कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
Rental subsidies for L.A. homeless vets often unused
Los Angeles Times
|August 30, 2025
Bureaucracy has left more than 4,000 vouchers for housing gathering dust.
WEINGART was forced to convert 10 of 40 veteran units in its high-rise residential tower in the Skid Row area to non-veteran vouchers.
Over the last decade, Los Angeles County housing authorities have received nearly 4,500 rental vouchers to get homeless veterans into permanent housing.
If all of those vouchers had been put to use, veteran homelessness would be a thing of the past.
"There are certainly enough available vouchers to eliminate veteran homelessness in Los Angeles County," said Emilio Salas, executive director of the county housing authority.
Instead, chronic failures in a complicated system of referral, leasing and support services have left those housing authorities treading water. About 4,000 vouchers are gathering dust while an estimated 3,400 veterans remain on the county’s streets or in its shelters.
The county’s 11 housing agencies that receive vouchers through the federal HUD-VASH program have obtained leases for only 59% of them, a rate 20 percentage points below the national average.
Salas and other housing authority officials say they could do much better if the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs would send them more applicants. In a segmented system, the housing authorities manage the leasing but the VA is responsible for identifying qualified veterans and helping them find a home.
"Getting them through that process to me to issue the voucher is where the problem lies," Salas said.
The chief executive of L.A. city's housing authority, Lourdes Castro Ramirez, said the agency would need 25 referrals a week, three times what it has historically received, to use its vouchers effectively.
यह कहानी Los Angeles Times के August 30, 2025 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
Los Angeles Times से और कहानियाँ
Los Angeles Times
Paramount sheds 1,600 more workers as Ellison's team digs in
Tech scion David Ellison marked his 96th day running Paramount by disclosing an upbeat financial outlook for next year and a plan to reduce an additional 1,600 workers.
3 mins
November 12, 2025
Los Angeles Times
A facade at national parks?
Camps and bathrooms stayed open, but behind the scenes, conservation and research services ended during shutdown
5 mins
November 12, 2025
Los Angeles Times
New visa rules may bar obese people
Medical conditions can be reason to reject overseas applicants, White House says.
3 mins
November 12, 2025
Los Angeles Times
INSIDE THE SEARCH FOR MELODEE
As details emerge in the missing girl's case, her relatives are frantic for answers
5 mins
November 12, 2025
Los Angeles Times
McIlroy's legacy is secure, but he's not ready to lay up
Desire to win drives Masters winner, and he has goals, including perhaps ’28 Olympics.
4 mins
November 12, 2025
Los Angeles Times
'THE HUNGER GAMES' TAKES CENTER STAGE
The play, which adapts the first novel and film, opens at a theater designed as an interactive arena to amplify its brutality
8 mins
November 12, 2025
Los Angeles Times
LAPD's spending irritates council
L.A.'s elected leaders took a dramatic step to cut police spending this year, chopping in half the number of officers that Mayor Karen Bass had been hoping to hire.
3 mins
November 12, 2025
Los Angeles Times
California could be hit with days of heavy rain
A fast-moving atmospheric river is heading toward California this week and could pack a punch, threatening periods of heavy rain and possible flooding and debris flows in recently burned areas.
5 mins
November 12, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Harden’s triple-double just not enough
The reeling Clippers lose fifth in a row as Hawks pull away in the final five minutes.
1 mins
November 12, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Novartis opens new manufacturing plant in Carlsbad
Swiss drugmaker Novartis opened a new 10,000-square-foot manufacturing facility in Carlsbad to make cancer drugs, as part of its promised $23-billion investment push to build out its domestic U.S. facilities over the next five years.
1 mins
November 12, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
