Need you know that the City of Los Angeles has created “tiny homes” for the homeless. They are 60 sq. ft. and incudes two beds!
“At just 64 square feet with two beds, it isn’t much. But for Clark, it is a major improvement over the public benches where he used to sleep. He says staffers are helping him apply for disability and hopefully find a permanent place to live.
“The services are here. You just have to take advantage of them,” he told us.
Los Angeles now has 11 tiny home villages built by the city and largely operated with government funds.
Chandler Blvd. was the first, opening in 2021. But as these communities have expanded, so has something else: the number of emergency calls.
KTLA obtained police, fire and paramedic records which paint a picture of the care still needed by the unhoused when they are taken off the streets. Among them are calls for suspected assault, threats, weapons, suicides and overdoses.
Want crime, drugs and fires in your community? Build tiny homes—homeless encampments with walls. This is how you create a slum.
Emergency calls piling up at L.A.’s tiny home villages
by: Lauren Lyster, Marc Sternfield, KTLA, 11/15/23 https://ktla.com/news/local-news/emergency-calls-pile-up-at-l-a-s-tiny-home-villages/HARE
Richard Clark found himself homeless after he says an injury prevented him from working. For the past year, a purple shed in North Hollywood’s Chandler Blvd. Tiny Home Village has been his temporary home.
At just 64 square feet with two beds, it isn’t much. But for Clark, it is a major improvement over the public benches where he used to sleep. He says staffers are helping him apply for disability and hopefully find a permanent place to live.
“The services are here. You just have to take advantage of them,” he told us.
Los Angeles now has 11 tiny home villages built by the city and largely operated with government funds.
Chandler Blvd. was the first, opening in 2021. But as these communities have expanded, so has something else: the number of emergency calls.
KTLA obtained police, fire and paramedic records which paint a picture of the care still needed by the unhoused when they are taken off the streets. Among them are calls for suspected assault, threats, weapons, suicides and overdoses.
From January through August of this year, authorities responded to more than 170 calls for police, fire, or paramedics at one tiny home village in North Hollywood’s Alexandria Park that houses around 150 people.
Over the same period, records show more than 160 emergency calls to Whitsett West Village at Saticoy and the 170 Freeway, also in the San Fernando Valley.
“By no means am I surprised,” says Rowan Vansleve, the president of Hope the Mission, a nonprofit that runs four tiny home communities in L.A. “I think first and foremost, it’s a lot less than calls going to active encampments with same amount of people. Anytime you put well over 100 people in one site who are in crisis there is going to be an element of law enforcement needed.”
LAPD records show about 20% of the calls for service to two of the three North Hollywood tiny home villages are for a suspected overdose or suicide attempts. Vansleve says this speaks to the need for more behavioral health services.
“Many of our guests … have been on streets for 3, 4, 5 years. The amount of trauma that somebody has endured and depths of mental health issues and addiction issues are unprecedented,” he told us.
Vansleve believes the villages need mental health staff on-site, seven days a week to deal with urgent needs. At least one resident agrees.
“The staff is not equipped to handle the different types of situations going on in here,” said James Hill, who told us his first roommate overdosed on drugs but survived.
Even with the large need for emergency resources, those who live near Chandler Blvd. Tiny Home Village believe it is better than what existed before.
“I’ve seen positives because I don’t see a lot of homeless encampments around,” says Gordon Beck. “It’s good people have a place to go.”
However, Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles attorney Shayla Myers, who represents the unhoused, worries that these villages are being used as permanent housing and not a temporary solution as designed.
“Because there is so little affordable housing in Los Angeles, people are being forced to stay there for a very long time,” says Myers.
Vansleve says, on average, they are moving 11 to 14 people per month from the NoHo cabin communities into permanent homes. Whatever the success rate is, he believes, is better than the alternative of living on the streets.
“They are incredibly successful but also very imperfect.”