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Monday, April 06, 2026
Los Angeles has spent more than $300 million on Inside Safe since Bass launched the program in December 2022, clearing scores of homeless encampments and moving about 5,800 people into interim housing " mostly hotels and motels. The goal was to get each of those people into permanent housing, typically taxpayer-funded apartments. But even as the mayor's initiative brings more people indoors, a growing number are winding up back on the street. The longer the program exists, the greater the share of participants who have returned to "unsheltered" homelessness, according to monthly dashboards which were posted by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, or LAHSA, and analyzed by The Times. |
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More Alternate links: Google News | Twitter This is a great example of a Snoofy type of oversimplification of social engineering. Just get them short term housing ... Well the housing has to have rules, and the rules make people leave. Without looking at the data or the cases of why its not working, LA says they just need more money to make it work. Homelessness is a complex problem, the answer is never one size fits all solution. Comments
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