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LA Mayor's new homelessness plan: more shelters, more enforcement

LOS ANGELES, CA - APRIL 19:  A police car stops near homeless people sleeping in their encampments in the early morning hours of downtown sidewalks on April 19, 2006 in Los Angeles, California. Most homeless tents and improvised shelters are taken down at dawn, before their possessions can be hauled away by cleaning crews. A 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel ruled last week that a city law making it illegal to sleep or sit on city sidewalks cannot be implemented as long as there is a shortage of homeless shelter beds in Los Angeles. According to a study released in January by the Los Angeles Housing Services Authority, there are nearly 90,000 homeless people live in Los Angeles County but only 9,000 to 10,000 beds available in homeless shelters, single-room occupancy hotels, and other facilities.    (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)
Will the promise of cleaner streets persuade more L.A. neighborhoods to allow homeless shelters in? L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti hopes so.
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David McNew/Getty Images
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LA Mayor's new homelessness plan: more shelters, more enforcement

Could the prospect of cleaner streets and sidewalks free of homeless encampments be enough to override L.A.'s history of NIMBYism?

That's the hope behind a new plan by L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti to spread $20 million worth of emergency homeless shelters across the city—and simultaneously beef up the Bureau of Sanitation resources traditionally responsible for clearing encampments. 

Garcetti will unveil the proposal during his annual State of the City address Monday. 

[FOLLOW LIVE: Fact checks and analysis from KPCC reporters]

"In this city, we are pushing past skepticism," Garcetti plans to say in his address. "Because here, I will accept nothing less than a home for every person who needs a roof over their head."

The city has approximately 25,000 "unsheltered" homeless, living in vehicles, tents or in the open, according to the last tally in Jan. 2017. (Officials estimate there are nearly 43,000 unsheltered homeless countywide.) 

The county estimates it needs more than 3,000 more shelter beds to be able to accommodate everyone — and finding sites for new shelters is a perpetual challenge. Neighborhoods simply don't want them. 

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That's left the need in places like the San Fernando Valley and L.A.'s West Side quite high, said Matt Szabo, Garcetti's deputy chief of staff. 

The plan to change that centers around a promise: For any neighborhood that houses one of these new shelters, the city will keep it clear of homeless encampments.

How the plan would work

Garcetti is asking the city council to appropriate about $1.3 million to each of L.A.'s 15 council districts to construct a temporary shelter. 

The area around the shelter would then become a target zone for enforcement efforts by special LAPD Homeless Outreach and Proactive Engagement (HOPE) teams and Bureau of Sanitation workers who would keep the area clear of encampments. (HOPE teams partner law enforcement with service providers to do outreach and enforcement related to homelessness.)

Teams from the L.A. Homeless Services Authority and L.A. County Department of Mental Health would conduct outreach in the neighborhood in the runup to the shelters's opening to get as many people into services and housing as possible, according to the mayor's plan.

"Once the facilities are open, then those that remain in the encampments will be encouraged to move into the shelter," Szabo said.

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According to excerpts of his speech released early,  Garcetti will say anyone who seeks help getting off the streets will get it. "Some people will only need to stay for a few weeks in our new shelters, where we can connect them to a job or a rapid-rehousing voucher — and then turn the bed over to someone else," the mayor is planning to say. "Other folks could be there for six months before they’re ready to move somewhere permanent, but everybody will get the help that they need."

The city would then determine and post a date by which homeless people would either have to move into the shelter or leave the neighborhood, he said.

"When the enforcement begins, the encampment will be removed, and we will not allow for re-encampment in those targeted areas," Szabo said. 

Asked if the mayor is confident the plan complies with L.A.'s various settlement agreements regarding the rights of homeless people, Szabo said the mayor's office has been working with the L.A. City Attorney's Office on the plan.

The details of how enforcement would work and what radius around the shelter would be an encampment-free zone is still under discussion, he added.

To fund enforcement, Garcetti is proposing a $29 million boost in homelessness spending related to city departments in the coming fiscal year, $17 million of which would go to the  Bureau of Sanitation. The number of LAPD officers paired with these teams (40 citywide) would remain the same as in the last fiscal year. 

What would these shelters look like and where would they be?

The proposed shelters are intended to be temporary, meaning lasting up to three years, and could take many forms. 

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"We're looking at tent structures, we're looking at trailers," Szabo said. "There may be some instances where we use an existing building." 

The shelters would be administered by the L.A. Homeless Services Authority, likely through contracts with community providers. Any on-site services would ideally be paid for by L.A. County, he said, adding that the city is in talks with the county to determine whether funds from Measure H, a new sales tax, could pay for services. 

Simultaneously, the city has been working with the state to establish "alternative minimum health and safety standards" to apply to the temporary shelters, which would relieve the structures of some of the need to conform to building and fire safety codes, said Szabo.

The need for such standards and any zoning changes and other red tape would be substantially reduced if the L.A. City Council enacts an emergency declaration regarding homelessness. The council is expected to take up such a declaration on Tuesday. 

As for siting, Szabo said no council district or neighborhood would be forced to open a shelter against the community's wishes. Neighborhood councils would be involved in locating sites. And the district's city council representative would still have the ability to nix any project, he said.

But should a council district not use its funds in short order, it would lose access to them, and to the promise of stepped up encampment cleanups, Szabo noted. 

The money could potentially fund up to 100 beds in each council district. 

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Wait, that's nowhere near enough to shelter L.A.'s homeless

"The need is enormous, this is a start," Szabo said. 

The city, he said, is hoping for financial help from the state to expand the program. Garcetti was recently in Sacramento to help lobby for the passage of AB 3171, a bill that would create $1.5 billion in block grants for localities to spend on addressing homelessness. 

The measure, introduced by Assembly Member Phil Ting (D-San Francisco), is scheduled to go before the Assembly Housing and Community Development Committee later this month. 

If AB 3171 becomes law, Szabo said Garcetti's plan could work as a model for rolling those funds out in L.A.

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