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Chamber should deploy leadership to end homelessness.


THE Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  Area Chamber of Commerce held its annual inaugural dinner Jan. 25 at the Beverly Hilton. The theme of the gathering was "Together." However, there was little togetherness in the speech of one prominent Chamber leader, who spoke angrily about breaking the grip of "organized labor Organized Labor

An association of workers united as a single, representative entity for the purpose of improving the workers' economic status and working conditions through collective bargaining with employers. Also known as "unions".
," and using the Internet to unite business leaders in a crusade for economic progress.

A different kind of togetherness was envisaged in a recent petition, signed by 54 L.A.-based academic researchers, advocating multilateral action to end homelessness in L.A. These nonpartisan experts called on business to unite with politicians, service providers, and communities to combat homelessness.

Los Angeles has the largest homeless population of any U.S. city. It gained notoriety as the nation's "homeless capital" in the 1980s. Back then, L.A. responded to homelessness by using federal funds Federal Funds

Funds deposited to regional Federal Reserve Banks by commercial banks, including funds in excess of reserve requirements.

Notes:
These non-interest bearing deposits are lent out at the Fed funds rate to other banks unable to meet overnight reserve
 to expand its emergency shelter Emergency shelters are places for people to live temporarily when they can't live in their previous residence, similar to homeless shelters. The main difference is that an emergency shelter typically specializes in people fleeing a specific type of situation, such as battered  network. The problem is L.A. remains stuck in an emergency shelter mentality. But to get people off the streets for good, transitional housing, jobs, health care, and addiction services are also needed. To date, L.A. has not provided these pathways out of homelessness at a scale necessary to meet the demand. Only 25 out of L.A. County's 88 municipalities spend money on services for the homeless. Some of these non-contributing communities prefer to dump their homeless residents on Skid Row skid row

a run-down area frequented by alcoholics. [Am. Culture: Misc.]

See : Alcoholism


Skid Row

district of down-and-outs and bums. [Am. Usage: Brewer Dictionary, 1008]

See : Failure
, using it as the solution to their local homelessness problem.

Today, Skid Row is under attack. Opponents want to dismantle its shelter and service infrastructure (the largest in the region), and cleanse cleanse  
tr.v. cleansed, cleans·ing, cleans·es
To free from dirt, defilement, or guilt; purge or clean.



[Middle English clensen, from Old English
 the district of homeless people. There's a story going around about some developers who went to Wall Street for money to support downtown redevelopment. Sure, they were told, you can have the funds but first you must clean up Skid Row. Yet to close down Skid Row without first providing adequate services throughout the county would be tantamount tan·ta·mount  
adj.
Equivalent in effect or value: a request tantamount to a demand.



[From obsolete tantamount, an equivalent, from Anglo-Norman
 to a death sentence for many homeless individuals, for whom Skid Row is already the community of last resort.

Action plan

A five-point action plan endorsed by the 54 academic experts recommends combating homelessness by creating jobs, making welfare work, providing housing, stopping the flow of homeless people to Skid Row, and ending NIMBYism.

* The mayor, City Council and county supervisors must act in concert to fix a broken system. The county must raise general relief payments, currently $221 per month, exactly what it was 25 years ago. Welfare recipients need more education and training for jobs. Many county dollars could be saved by helping people obtain federal Social Security benefits and veterans' disability payments to which they are entitled.

* Social service providers must move beyond a shelter mentality and build pathways out of homelessness that include jobs and supportive housing Supportive housing is designed to support individuals, not just socially but with basic life skills. Housing is coupled with social services such as job training, alcohol and drug abuse programs and case management. . It makes no economic sense to warehouse people in shelters, jails and hospitals that are not designed to move them beyond homelessness, and are expensive to operate: one night in supportive housing costs $30, but shelters cost $37, prisons $85, mental hospitals $607, and general hospitals $1,474.

* Communities must care for their own homeless people, and be prohibited from exporting them to other cities (by illicit dumping or contracting out for services). Zoning restrictions that make it possible for neighborhoods to reject needed facilities should be scrapped; such facilities should be mandatory elements of each city's general plan.

* Finally, business must provide leadership that is constructive and visionary, instead of pushing for policing and cleansing of Skid Row. If businesses help pay to end homelessness in municipalities across the county, the flow of homeless people to Skid Row will dry up. It will then go back to what it was, simply one more downtown neighborhood. Business leaders could also ensure that a portion of California's infrastructure bond monies goes to provide jobs for homeless people.

We can afford to end homelessness. In 2005, L.A. City spent under $1 per capita [Latin, By the heads or polls.] A term used in the Descent and Distribution of the estate of one who dies without a will. It means to share and share alike according to the number of individuals.  on homeless aid; Chicago spent $3, Boston $8, and Seattle $13. Currently L.A. County, local, and private sources spend $600 million on homeless services each year. We need $1.5 billion a year to help every homeless person An individual who lacks housing, including one whose primary residence during the night is a supervised public or private facility that provides temporary living accommodations; an individual who is a resident in transitional housing; or an individual who has as a primary residence a  in L.A. County. New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 spends $1.7 billion each year, with enough success that it is closing its largest, 1,000-bed shelter in June.

Experts know what causes homelessness and how to end it. The L.A. Area Chamber of Commerce, if it truly believes in togetherness, should now deploy its moral and economic leadership in a community-wide coalition to end homelessness.

Michael Dear is a professor of geography at USC An abbreviation for U.S. Code. .
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Title Annotation:COMMENTARY
Author:Dear, Michael
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Date:Feb 19, 2007
Words:765
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