Posts Tagged 'LA Chamber of Commerce'

Los Angeles Confronts Homelessness Reputation

We’d like to highlight a recent article in the NY Times addressing the severity of homelessness in Los Angeles, which has a homeless population growing faster than everywhere else in the country. L.A.’s homeless reputation is a concern for both residents and potential investors.

This article is related to the discussion over how homelessness effects potential downtown development, which we did a blog post about recently: Will Downtown Development Hurt The Homeless?

Also relevant is the recently announced five year plan by the L.A. Chamber of Commerce and the United Way to end chronic homelessness in LA, which we also highlighted in a previous blog post. That plan seeks to end homelessness in five years providing food and housing for those most in need.

Los Angeles Confronts Homelessness Reputation

By ADAM NAGOURNEY
Published: December 12, 2010

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/13/us/13homeless.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=a23

LOS ANGELES — It was just past dusk in the upscale enclave of Brentwood as a homeless man, wrapped in a tattered gray blanket, stepped into a doorway to escape a light rain, watching the flow of people on their way to the high-end restaurants that lined the street.

Across town in Hollywood the next morning, homeless people were wandering up and down Sunset Boulevard, pushing shopping carts and slumped at bus stops. More homeless men and women could be found shuffling along the boardwalks of Venice and Santa Monica, while a few others were spotted near the heart of Beverly Hills, the very symbol of Los Angeles wealth.

And, as always, San Julian Street, the infamous center of Skid Row on the south edge of downtown Los Angeles, was teeming: a small city of people were making the street their home in a warm December sun, waiting for one of the many missions there to serve a meal.

At a time when cities across the country have made significant progress over the past decade in reducing the number of homeless, in no small part by building permanent housing, the problem seems intractable in the County of Los Angeles.

It has become a subject of acute embarrassment to some civic leaders, upset over the county’s faltering efforts, the glaring contrast of street poverty and mansion wealth, and any perception of a hardhearted Los Angeles unmoved by a problem that has motivated action in so many other cities.

For national organizations trying to eradicate homelessness, Los Angeles — with its 48,000 people living on the streets, including 6,000 veterans, according to one count — stands as a stubborn anomaly, an outlier at a time when there has been progress, albeit modest and at times fitful, in so many cities.

Its designation as the homeless capital of America, a title that people here dislike but do not contest, seems increasingly indisputable.

“If we want to end homelessness in this country, we have to do something about L.A.; it is the biggest nut,” said Nan Roman, the president of the National Alliance to End Homelessness. “It has more homeless people than anyplace else.”

Neil J. Donovan, the executive director of the National Coalition for the Homeless, said he believed that, after years of decline, there had been a slight rise in the number of homeless nationally this year because of the economic downturn, and that Los Angeles had led the way.

“Los Angeles’s homeless problem is growing faster than the overall national problem,” he said, “trending upwards in every demographic, dashing every hope of progress anywhere.”

In a reflection of the growing concern here, a task force created by the Chamber of Commerce and the United Way of Greater Los Angeles has stepped in with a plan, called Home for Good, to end homelessness here in five years. The idea is to, among other things, build housing for 12,000 of the chronically unemployed and provide food, maintenance and other services at a cost of $235 million a year.

The proposal, based on the task force’s study of what other cities had done, was embraced by political and civic leaders even as it served as a reminder of how many of these plans have failed over the years.

“This is not rocket science,” said Zev Yaroslavsky of the County Board of Supervisors. “It’s been done in New York, it’s been done in Atlanta, and it’s been done in San Francisco.”

Part of the impetus for this most recent flurry of attention is concern in the business and political communities that the epidemic is threatening to tarnish Los Angeles’s national image and undercut a campaign to promote tourism, particularly in downtown, which has been in the midst of a transformation of sorts, with a boom of museums, concert halls, restaurants, boutiques, parks and lofts.

The gentrification has pushed many of the homeless people south, but they can still be seen settled on benches and patches of grass in the center of downtown.

“If you have a homeless problem, then your sense of security is diminished, and that makes people not want to come,” said Jerry Neuman, a co-chairman of the task force. “It’s a problem that diminishes us in many ways: the way we view ourselves and the way other people view us.”

Fittingly enough, it was even the subject of a movie last year, “The Soloist,” which portrayed the relationship between a Los Angeles Times columnist, Steve Lopez, who has written extensively about the homeless, and a musician living on the streets.

The obstacles seem particularly great in this part of the country. The warm climate has always been a draw for homeless people. And the fact that people sleeping outside rarely die of exposure means there is less pressure on civic leaders to act. (In New York City, when a homeless woman known only as “Mama” was found dead at Grand Central Terminal on a frigid Christmas in 1985, it was front-page news that inspired a campaign to deal with the epidemic.)

The governmental structure here, of a county that includes 88 cities and a maze of conflicting jurisdictions, responsibilities and boundaries, has defused responsibility and made it nearly impossible for any one organization or person to take charge.

And Los Angeles is a place where people drive almost everywhere, so there are fewer of the reminders of homelessness — walking around a sleeping person on a sidewalk, responding to requests for money at the corner — that are common in concentrated cities like New York.

“It’s easy to get up in the morning, go to work, drive home and never encounter someone who is homeless,” said Wendy Greuel, the Los Angeles city controller. “I don’t think it’s seeped into the public’s consciousness that homelessness is a problem.”

