:
0:00
0:00
-
Listen Listen
-
Listen Listen
Housing & Homelessness
A $6.3 million state grant funded health and social workers’ efforts to get people inside.
Sponsored message
More Stories
-
L.A. County officials announced late Friday they plan to appeal a judge’s rejection of their deal to resolve a long-running federal lawsuit over L.A.’s systemic failures to confront homelessness.
-
LAist has learned that biweekly reports ordered by the Los Angeles City Council on where the money is going and how many people have been sheltered have not been delivered.
-
Despite the increase, Long Beach city officials say the results also show a promising slowdown of growth.
-
Downtown L.A. — just 1% of the city’s land — would accommodate 20% of new housing under the proposed community plan update that passed a key committee this week.
-
A California housing law grants generous benefits to builders who agree to only hire union workers. Trouble is, few if any builders found a way to do it.
-
In a contentious hearing, U.S. District Judge David O. Carter said L.A. County's proposal was woefully inadequate.
-
It’s a major jump from a previous proposal rejected by a judge, though still far short of the 3,000 additional mental health beds a county report found were needed as of 2019.
-
“How do I say the state of the city is strong when 40,000 people are in tents?” L.A. Mayor Karen Bass said as she released her budget proposal.
-
The Umeya facility will be demolished in the coming weeks to make way for 175 affordable units, half for unhoused people.
-
The mayor wants to scale up her Inside Safe program to $250 million, and hire hundreds more police officers.
-
Los inquilinos del condado de Los Ángeles pierden las protecciones de COVID-19, pero se mantendrán otras salvaguardias.
-
Democratic voters in California cities are pushing mayors and city councils to clear homeless camps. Leaders are responding with new ordinances, from Sacramento to San Diego.