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$600,000 for homeless housing? Audit suggests spending money on shelters instead

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With the costs of building housing on the rise, Los Angeles City Controller Ron Galperin is recommending that some projects be reevaluated to see if their budgets can be cut to use less of the city’s $1.2-billion homeless housing bond.

In an audit that will be released Tuesday, Galperin found that more than 1,000 units of housing approved for funding through Proposition HHH could top $600,000 apiece.

“The median cost of building many of these units approaches — and in many cases, exceeds — the median sale price of a condominium in the City of Los Angeles and of a single-family home in Los Angeles County,” according to the audit, an early copy of which was obtained by The Times.

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DTLA construction
Construction continues at 519 E. Seventh St. in downtown Los Angeles in the $1.2-billion homeless housing bond program.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

The audit said the city should evaluate whether it can revise homeless housing projects that have such “outlier” costs and instead use innovations such as shared housing, modular construction and simplified financing. Any savings should then be shifted to fund shelters, bridge housing, hygiene centers and other service facilities to address more immediate needs of the city’s homeless population, he said.

Spending on shelters and other short-term facilities and services was curtailed last year as rising costs threatened the bond program’s goal of supplying 10,000 supportive housing units for homeless people in 10 years.

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The audit also highlighted the slow progress of the program, which has yet to produce a new unit of homeless housing three years after voters approved the bond in November 2016. The first two projects are scheduled to be completed later this year.

But criticism for the delays and escalating costs was muted, with the audit blaming regulatory barriers, a limited pool of developers, cumbersome permitting processes, labor costs and litigation that has blocked a city ordinance intended to streamline homeless housing projects.

DTLA construction
Construction continues on Flor 401 Lofts at 401 E. Seventh St. in downtown Los Angeles. Calling out skyrocketing costs of the city’s $1.2-billion homeless housing bond program, Los Angeles City Controller Ron Galperin has recommended clawing funds back from from high-priced projects to encourage innovative proposals that cost less.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
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“We’re not saying we should be ashamed of HHH,” Galperin said through a spokesman. “We’re saying we have a program that is not keeping pace with the crisis at hand. We need to figure out what changes can be made so we can better fulfill the intention voters had when they approved this proposition.”

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti released a statement on Monday calling the audit “a thoughtful look” that “rightfully acknowledges the deep complexity of the task before us.”

The audit suggested that the city may have moved too quickly, rushing to allocate all the funds rather than wait for new laws to take effect that would have eased the development process.

The city’s permanent supportive housing ordinance, adopted in 2017, sought to reduce zoning and parking restrictions on HHH projects but has been stalled by lawsuits. A new state law designed to achieve much the same streamlining was signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom last month.

Meanwhile, pressed by the Proposition HHH citizen oversight committee, Garcetti has conducted an innovation challenge that resulted in committing $120 million of the bond funds to six projects with the goal of building housing faster and for less. In all, the developers would supply 975 new units at an average cost of $351,965. The ideas developed in the challenge could have saved both money and time if implemented throughout the program, the audit found.

DTLA construction
One of the Proposition HHH homeless housing construction sites at 519 E. Seventh St. in downtown Los Angeles.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
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Recently, the city also established an HHH “concierge” position — a person to help guide projects through approvals by multiple city departments. The audit described it as a good step, but a late one.

“Even as the city solicited and developed ideas to tackle these issues in more innovative ways, it continued to award Proposition HHH funds before some of the ideas could fully blossom,” the audit said. “The city’s decision to push forward and conditionally award nearly all remaining funds represents a missed opportunity to maximize the impact of Proposition HHH.”

If followed, Galperin’s proposed reevaluation could affect up to 95 homeless housing projects that have received preliminary approval, but have not reached the next stage of obtaining a development agreement with the city. The audit acknowledged that making significant changes at those stages might not be feasible, but said the city should try.

But the city’s Housing and Community Investment Department released a statement saying that changing the terms of projects with conditional approval would be a poor business practice, “further delaying the pre-development process and the start of construction for the affected projects, creating new funding gaps for those projects, and reducing the time value of money in an inflationary construction cost environment.”

It would also create “a chilling effect on the development industry and damage the city’s reputation,” the department said.

Nicholas Halaris, chairman of the HHH citizen oversight committee, said the idea of reprogramming projects with preliminary approval was “an interesting idea,” but it might be better to look forward rather than back. Los Angeles is building housing on a scale greater than anywhere else, he said.

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“There is tremendous momentum. The next batch will be better.”

The audit, which also attempted to explain why projects cost so much, dismissed the commonly cited factor of land cost as “likely overstated” and instead pointed to “soft costs” as 40% of the projects — nearly as much as labor and materials.

“The high level of soft costs indicates that developers are spending large amounts on non-construction activities such as fees, consultants, and financing costs,” it said.

The audit also criticized the city’s management of the bond program as having splintered leadership and recommended formation of a centralized accounting authority for the remainder of the program. Also, it said, the city paid millions of dollars in unnecessary interest payments by borrowing on the bond before projects were ready to use the money.

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