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County officials, housing advocates band together on rising homelessness

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Elected officials and housing advocates from across Los Angeles County reinforced their commitment this week to working together to solve the problem of homelessness, even as communities push back against development in their own backyards.

On Tuesday, Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas joined Los Angeles City Councilmen Jose Huizar and Marqueece Harris-Dawson on the steps of the Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administration to underline their cooperation.

“The city of Los Angeles has stepped up big time,” Ridley-Thomas said.

The county has developed an agreement that it hopes will serve as a template for providing supportive services, like mental health and substance abuse treatment, to homeless individuals in Los Angeles and other cities. The Board of Supervisors signed off on the document Tuesday and empowered Chief Executive Officer Sachi Hamai to negotiate the details with various municipalities.

The city of Los Angeles brings $1.4 billion in bond funding to the table, approved under Measure HHH, while the county’s quarter-cent sales tax increase under Measure H is expected to raise roughly $355 million annually for supportive services. In addition to building more permanent supportive housing, cities can offer rental subsidies through federal housing vouchers.

A combined total of 2,084 federal rental vouchers have been pledged by seven cities—Los Angeles, Burbank, Glendale, Long Beach, Pasadena, Pomona and Redondo Beach—but final agreements have not yet been signed.

The Community Development Commission is also working with Compton, Santa Monica and Culver City to match city assistance with county services.

West Hollywood Mayor John Heilman said pairing supportive services with housing was key.

“What we are seeing on the streets are people having problems with substance abuse and mental health issues and physical challenges, and we can’t get them the help that they need without both shelter and supportive services,” Heilman said.

Homeless advocate Reba Stevens, who was homeless for 21 years, agreed.

“Housing is only the beginning to the end of homelessness,” Stevens told those assembled on the county steps, adding that “guilt and shame” kept her from getting the help she needed for many years.

The county’s goal is to move 45,000 families and individuals from homelessness into permanent housing during the first five years of Measure H, which takes effect Oct. 1. A second target is to prevent another 30,000 families and individuals from becoming homeless during that five-year period.

Harris-Dawson was optimistic about the city’s ability to forge ahead with its projects in spite of community resistance.

“There are almost no projects in the city of Los Angeles that don’t get some pushback,” Harris-Dawson told City News Service outside the county building. “Just because there’s pushback doesn’t mean you can’t get projects done.”

In fact, feedback from the community is helpful because it can serve to tailor projects to suit local needs, the councilman said.

Heilman said units built by the West Hollywood Community Housing Corp. “blend right in … We have not had the kind of problems that some of the NIMBYs (not in my backyard) raise about this kind of housing in their communities.”

Supervisor Kathryn Barger said city officials would need to help the county convince residents that formerly homeless individuals can be good neighbors.

“The money is not going to be the problem,” Barger said. “The issue is going to be cities willing to step up and allow these types of facilities to be in their community.”

On Sept. 27, the county will host a second city summit on combating homelessness.

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