bass He made homelessness a top priority as soon as he took office, declaring a local state of emergency and launching Inside Safe, which has moved thousands of homeless people off the streets and into hotels, motels and other temporary housing.
The mayor credited Inside Safe with a 17.5% decline in “unsheltered” homeless living on the street or in their vehicles over a two-year period. However, an ever-increasing share of program participants are returning to the street. Currently, almost one in four is in permanent housing.
BAS wants to solve the problem by increasing social services under the program. Still, she described Inside Safe as a lifeline for LA’s non-household residents, providing toilet facilities, hot showers and rooms with locking doors.
“I will absolutely not go back to the broken systems of the past,” she told reporters last month.
Raman, Joe is in charge of the council’s housing and homelessness committee from 2023. He voted for the mayor’s emergency declaration and signed off on three years of funding for Inside Safe.
However, in recent months, Raman has been saying that the program is too expensive, partly because the average stay at the Inside Safe facility is now about a year.
Raman wants the city to rely more on apartment vouchers, which he said are more effective and less expensive. She is also seeking to transfer oversight of LA homeless programs from several offices to the city’s Housing Department.
miller Called Inside Safe a complete failure. He promised to dramatically increase the number of “tiny home” villages, building 50 of them for $50 million, while also expanding the total number of shelter beds.
Additionally, Miller said he would introduce a new homeless outreach app for workers at city, county and other agencies to track “real-time services” for LA’s homeless population.
Miller supports Municipal Code Section 41.18, which prohibits visiting within 500 feet of “sensitive” locations such as schools, daycare centers and designated libraries or freeway overpasses.
Pratt And base also supports 41.18. Nevertheless, Pratt has criticized Bass’s handling of the homeless crisis, saying that too many sidewalks are filled with homeless addicts. On social media, he portrayed himself as the only candidate with “the will to remove encroachment in this city”.
“Nithya Raman and Karen Basura have turned LA into zombieland,” he said in a recent post.
Pratt will adopt a “treatment first” policy, which views mental illness and addiction as “the primary drivers of chronic homelessness.” His campaign website says long-term housing will be reserved for those who show “stability and sobriety.”
huang 41.18, which she described as inhumane, and end what she calls “sweeps” – sweeps of camps by city sanitation workers. These groups often confiscate and destroy tents and other items, including medicine and identity cards, he said.
“Sweeps also increase the anxiety and trauma of not having a home, creating mental health stressors that make it harder to connect with services,” Huang said.
Huang will ask the city controller to audit Inside Safe, while also accelerating production of “permanent supportive housing” apartments with on-site social services.
Raman opposed the council’s decision to extend 41.18 to ban camping near schools and daycare centers in 2022. He also voted against creating dozens of new 41.18 zones in other council districts, saying it only pushes unhoused people elsewhere.
