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LA hotel converted to homeless housing incurs $11.5M in damages.

Homeless ⁣Tent Encampment⁤ in Los Angeles

Homeless tent encampment in Los Angeles

Millions in Damages at Los ⁣Angeles Hotel‍ Turned ‍Homeless Shelter

A Los ⁣Angeles hotel sustained $11.5 million in damages ‍while⁣ the city used it as a federally sponsored homeless shelter.

The⁢ city included the⁣ Mayfair Hotel in Project Roomkey, a federal initiative ⁢to turn ​California hotels into⁢ temporary ​homeless shelters. At the end of the hotel’s time in​ the⁢ program, the city quietly paid the hotel’s owner ⁢millions to cover damages from residents.⁢ Social workers assigned to the hotel lamented its ‌condition in emails obtained ⁣by the Los Angeles Times.

“Participant in 1516 Threatened staff, Security,‍ destroyed property. Screamed. Yelled cursed. Everything went wrong with her. Inside ⁣and outside the building,” ⁣one social⁤ worker wrote. Another recounted how ⁤”a ‌male in 1526 assaulted ​another resident in Room 726.”

High Costs of Addressing⁤ Homelessness in California

The Mayfair ⁤represents the latest instance in‌ which state and local ⁢governments have paid a huge ‌price to address ⁣the homelessness crisis in California.

San Diego ⁤in April⁣ requested state funds to buy three hotels at $383,000 per room to ​house its homeless population. ‍The city‌ saw homelessness hit record highs in the months leading up to the purchase.

Between ⁤September 2021 and ​June ⁤2022, the city of Berkeley alone removed 75 tons of garbage, drug paraphernalia, and human feces from‌ homeless ​encampments. With an ‌estimated 535 people living on the street at the time, ⁤the city removed ⁢roughly ​500 pounds of waste per homeless person per‍ year.

Challenges‌ with California’s Homelessness Policy

Experts have attributed the state’s struggles with homelessness to the so-called Housing ⁤First principle,‍ which became the⁤ state’s law ‍of the land‌ for homelessness‌ policy in 2016. The ⁣practice focuses almost exclusively on providing subsidized housing to the homeless without requiring them to undergo treatment for substance abuse or mental illness.

In July, President Joe Biden’s⁢ Department of ‌Housing and Urban Development announced its ‍investment‌ of $3 ‍billion into Housing⁤ First programs across the country.



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