HOMELESS COUNT: 14.5% rise in Hollywood area

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The unhoused population in three of Los Angeles’ high-priority neighborhoods has increased by an average of 18%, according to a yearlong count conducted by the RAND Corp., which released results Thursday.

The Los Angeles Longitudinal Enumeration and Demographic Survey — which focused on Hollywood, Skid Row and Venice — took place from September 2021 to October 2022 and is separate from the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority’s annual tally. LAHSA is conducting its 2023 count this week and expects to have results by the spring or summer.

The report found an increase in homelessness of 32% in Venice, 14.5% in Hollywood and 13% on Skid Row.

Jason Ward, the lead author and associate economist at RAND, said the count determined “that there is a lot to be learned by measuring progress on homelessness more regularly than the once-a-year count of unsheltered people conducted by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority.”

Researchers also surveyed 400 unhoused people during the first six months. Of those individuals, nearly 80% said they were “continuously homeless” for over a year and 57% for more than three years.

Nine out of 10 respondents were interested in housing, and 29% were on wait lists.

According to RAND, the study is the largest count of unhoused people in Los Angeles outside of LAHSA’s tally. Researchers said that though the methodology was different, the survey’s results found a 15% increase in homelessness in the targeted areas compared to LAHSA’s last count in January 2022.

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LAHSA’s 2022 count revealed 41,980 unhoused people in the city of Los Angeles, up 1.7% from 2020. In the county, there were 69,144 unhoused people, an increase of 4.1%.

Last year’s count was followed by criticism from some officials, including members of the City Council, who pointed to issues with accessing data related to the count and inconsistencies in communication between the agency and council districts. Some council members called for a third-party count of Los Angeles’ unhoused population and a multi-year audit of authority’s previous counts.

In response, LAHSA announced changes for this year’s count that include using a new app, and ensuring that those counting have access to paper maps and tally sheets for counts if there are issues with connecting to the internet. Agency officials said earlier this month they also plan to hire a demographer and two data scientists for data analysis.

The RAND count determined some variation in unhoused people in the neighborhoods studied from month-to-month, with changes as high as 24%. Researchers attributed certain declines to city-authorized cleanups of encampments, but noted that the numbers came back up quickly.

Among the individuals surveyed, the most common answers for why unhoused people were not living in housing included never being contacted, privacy and safety concerns and issues with paperwork.

Copyright 2023, City News Service, Inc.

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Jose
Jose
1 year ago

Most are druggie-thieves who live in squalor. The DMV area has become a dangerous slum with absolutely no govt. oversight.
I will NEVER vote democrat again in my life after what I have seen over the last 5 years here in WH and LA.

Last edited 1 year ago by Jose
CTC
CTC
1 year ago

The most significant change I’ve noticed over the past few years isn’t so much the number of homeless people, it’s the proliferation of long term encampments; the junk piled shacks and sidewalk encompassing tents. Where once one might encounter a small tent or individual under a blanket, which were usually overnight or short term, there are now constantly expanding shanty towns that stay in place for months. These encampments end up collecting so much garbage that work crews with shovels and dumptrucks end up having to be called in for day long cleanups. Basically, the scenes one has traditionally found… Read more »

Desiree
Desiree
1 year ago

I was a volunteer for LASHA’s homeless count for a couple of years. The problem with the count is you don’t know how many souls are in tents and motor homes. There could be a family inside a tent that is counted as 1 or 2 homeless souls.

voter
voter
1 year ago

Unhoused people–vagrants, thieves, and bums–let’s stop throwing our money into this bottomless pit. There is nothing we can do to help those who won’t help themselves. It’s an old story.

WehoQueen
WehoQueen
1 year ago
Reply to  voter

That’s what I say! There need to be consequences for any bad life choices. Let’s not reward failure.

Christopher Roth
Christopher Roth
1 year ago
Reply to  WehoQueen

Aren’t they actually living in the consequence of bad life choices?
If not what might you suggest should happen to someone who can’t afford their rent and have no safety net (family, friends) to rely on?

WEHO Resident
WEHO Resident
1 year ago

The problem is rarely about being able to afford rent. Most of the homeless population is either severely mentally ill and need institutionalization to keep them off the streets and get the treatment they need or they are drug/alcohol addicts and aren’t interested in getting help. The people who don’t fall into either category but are homeless are the ones that can’t afford their rent because something went wrong (barely making it and lost job, can’t find job, etc). The latter group is often not who we see on the streets because they actually use temporary housing like shelters or… Read more »

Lindsey Liar
Lindsey Liar
1 year ago
Reply to  WEHO Resident

Liberal politicians (not liberal people) don’t have the backbone to do this. That’s why I remain liberal but don’t vote for them anymore.

Jose
Jose
1 year ago
Reply to  Lindsey Liar

Well said. I ditto your sentiments.

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