How WeHo counts the homeless

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City Hall sent us this information in response to our story about this year’s Homeless Count, which proceeded last week with neither volunteers from the public nor media access.

Since 2009, the City of West Hollywood has participated in the Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count. The count is directed by, and the responsibility of, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA).

At that time, the count was conducted every two years (in odd number years), and then in 2016 became an annual count. As mandated by the federal Housing and Urban Development Department (HUD), the LAHSA Count is conducted the fourth week of January, with West Hollywood’s portion of the count taking place on the fourth Thursday of January each year, with two COVID-related exceptions as noted below.

Pre-COVID, the City’s count deployed from the West Hollywood Sheriff’s Station – Count participants/volunteers included City Council members, City appointed officials, Sheriff’s deputies, staff from the City’s contracted homeless services agencies, City staff, and other community members. Again, because this is LAHSA’s Count, everyone who participates is a LAHSA volunteer and is trained to participate in the count by LAHSA, including directions about how to count individuals, youth, families, cars, vans, RVs, tents, and makeshift shelters.

The last pre-COVID count was conducted in 2020. In 2021 there was no count due to COVID impacts, and the 2022 count was changed to the last week in February due to a surge in COVID variants. In 2023, the count was again conducted in the fourth week of January, and in West Hollywood specifically: on the fourth Thursday of January (January 26, 2023).

For the 2022 and 2023 Counts, COVID safety measures were employed similar to other count locations, utilizing a grab-and-go drive-up system to start and end the count, rather than providing an indoor deployment center. Additionally, as best it could, the count aimed to create general personal safety, as well as COVID safety, among teams, most of which would be in an enclosed vehicle for the duration of the process.

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For 2023, LAHSA was seeking volunteers to cover 8,000 shifts to count over 3,000 Census tracts. Of those more than 3,000 tracts, West Hollywood is home to seven (7). Even with four people in a standard vehicle, the largest number of people needed to conduct the count would have been 28. The count in West Hollywood never has required or requested 50 volunteers. This is very different from our neighbors in the City of Los Angeles, for example, which due to its size and number of tracts, relied on volunteers for its count.   

Regarding information on the LAHSA website about volunteers or e-mails that may be generated to volunteers, LAHSA would need to speak to details, as this is not the City’s purview. As is the case each year, some locations throughout Los Angeles County have more volunteers than they need while others may not have enough. In order to support LAHSA to direct volunteers to the sites where they were most needed, the City of West Hollywood did not request additional volunteers through the LAHSA website, as there were enough people to count West Hollywood’s seven tracts.

The City of West Hollywood is very grateful to those who volunteered to assist with the West Hollywood count – particularly agency staff members from Step Up on Second, the Los Angeles LGBT Center, and Housing Works who already worked a full day on the frontlines and who then signed on to continue to serve our community by participating in the count late into the evening.

For more information about the LAHSA Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count – including details about results of the West Hollywood count as information becomes available from LAHSA – visit www.lahsa.org  or www.theycountwillyou.com.

For more information about the City of West Hollywood’s Homeless Initiative, visit www.weho.org/homeless.

West Hollywood Point-in-Time Homeless Count Results 

(these numbers represent individuals, but also vehicles, tents, and makeshift shelters*)

  • 2009 — 59
  • 2011 — 57
  • 2013 — 45
  • 2015 — 43
  • 2016 — 81
  • 2017 — 105
  • 2018 — 100
  • 2019 — 131
  • 2020 – 112
  • 2021 – N/A (No Count due to COVID impacts)
  • 2022 – 40 (Count conducted in February, rather than January, due to COVID impacts)
  • 2023 – TBD from LAHSA

*  Over the years, LAHSA has applied a SPA-level multiplier (Service Planning Area) to the raw data in order to standardize the estimates of people living in vehicles, makeshift shelters, and tents. For example, a baseline number of 6 could be calculated with a statistical multiplier to total 8.5. Such multipliers/conversion factors are used to estimate the total LAHSA count across the region, and those formulas change year over year.

WEHOville’s Public Information Request: R000959-013023

On Jan. 30, WEHOville submitted a public information request to City Hall asking for the following:

Any and all documentation, communications (including e-mails and texts) and recorded media related to the WeHo Homeless Count conducted on Jan. 26, 2023, including but not limited to:
● Any and all emails/text messages from Dec. 1, 2022 through Jan. 31, 2023 sent or received by city council, city manager, city staff and city attorney referencing the count
● Any and all emails/text messages from Dec. 1, 2022 through Jan. 31, 2023 between city council, city manager, city staff and/or city attorney and the Los Angeles Housing Services Authority
● Documentation showing which City Staff members participated in the operation, what their roles were, how long they worked and how much they were compensated
● Preliminary count totals
Documentation regarding Mayor Sepi Shyne’s and Mayor Pro Tem John Erickson’s participation in the operation, what their roles were, how long they participated
A blank or sample copy of the paperwork/clipboard material given to each volunteer/city staff member Information regarding the transportation used during the count — how many vehicles were used? How many vehicles were city-owned?
Any still image, video or audio recordings related to the count

We await the city’s reply.

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WehoQueen
WehoQueen
1 year ago

It’s not necessary to spend lots of taxpayer money to count how many homeless there are living on our streets, illegally. We don’t need to know a number. What we need is action to round them up, and get them out of town. We aren’t running a charity for the losers in life who made bad life choices, and want to be rewarded for those bad decisions, by having others pay their way in life. Enough is enough. Nothing has worked, nothing has even helped in the slightest. The good people in town, who pay the bills (i.e., “taxpayers”), work… Read more »

John Ryan
John Ryan
1 year ago

How does West Hollywood count the homeless? BADLY

West
West
1 year ago

First Weho banned the unvaccinated from volunteering, then they banned the rest of us. Noticing a pattern yet?

Outraged
Outraged
1 year ago

Do you really expect anything but self-serving fraud and manipulation from Shyne and the City Council Grifters??

Toms
Toms
1 year ago

City hall smoke and mirrors for publicity
People forget or don’t care that we are a tiny city acting as if we are on a national stage. They are clowns making complete fools of themselves.

JF1
JF1
1 year ago

Good. I’m glad you made the request! If City Hall won’t be transparent, then we will have to force them to be! Great job!

Nothing
Nothing
1 year ago

An information less message from the City .

Bastian
Bastian
1 year ago

So after we spend a small fortune on the 20 Room Holloway Motel, we should expect our homeless count to drop in half?

Alan Strasburg
Alan Strasburg
1 year ago

It looks like you got the city’s bureaucratic bullpucky non-reply. The City of West Hollywood operated the count as a photo op and the results will have that asterisk of dubious authenticity planted on them.

Manny
Manny
1 year ago
Reply to  Alan Strasburg

……and it took 5 days to write it.

Inquiring Minds
Inquiring Minds
1 year ago

But how many employees from the “Office of The Mayor” participated?

Joseph Balogna
Joseph Balogna
1 year ago

That graphic looks like it was lifted from a “Fat Albert” cartoon from 1976.

WeHo Mary!
WeHo Mary!
1 year ago
Reply to  Joseph Balogna

🤣🤣🤣 This is the world we live in.

West
West
1 year ago
Reply to  WeHo Mary!

This art style is called “Corperate Memphis”, the aesthetic of dystopian societies