Finding a Way Home
Recent Times editorials on homelessness in L.A. and the struggle for a solution.
EDITORIAL
Not in their backyard
FOUR WEEKS AGO, JAMIE KRONICK moved into her first home in six years. She had been sleeping on the streets of Santa Monica, often in a doorway if the building's owners didn't make too much of a fuss. Now Kronick, who is 50, lives in a clean, well-lighted studio apartment in Silver Lake so new it smells of fresh paint. More.../span>
EDITORIAL
Much ado about not much
AT FIRST GLANCE, NEWS THAT a federal appeals court has blocked Los Angeles police from arresting people for sleeping on the sidewalks may seem like a big deal. But the ruling and worries that it will make it difficult for the police department to clean up skid row are much ado about almost nothing. More.../span>
EDITORIAL
Don't get cocky, kids
THE AIR WILL BE THICK WITH CONGRATULATIONS this morning on skid row, where Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, members of the County Board of Supervisors and others are scheduled to gather to announce a 10-year plan to end homelessness in Los Angeles. The plan, three years in the making, comes just two days after the supervisors voted to spend $100 million on improved services for the homeless on skid row and beyond. More.../span>
EDITORIAL
Homeless politics, L.A.-style
LATE LAST MONTH, the county Board of Supervisors announced a $100-million plan to improve services for the homeless on skid row and beyond. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa was barely consulted about the plan, and he didn't know when it was being unveiled. But he can hardly complain because in December, when he held a news conference to announce a record homeless grant from the federal government, he waited until the last minute to tell the county, leaving too little time for most supervisors to make the event. The mayor's office announced a new homelessness czar a few weeks ago; the county followed with a similar appointment a week later. More.../span>
EDITORIAL
No breaks for Skid Row
THERE IS AN EMERGING CONSENSUS, long overdue, that the police should aggressively enforce the law on skid row. The question is how aggressively. Police Chief William J. Bratton is considering two proposals. One would sweep thousands of homeless people from their tent-and-box cities; the other would allow them to remain but would arrest those who commit even the most minor crimes. More.../span>
EDITORIAL
Our city, our duty
THERE ARE ENOUGH HOMELESS people in Los Angeles to fill the Kodak Theatre, home of tonight's Academy Awards ceremony, 26 times over. For one night, Los Angeles is the capital of glamour and style, but it is the capital of homelessness every day of the year. More.../span>
EDITORIAL
Homeless in the foothills
IT'S TOO EARLY TO KNOW how real it is, but the attention being paid to skid row and homelessness by Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, the county Board of Supervisors and many other community leaders is encouraging. Now comes the first major test of this supposed new resolve. More.../span>
EDITORIAL
A musician of the streets
READERS OF THE TIMES HAVE watched Nathaniel Ayers musician, schizophrenic, street dweller creep for eight months toward a better life under the empathetic eye of columnist Steve Lopez. Ayers' is a hard case, mired in decades of sporadically treated mental illness, cemented by habit to a patch of sidewalk at the mouth of a tunnel in downtown Los Angeles. He also is the public's window into the promise and difficulties of a new approach in California to cases like his, offering assistance for the whole person rather than treatment for a disease. For the first time in years, thanks to a 2004 ballot initiative, public health agencies will have enough funds to seek out people like Ayers rather than limit who can be helped. More.../span>
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