The results of the homeless count are in – and the biggest reduction in LA is in Council District 11.
It shows housing and services -- not enforcement and criminalization -- end homelessness.
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According to @LAHomeless, homelessness ticked up citywide (2%) and countywide (4%). But the Westside as a whole (including CD11, SaMo, Culver City, etc) is down 23%.
The data shows homelessness in District 11 has dropped 38.5%, more than in any other part of the City of LA.
How did it happen? By focusing intently on housing and services to help people transition off the streets permanently.
And by firmly rejecting failed, expensive policies that criminalize homelessness and move tents from block to block.
Between the last count in 2020 and the count in February 2022, we focused on finding places where unhoused people could go, rather than passing laws telling them where they could not go.
We opened bridge housing in Venice and at the VA in Brentwood.
We conducted the largest and most successful place-based homelessness intervention programs in Los Angeles, moving nearly 300 people indoors from tents on Venice Beach and in Westchester Park.
As long as thousands of our neighbors sleep on the streets, we can’t let up.
We know what works, and we intend to keep doing more of it.
Since the 2022 homeless count, we have opened, approved, purchased or started building even more homeless housing and shelter.
We’ve opened supportive or affordable housing in Venice, West LA and Mar Vista.
We’ve approved more in Westchester and Venice.
Even more is already under construction in West LA, at the VA, and in Venice.
And we’re in the process of purchasing a 133-room motel on the Westchester/Del Rey/Playa Vista border to provide even more homeless housing. That’s thanks to Project Homekey, funded by the city and the state.
And we’re opening more Safe Parking near LAX soon.
There is another key tool we have used to confront homelessness – renter protections -- and they are at risk of ending, if we don’t take action.
COVID-era tenant protections and rent relief helped keep people housed, slowing and reducing the number of people falling into homelessness. There's a growing movement to repeal those protections, and it would create a tsunami of evictions, reversing any progress on homelessness.
We can’t let that happen. Before the City Council repeals any COVID-era tenant protections, we need to approve new, tough permanent protections.
We need things like a fully-funded right to counsel, universal “just cause” eviction rules, increased relocation assistance, limits on rent increases, and removal of discriminatory barriers to rental housing.
Confronting homelessness is not easy, but we know how to do it. Provide housing and services, as quickly and cost-effectively as possible, to people who are currently homeless. And stop people from becoming homeless in the first place.
I’ve got 3 months left in office, and my team and I are going to continue that work every single day.
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Attacks on the LGBTQ+ community in LA County are on the rise. Who's really behind it? Proud Boys, right-wingers, and Capitol Hill rioters. We've got details. Journalists
These demonstrations have been too often described as parents concerned about what their kids are being taught in local schools. But, as independent media has documented, the loudest and most prominent voices are part of a road show of right-wing protesters from outside the area.
@ACatWithNews covered Glendale and North Hollywood, with @joeyneverjoe cross referencing information from other demonstrations to show the familiar faces, who belong to a host of far right groups.
If you want to see what grassroots organizing can do, just take a look at Los Angeles, where in the past 4 weeks, progressive activists have scored major victories in multiple areas.
In November, the @UnitedToHouseLA ballot measure won with 58% of the vote. It dramatically and permanently expands what can be done to address LA's homelessness and affordable housing crises.
Providing free public transit is one of the most important things @metrolosangels can do. That’s why I have serious concerns about a fare restructuring plan that moves us in the opposite direction.
When all ballots are counted, LA’s top vote getter will likely be an unabashedly progressive tenant advocate whose signature issue was excessive police spending.
City Controller-elect @kennethmejiaLA defied -- and obliterated -- conventional wisdom.
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Political professionals and even other progressives initially dismissed him.
They scoffed at his lack of government experience. They mocked the way he campaigned. They criticized the issues he focused on.
He and his formidable and mostly unpaid movement proved everyone wrong.
With the media repeatedly warning about crime, and with both parties insisting more and more police are the answer, Mejia crunched the data and showed there was no correlation between LAPD funding and crime in the city.
We’ve all heard the ugly things three of my colleagues said on the infamous tapes.
It is also important to remember what they did. The legislation they killed, stalled or weakened. The laws and programs they stopped that would've helped people. The bad policies they passed.
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As president of the council, and as chairs of the committees handling housing policy, COVID recovery, and all issues impacting homelessness and poverty, Nury, Gil, and Kevin wielded enormous power, and often used it to the detriment of people in Los Angeles
They often worked to prop up the status quo, consolidate power, and undermine truly progressive reforms.
They did so while insisting to be progressives themselves, and vilifying anyone (activists, community leaders, candidates, other electeds) pushing progressive policy.
LA is about to end COVID-era renter protections, leaving tenants more vulnerable and at risk of homelessness than they’ve been in years.
And the City Council’s actions will be based on a false narrative, being artfully spun by corporate landlords and their supporters.
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The landlord lobby and its supporters keep talking about the need to “balance” the interests of landlords and tenants.
But they don’t mention what's really imbalanced: There are far more renters than landlords in LA – but landlords hold more power, politically and economically.
Two-thirds of LA residents are renters. That's as many as 2.4 million people renting in LA.
There are about 300,000 small landlords – and many of them live outside the City.