The Santa Monica City Council this week declared a state of emergency on homelessness, joining a number of other local governments — including the both L.A. city and county — in such declarations.
Why it matters
The emergency declaration allows Santa Monica to:
- Advocate for more funding and resources, at the state, federal and county level
- Work to remove barriers to affordable housing
- Streamline the hiring process for staff that will focus on homelessness prevention efforts
“The reality is that we cannot address this crisis on our own, and we need our regional, state, and federal partners to support us,” said Santa Monica City Manager David White in a statement.
One example of how the city will move forward: City officials anticipate being able to use their Affordable Housing Trust Fund (which currently has $25 million) resources to incentive affordable housing initiatives.
About the homelessness crisis in Santa Monica
The city’s last point-in-time count of unhoused people reported 807 people in Santa Monica experiencing homelessness. That survey was conducted in February 2022.
In L.A. County, the most recent available count of people experiencing homelessness found an estimated 69,144 do not have permanent housing on any given night.
What’s next
The statement of emergency is in effect for 180 days but then can be extended by the Santa Monica city council.
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