Los Angeles State of Emergency

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  • BillyCarpenter
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    • Aug 2020
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    #1

    Los Angeles State of Emergency

    Los Angeles mayor declares a state of emergency over the homelessness crisis

    The new Los Angeles mayor Karen Bass declared a state of emergency over the homelessness crisis in the city. The move gives her certain powers to speed the opening of shelters and other services.

    ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:
    In Los Angeles, the city's new mayor, Karen Bass, has declared a state of emergency over homelessness. It's her first official act as city leader since being sworn in Sunday.
    (SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
    KAREN BASS: I will not accept a homelessness crisis that afflicts more than 40,000 Angelenos and affects every one of us. It is a humanitarian crisis that takes the life of five people every day.
    SHAPIRO: Anna Scott covers housing for member station KCRW in Los Angeles. Hi, Anna.
    ANNA SCOTT, BYLINE: Hi, Ari.
    SHAPIRO: So this is a humanitarian crisis, but it's not a sudden or new crisis. What's the reasoning behind declaring a state of emergency?
    SCOTT: Part of this at this point is about making a statement. Bass wants to signal that she's willing to use the bully pulpit of her office, I think, to call for solutions to this crisis, which is definitely something that the former mayor, Eric Garcetti, was criticized for not doing. Also, though, you just heard Bass say more than 40,000 people are experiencing homelessness in the city. She points out in her written declaration that that's more people than were displaced during the Northridge earthquake here in 1994. And the rate of people dying on the streets in LA has grown very dramatically over the last decade, a 200% increase. That's due to a number of things, including heart disease, overdoses from drugs like fentanyl and even homicide. So for all of those reasons, Bass is calling homelessness an emergency, and LA's city council members agree with her. They approved this declaration yesterday.
    SHAPIRO: Beyond the statement, what does it actually do, and what are the limitations as well?
    SCOTT: Yeah, I will start with what it doesn't do because that is more clear. It doesn't bring in any money. So LA is not going to get millions of dollars from FEMA like it would if there were a hurricane, for example. It doesn't mean the city is going to get an army of social workers or any new resources, really. But it does give Bass some power to lift red tape around things like building affordable housing and shelters or investing in services and resources without going through a competitive bidding process like you would under normal circumstances. But we don't know yet how she plans to use these powers.
    And one big question is how far she's going to go. Is she going to push projects through in different city council districts, for example, that maybe don't want new affordable housing or new shelters? That was, again, a criticism of the previous mayor, that he really let the 15 city council members each have their own approach to homelessness. So one thing I'm watching for is whether Bass is going to have a more unified strategy, which she has promised, and if these emergency powers are going to help her do that.
    SHAPIRO: What are you hearing from advocates for unhoused people in LA? How are they responding?
    SCOTT: A lot of people are taking a wait and see to see when more details come out. But I have definitely heard concerns that this could lead to a lot of enforcement against people camping on the streets, which might put them out of sight but isn't going to solve homelessness because the truth is, no mayor is going to fix LA's serious affordable housing shortage, which built up over decades, in a year or even in an entire four-year term. And that lack of affordable housing is at the root of the homelessness crisis. So it makes some advocates nervous to hear big promises about cleaning up the streets quickly because where are people going to go?


    More: Los Angeles mayor declares a state of emergency over the homelessness crisis : NPR


    Another failure of liberal policy. The homeless situation will never be solved unless a serious (not democrat) is elected. The primary problem is that the city of Los Angeles doesn't have the tools to force people off the street. Most of these people are drug addicts or mentally ill. Most don't want treatment. They must be forced off the street and into treatment. Homelessness is also a big factor in the rising crime rate.

    Democrats aren't up for the job.
    Adversity temporarily visits a strong man but stays with the weak for a lifetime.
  • slimslob
    Retired

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    • May 2013
    • 37317

    #2
    Re: Los Angeles State of Emergency

    Hell the liberals city counsel members can't even get along without using racial slurs. LA City Council scandal exposes Democrats' politics of racial division

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    • BillyCarpenter
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      #3
      Re: Los Angeles State of Emergency

      Los Angeles passed a law stating that if there aren't enough bed @ homeless shelter that law enforcement can't tell the homeless to get off the streets. There are 13,000 beds and 75,000 homeless people. And they'll never have enough beds because the homeless population is growing. Of course this isn't a new problem, democrats allowed this to happen on their watch many years ago.


      Take a look:




      Adversity temporarily visits a strong man but stays with the weak for a lifetime.

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      • BBM
        Senior Tech

        500+ Posts
        • Dec 2020
        • 875

        #4
        Re: Los Angeles State of Emergency

        They sure to clear the streets when a big sporting event comes to the city or some other big event .

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        • slimslob
          Retired

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          • May 2013
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          #5
          Re: Los Angeles State of Emergency

          Originally posted by BillyCarpenter
          Los Angeles passed a law stating that if there aren't enough bed @ homeless shelter that law enforcement can't tell the homeless to get off the streets. There are 13,000 beds and 75,000 homeless people. And they'll never have enough beds because the homeless population is growing. Of course this isn't a new problem, democrats allowed this to happen on their watch many years ago.


          Take a look:




          Actually it is all of California that has the problem because of liberals in Sacramento.

          Comment

          • slimslob
            Retired

            Site Contributor
            25,000+ Posts
            • May 2013
            • 37317

            #6
            Re: Los Angeles State of Emergency

            Los Angeles accused of fabricating artificially low homelessness numbers - TheBlaze

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