How Los Angeles Is Approaching Homelessness
U.S.|How Los Angeles Is Approaching Homelessness https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/27/us/los-angeles-homelessness.html You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load. California Today A conversation with the Times reporter who wrote about Mayor Karen Bass’s flagship program to solve homelessness. March 27, 2024Updated 9:29 […]
U.S.|How Los Angeles Is Approaching Homelessness
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/27/us/los-angeles-homelessness.html
You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.
California Today
A conversation with the Times reporter who wrote about Mayor Karen Bass’s flagship program to solve homelessness.
About 171,000 people living in California are homeless, a total that has grown significantly over the past decade. If you live here, this has surely not gone without notice, as encampments have popped up on sidewalks and in public parks across the state in recent years.
Though California accounts for 12 percent of the nation’s population, the state is home to 30 percent of all homeless people in the United States.
My colleague Jill Cowan recently wrote about a new program spearheaded by Mayor Karen Bass of Los Angeles that’s aimed at eliminating the most visible encampments in the city. Bass took office in late 2022, and the program, Inside Safe, is at the core of her efforts to solve homelessness.
The program provides motel rooms for homeless residents who agree to leave encampments, a shift from sweeps in which officials clear encampments and force people to leave. But while Inside Safe has moved more than 2,100 people into shelters, only 400 of them have since moved into permanent housing. That’s drawn criticism that the program is only a short-term fix and perhaps more for optics than helping Angelenos most in need.
You can read Jill’s full article here.
I spoke to Jill about her article and her reporting, which spanned more than a year. Here’s our conversation, lightly edited:
Why did you decide to focus on Inside Safe?
Because it was the mayor’s focus — it was the program she touted the most and it was meant to address some of the people who need it most.
You reported that through Inside Safe and other programs, L.A. moved 21,000 people off the street and into temporary housing in 2023, about 4,000 more than it did in the prior year. How are Bass’s efforts seemingly more effective than her predecessors’?