Part 130: "Looking for Unicorns" - Housing and Homelessness Progress in Los Angeles
By Ruth Roofless and Zachary Ellison, Independent Journalists
Finding housing in Los Angeles isnt easy, much less finding the perfect units for potential tenants within a building. At the City Administrative Officer's (CAO) pivotal Homeless Strategy Committee meeting on Thursday, November 7, Assistant City Administrative Officer Edwin Gipson remarked that he felt like he was looking for unicorns in making placements. The real unicorn though might be the relatively new Los Angeles County Affordable Housing Solutions Authority (LACAHSA), a new-ish body designed to comprehensively tackle the housing crisis. Hydra-like problems of housing unaffordability and homelessness are nothing new in Los Angeles, but LACAHSAs novel multi-jurisdictional structure promises a new approach to building affordable housing, keeping people off the streets, and getting those on them housed.
The CAOs meeting with a single elected, Councilwoman Nithya Raman, takes place in non-descript conference room Suite 1500 in City Hall East, attached to main City Hall by a bridge over Main Street. By contrast, LACAHSA meets in the boardroom of the Metropolitan Water District Building on Alameda Street, with elected officials gathered at DWPs usual chamber underneath elaborate lighting. The room was only sparsely filled with attendees. With 77,049 evictions originating from within the City of Los Angeles being processed through LA County Courts from February through December 2023, according to Controller Kenneth Mejia, the room could have been filled with those who were evicted many, many times over. The despair is real, as several public commenters reminded LACAHSA of their housing struggles. Indeed, at one point, the board even discussed adding outreach workers to the meeting plan.
Link:
https://zacharyellison.substack.com/p/part-130-looking-for-unicorns-housing