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Housing & Homelessness
A new report finds that L.A.’s new anti-rent gouging laws have not resulted in lawsuits or fines against landlords who jacked up rents after the fires.
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The new restrictions will affect more than a dozen streets in neighborhoods like Venice, Playa Vista, and Westchester.
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The county allotted $3 million to administer a pilot program over the next year to assist households at risk of evictions.
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The U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear a case that has implications for how much power California officials have over homeless camps. It will rule on current precedent later this year.
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Friday is the last day for landlords to apply to the county’s $69-million rent relief program.
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Mayor Karen Bass decided last year to exclude single-family neighborhoods from her signature housing policy. Now the city faces a lawsuit over the change.
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State investigators say Invitation Homes, the nation’s largest single-family home rental company, increased rents above legal limits on 1,900 California homes.
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The program is designed to give grants to Long Beach residents looking to reduce costs associated with buying homes in the city.
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How To LA host Brian De Los Santos and producer Evan Jacoby discuss what they learned in the mutual aid series that hones in on homelessness and how people navigate basic needs.
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This was a brutal year for anyone trying to buy their first home in Southern California. Will 2024 be any better?
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Health experts say overdose prevention centers can save lives, but are illegal in most of the U.S. On Los Angeles’ Skid Row, those in need have built their own.
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Twenty-one hotels have been cited so far. If the citations are enforced and upheld in court, hundreds of rooms could be turned back into low-cost permanent housing for the city’s poorest residents.
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We look at how the Great Depression and a long housing crisis shaped the programs we have today.