housing rally / homeless
Housing Rally - Photo courtesy of Ringo Chiu on Shutterstock

Housing advocates surrounded Los Angeles City Hall with 1,480 feet of red ribbon Tuesday, a symbol of the bureaucratic barriers they say have created years of delay in providing permanent housing for homeless and low-income communities.

Members of the AIDS Healthcare Foundation’s Housing Is A Human Right division and the Los Angeles office of the National Coalition for the Homeless led Tuesday’s action, part of a national movement calling on government officials to provide “Housing Now” for unhoused people nationwide.

It also marked the one-year anniversary of the Supreme Court’s decision in the Grants Pass case, which ruled that enforcing generally applicable laws regulating public camping does not constitute cruel and unusual punishment.

“Seven people die on the streets of Los Angeles every day,” Susie Shannon, policy director for Housing Is A Human Right, said in a statement. “Delays in bringing permanent housing online immediately through adaptive reuse and new construction are unconscionable.”

On Monday, Mayor Karen Bass touted progress in resolving the housing and homelessness crisis through new initiatives and her signature program, Inside Safe, during her State of the City Address. She also noted the city has experienced its first decline in unsheltered homelessness, and that more unhoused people entered temporary shelters.

The 2024 Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count found there were more than 45,000 homeless people in the city.

According to Housing Is A Human Right, the city remains far behind in the approval of building permits and creating new, affordable housing units — an issue exacerbated by January’s devastating wildfires.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *