Mayor Eric Garcetti joined several City Council members in
unveiling the plan, which follows an increase in the city's homeless
population from just under 23,000 two years ago, according to the
Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority.
With a number of luxury residential buildings opening in recent
years, especially downtown, some community groups blame
gentrification for contributing to the city's skyrocketing rents and
worsening homeless problem.
The nation's second-largest city has nearly 18,000 individuals
living on the streets, as opposed to shelters. Groups of homeless
people dwelling in tents on sidewalks have become an increasingly
frequent sight in the city.
Officials in New York, the nation's biggest city, which has a more
extensive shelter system, say that last year they had about 3,360
people living unsheltered.
The plan by Los Angeles officials to spend $100 million to provide
more permanent housing, shelter beds and other homeless services was
introduced to the City Council on Tuesday, a day after Garcetti
proposed another $13 million in immediate expenditures to tackle
homelessness.
"The city has pushed this problem from neighborhood to neighborhood
for too long," Garcetti, a Democrat who is campaigning to attract
the 2024 Olympic Games to Los Angeles, told a news conference.
"It has cost us money, and most importantly it's cost us lives," he
said of the homelessness problem. City Council President Herb
Wesson said the proposal, which will come up for a vote by the full
council within weeks along with a declaration that homelessness in
Los Angeles represents an emergency, would make the money available
starting in January 2016.
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The emergency declaration could allow Los Angeles to receive federal
funding to combat the problem, according to Wesson's office.
Garcetti last year pledged to end the problem of homelessness among
veterans by the end of 2015. Hundreds of other U.S. mayors have made
similar pledges under an initiative of President Barack Obama's
administration.
Garcetti's office said the $100 million officials have proposed to
spend starting next year should be a recurring, annual expenditure.
The city currently spends over $13 million from its general fund for
homeless programs, such as winter shelters, housing vouchers and
outreach to homeless veterans, said Assistant City Administrative
Officer Ben Ceja.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Dan Whitcomb and Eric
Beech)
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