The homelessness task force offered its plan at a conference that attracted some of the top elected officials here, including Mayor Antonio R. Villaraigosa and three of the five members of the Board of Supervisors, a notable show of political support.

“We believe that with the release of this plan, we now have a blueprint to end chronic homelessness and veteran homelessness,” said Christine Marge, director of housing for the United Way of Greater Los Angeles.

Yet in a time of severe budget retrenchment, the five-year goal seems daunting. Even though the drafters of the plan say that no new money will be needed to finance it — Los Angeles is already spending more than $235 million a year on hospital, overnight housing and police costs dealing with the homeless — government financing of all social services has come under assault.

“I don’t for a minute think it’s not going to require a tremendous amount of political will to make it happen,” said Richard Bloom, the mayor of Santa Monica. “Do I think it can happen? Yes, because I’ve seen what happens in other cities, like New York City, Denver and Boston.”

Still, Mr. Bloom, who said he regularly attended conferences involving officials from other communities, added: “Our numbers are way out of whack with those numbers I hear elsewhere. It’s just so much more enormous and daunting here.”

$13 Million to Help Homeless Veterans in L.A.

Let’s start the new year with an encouraging story. This is a follow-up to a previous blog post about the L.A. Chamber of Commerce reaching out to end homelessness.

The Conrad N. Hilton Foundation has donated $13 Million dollars to help move forward the plan to build 2,500 permanent supportive housing units, and offer housing assistance in other ways, to chronically homeless veterans (chronically homeless means homeless for a year or more.)

There are approximately 12,000 chronically homeless veterans in Los Angeles.

 

$13 Million to Help Chronically Homeless Veterans in L.A. County

By City News Service www.egpnews.com

An initiative to end chronic and veteran homelessness in Los Angeles County within five years was boosted yesterday by a $13 million grant from the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation.

The Los Angeles Business Leaders Task Force on Homeless, which is leading the initiative, plans to use $9 million of the money to help build 2,500 permanent supportive housing units. Another $3.6 million will go toward identifying and housing 4,500 of the most vulnerable people on the streets.

The rest of the grant will fund a pilot program to ease the transition into housing, and to engage faith leaders and communities in the campaign.

“The Hilton Foundation has been championing solutions for long-term homelessness for two decades, and we have learned that permanent supportive housing is the most cost-effective and successful,” said Steven Hilton, president and chief executive of the Hilton Foundation. “This approach restores stability, autonomy and dignity, and helps individuals integrate back into the community.”

Permanent supportive housing combines affordable housing with on-site comprehensive services such as mental health treatment, substance abuse prevention, employment opportunities and life training.

According to the Hilton Foundation, studies have shown it is 40 percent less costly to place someone in permanent supportive housing than to leave them on the streets.

L.A. Chamber of Commerce Acting to End Homelessness

The Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce is reaching out to end homelessness. Here is an article by their president and CEO, Gary Toebben, declaring a five year strategic plan. It’s great to see the business community acting to assist the less fortunate.

Ending Homeless In Los Angeles For Good

By Gary Toebben

published at egpnews.com

November 18, 2010

Every night more than 48,000 people in Los Angeles County sleep on the streets because they do not have a place to call home. Los Angeles has the unfortunate distinction of being the epicenter of the nation’s homelessness crisis. That’s why the Chamber partnered with the United Way of Greater Los Angeles and last week launched Home For Good – a five-year strategic plan to end chronic and veteran homelessness in Los Angeles.

Home For Good is aimed at the 12,000 chronically homeless Angelenos who have been homeless for more than a year and have serious mental or physical health problems. This includes approximately 1,400 veterans – an increasing number of whom are soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. By implementing a new strategy, we can provide life-saving opportunities for the chronically homeless and at the same time free up resources for those in need of transitional services.

The plan’s foundation is to build a network of permanent supportive housing at locations throughout L.A. County. These homes – often indistinguishable from “regular” housing – would include on-site mental health, medical and substance abuse supportive services. This “wrap-around” services approach dramatically increases the rate of success in keeping people from going back to the streets.

Home For Good will also save taxpayers millions of dollars. Los Angeles spends $875 million each year under our current system. Studies show that we can save $280 million each year under a new plan that prioritizes permanent supportive housing, because the chronically homeless are no longer cycling through the justice system, emergency rooms and receiving ad-hoc care without a long-term strategy for success.

Best of all, this plan is proven to work. Cities like Denver, New York, Seattle and Atlanta have all dramatically reduced their homeless population through permanent supportive housing – and at a fraction of the cost of keeping them on the streets. While drafting Home For Good, our task force visited with leaders in those communities to evaluate their best practices and lessons learned.

We’ve done the research and have already begun laying the groundwork with local elected officials and agencies that serve the homeless.

The months ahead are critical to getting Home For Good off the ground. The biggest challenge is to make sure that the City and County of Los Angeles work together to implement the strategy.

Together we will push federal officials for a change in the federal funding formula for homelessness assistance that puts L.A. at an unnecessary disadvantage.

We need your help. On Dec. 1, 2010, we will ask business leaders, faith organizations, non-profits, elected officials, organizations and people like you to commit to this plan. Visit our website and read Home For Good, then lend your support by committing to this plan.

Together, we can end chronic homelessness, get people off the streets and save millions in taxpayer dollars. Most of all, we can help thousands of our fellow Angelenos find the hope, dignity and opportunity that all of us deserve – a home for good.

And that’s The Business Perspective.

Gary Toebben is president and CEO of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce.


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