LA City Council to vote on initiative that would require hotels to give up empty rooms to the homeless

The people of Los Angeles will get the opportunity to STEAL private property in November.  The ballot measure, if passed, would require hotel owners to give unused hotel rooms to the homeless.  Imagine the LAX Marriott, an expensive hotel with an 85% occupancy rate.  That means every night 15% of the rooms would be used by the homeless.  Think visitors will use that hotel knowing the mental cases, alcoholics, druggies and criminals are in the hotel, for free?  This is a good deal for hotels outside the city of Los Angles. 

This is how a socialist nation operates—no private property—in Cuba, China and Russia, the government controls private property—soon Los Angels could become the next Moscow or Havana.  This is why California is collapsing—it is turning into an agent of the Soviet Union.

LA City Council to vote on initiative that would require hotels to give up empty rooms to the homeless

Tents from a homeless encampment line a street in downtown Los Angeles on Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2016. Some 7,000 volunteers will fan out as part of a three-night effort to count homeless people in most of Los Angeles County. Naomi Goldman, a spokeswoman of the organizer the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, said the goal is to “paint a picture about the state of homelessness.” (AP Photo/Richard Vogel)

By Christina Gonzalez, Fox 11,  8/4/22 

LA City Council to vote on initiative that would require hotels to give up empty rooms to the homeless

Hotel owners in Los Angeles are up in arms as city leaders get ready to vote on an initiative that would force them to house the homeless.

LOS ANGELES – On Friday, the Los Angeles City Council will consider passing an ordinance that would house homeless people in empty hotel rooms. If it passes, every hotel in Los Angeles will have to report their vacancies.

According to the measure, “Each hotel shall communicate to the Department or its designee, in a form that the Department prescribes, by 2 p.m. each day the number of available rooms at the hotel for that night.” 

“It’s crazy,” said Ray Patel, the president of the Northeast Los Angeles Hotel Owners Association.

Patel said members of the association are worried.

“I can’t screen who ends up in my hotel rooms?” he said. “How do I protect my other customers and my staff?”

Members of Unite Here Local 11, who are behind the initiative, say they have already gathered 126,000 signatures in favor.  Council members could decide to put it on the ballot if they don’t approve it outright.

Maria Hernandez, communications director of Unite Here Local 11 said this picks up where the phased-out Project Room Key left off. The Los Angeles initiative paid hotels to house homeless individuals during the pandemic but did not force them. This initiative includes language indicating that hotels not accepting the vouchers could be sued.

FOX 11 reached out to Mike Feuer’s office for comment and staff with the Los Angeles City Attorney issued the following statement:

“This is a third-party sponsored ballot measure and our Office cannot comment on it before passage. I would ask the proponents what enforcement measures they are proposing.”

The Council will discuss the initiative Friday and do have the option to either approve it or let the voters decide in a future election. However, one thing is for certain: Friday’s meeting should bring a lot of public interest, possibly drawing loud reactions.