Karen Bass Launches New Housing Program To Help Tackle Homelessness In Los Angeles

By Shannon Dawson

Karen Bass is already making powerful moves in herĀ new role as the Mayor of Los Angeles.Ā On Sunday, the 69-year-old politician announced plans to move the cityā€™s homeless from tent encampments into hotels and motels through a new housing program set to launch Tuesday.

During an interview with NBCā€™s ā€œMeet the Press,ā€ Bass shared more details about the forthcoming initiative, noting how the program would notĀ ā€œaddress everybody, but it is going toĀ address, hopefully, a significant number,ā€ according toĀ AP News.Ā Under the plan, none of the cityā€™s homeless community will be forced to move from their current location, Bass clarified.Ā ā€œThis is not coercing people. This is not ticketing people or incarcerating people. This is moving people from tents to hotels or motels,ā€ she added.

Homelessness is a big issue in Los Angeles

Solving the cityā€™s homelessness crisis has been at the top of Bassā€™s priority list. On her first day as mayor, Bass promised to build more housing to help quell the issue, allocating nearly $1.2 billion of the cityā€™s budget. NearlyĀ 40,000 people experience homelessnessĀ in Los Angeles. The crisis disproportionately impacts Black, Latinos, and the formerly incarcerated.

Under the initiative, Karen Bass hopes to house over 17,000 homeless people in her first year. Upon taking office, the former House representative said that she would work closely with officials to train outreach workers to move homeless communities off the streets. The teams will include trained outreach workers, medical and mental health professionals, and social workers. The program will also create job opportunities for the formerly unhoused to work directly with street teams. ā€œAs individuals with lived experience, they play a vital role as trusted messengers in helping others find the same stability they did,ā€ herĀ websiteĀ notes.

Karen Bassā€™s passion for homelessness advocacy extends back to her early days with the Community Coalition. The former social worker helped push for converting motels into housing for the homeless in the 1990s, decades before COVID-19 spawned the creation of Project Roomkey, a federally funded homeless relief initiative in the state of California.