Tuesday, June 11, 2019

TRYING TO KEEP 36,000 HOMELESS FROM SHITTING ON THE STREETS

L.A. Officials Debate Building Restrooms For Homeless, Each Estimated To Cost More Than $300K A Year

LAPPL News Watch
June 10, 2019

It seems like an obvious fix to the squalor and stench as homelessness surges on Los Angeles streets: more restrooms. But L.A. has estimated that staffing and operating a mobile bathroom can cost more than $300,000 annually — a price tag that has galled some politicians.

During budget talks this spring, city officials estimated that providing toilets and showers for every homeless encampment in need would cost more than $57 million a year. “How many single-family homes could you build for that much money?” Councilman Paul Krekorian asked at a hearing at City Hall last month, saying that L.A. had to find a cheaper solution.

The heartburn over the price of bathrooms comes as the number of people living on the streets has surged. The Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority recently reported that the homeless population grew by 16% in the city this year, reaching more than 36,000.

EDITOR’S NOTE: How many single-family homes could you build for $57 million? In L.A. about20, in San Francisco about 10, in Houston about 60.

I wonder if Councilman Paul Krekorian thinks it would be smarter to build 20 houses for the 36,000 L.A. homeless than to provide them with mobile crappers?

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