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Weary Quake Victims Tied Up in Red Tape

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TIMES STAFF WRITERS

Thousands of bone-weary earthquake victims, whose hopes lifted when Clinton Administration officials arrived promising quick delivery of emergency housing vouchers, were bitterly disappointed Friday to find that it could be days--even weeks--before housing or other forms of emergency aid will be provided by disaster centers.

Government leaders struggled to cut through a thicket of bureaucratic delays and unravel a potentially embarrassing recovery snafu. By day’s end, there were signs of progress as hastily accelerated paperwork processing resulted in a few lucky quake victims receiving certificates that guarantee them help in paying rent.

After eight hours in line, Felicia Jefferson was the first to receive a housing certificate from the Van Nuys disaster relief center, which promises to pay 70% of her $900 rent for the next 18 months.

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“I’ve been working and paying taxes for 18 years now,” said the mother of twin toddlers. “I’ve never been in a situation where I needed to ask for help, but I really need it now so I’m not embarrassed or tucking my head or anything.”

For the most part, the 12 disaster assistance centers were overwhelmed by the enormity of the relief need. In many cases, emotions flared as victims learned that they may have to wait until next month for an appointment to apply for housing assistance.

The realization that the nightmare of camping out in cars, parks and emergency shelters was not over was underscored by a massive push by authorities to erect huge tent cities and coax the homeless into barracks-style Red Cross shelters before the expected weekend arrival of rain.

“I don’t understand. . . . They are supposed to have emergency services,” said mail carrier Phillip Denton, who trekked to the Crenshaw Disaster Assistance Center on Friday after his apartment building was condemned--only to be told to come back next week. “We work hard for a living and pay taxes. We shouldn’t have to go through this.”

Leora Garland, 27, a secretary forced out of the same apartment building, said: “We need a home. I can understand there is a lot of red tape . . . so many people are without homes. But don’t come out here and say that you don’t have nothing (for anyone).”

The anger was particularly acute because Clinton Administration officials, including Federal Emergency Management Agency Director James Lee Witt, had stressed that the aid response would be swift--unlike the much-criticized handling of victims of Hurricane Andrew and other disasters.

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Federal officials had announced that for the first time, housing vouchers allowing low-income quake victims to quickly rent replacement apartments would be distributed at disaster centers. “People can take that voucher and get housing tomorrow,” Housing and Urban Development Secretary Henry G. Cisneros said Wednesday, fueling the high expectations.

What was not made clear until victims swamped the centers late Thursday and Friday was the small number of people who could be processed. Only about 100 applications were handled at some centers Friday, and future appointments were quickly booked through early February. As a result, thousands seeking aid were turned away Friday.

“I’ve never seen a larger housing emergency anywhere,” Cisneros said in an interview with Times editors and reporters. “It’s stunning to see the extent of the damage.

“I’m guilty somewhat of raising expectations by talking about it,” he acknowledged. “There are people who believe they can walk in and get a voucher and walk out and get a house.”

The reality, he said, is that to safeguard public funds, officials must be assured that emergency aid goes only to quake victims, not the thousands of otherwise needy families in Los Angeles.

This requirement led to infuriating delays Friday morning at aid centers throughout Los Angeles, as those seeking help were asked to prove that their homes were rendered unlivable by the quake. Recognizing the severity of the problem, HUD officials moved to streamline the process in the afternoon, permitting some victims to begin hunting for new homes immediately.

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To deal with the volume of claims, Witt also pledged to open as many as six additional relief centers by early next week in Calabasas, Culver City and San Fernando and on the Westside. Officials said 2,000 more state and federal workers were en route to staff the network of centers.

Still, some elected officials, inundated by constituent complaints, criticized the early phases of the operation.

“The information given out was not accurate and it gave people unrealistic expectations,” said San Fernando Valley council member Laura Chick, who had to calm a woman who became hysterical at a relief center after learning she would have to wait days for emergency housing. “She had two children and an (ill) 83-year-old mother,” Chick said.

As a tense and tired crowd gathered outside the Winnetka Recreation Center, one of the busiest of the 12 disaster relief facilities, Los Angeles police officers tried to keep the peace and answer questions.

“So what’s going to happen to us today?” one man asked.

“Today, you are going to be patient, just like you have been,” an officer said gently, his hand on the man’s shoulder.

Federal and local officials, including Cisneros and Mayor Richard Riordan, huddled in a series of meetings throughout the day, trying to resolve the problems. The city hustled lists of damaged buildings to the FEMA centers to help workers confirm the eligibility of those seeking aid. But incomplete data and computer glitches at the city’s Department of Building and Safety were complicating the effort.

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While FEMA officials did distribute some emergency food stamps and issue a number of cash grants for housing, much of Friday’s work at the centers appeared to be limited to pushing forms.

One official with the California Department of Social Services, despairing at the pace in the centers, observed tartly: “The only thing (the disaster centers) did today was create one long paper trail. All we did was take applications.”

Adding to the confusion was uncertainty about what aid was available, and for whom. FEMA directly administers two types of disaster grants. Regardless of their income, people whose homes are unsafe can obtain a flat sum of emergency money, based on family size and average rents in the area, to help pay for a place to stay.

FEMA also will pay the mortgages or rents of people who are in danger of losing their homes because their jobs were wiped out by the quake.

“People out there are scared we’re going to run out of money . . . that if they’re not of there first, they won’t get help,” Witt said. “That’s not true.”

But Linda Hooker, who has spent five days in a tent in Granada Hills with her two children, is losing patience. As she stood in a long line of people at the Van Nuys disaster center, she refused to accept the obvious--she would not be getting help finding a new home anytime soon.

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“I really don’t know what they are offering. . . . From what I’m hearing, they are just giving out appointments. I don’t know if I can wait.”

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