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LA officials highlight tenant resources ahead of rent debt repayment deadline
More migrants from Texas arrive in Los Angeles
By City News Service
By City News Service
head of the Aug. 1 deadline for repayment of back rent for the first 18 months of the coronavirus pandemic, Mayor Karen Bass and City Councilwoman Nithya Raman have released resources for Angelenos to stay in their homes. âWe will only be able to solve our cityâs homelessness crisis if we work to prevent people from falling into homelessness in the first place,â Bass said in a statement Thursday. âOn August 1, certain COVID-19 rental protections will expire and I have worked with our partners on the City Council as well as the Los Angeles Housing Department to prepare resources for those who maybe impacted.â She added that the city will do all it can to prevent a âwave of evictionsâ as they continue to confront the homelessness crisis. Raman in a statement said the city will utilize all of its tools, including the package of renter protections the council put in place earlier this year, plus Measure ULA dollars and an eviction defense program to prevent Angelenos from becoming homeless due to back rent. âMy hope is that the impending August 1 rent debt repayment deadline actually push us to reshape and transform our current system into one that proactively supports vulnerable tenants to stay housed, not just at this moment but over the long term,â Raman said in a statement. Under previous tenant protections during the pandemic, tenants have until Aug. 1 to pay any missing rent due between March 2020 to September 2021. For rent due between October 2021 to Jan. 31, tenants have until February
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass. | Photo courtesy of Lord Jim/Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0)
2024 to pay the missing rent. The mayorâs office and the Los Angeles Housing Department launched public information campaigns to inform tenants about new protections and resources for Angelenos. These campaigns targeted âhigh-riskâ ZIP codes, which were identified through Stay Housed LA, and also included newly protected units post 1978 construction and singlefamily homes. Paid advertisements about protections ran on radio and in community papers in various languages. In addition, ads ran on social media platforms resulting in more than 150,000 clicks, as well as on NextDoor, which led to more than 1 million impressions. The Mayorâs Fund for Los Angeles â an independent nonprofit that supports the
mayorâs vision for the city â committed its resources to homelessness prevention. The organizationâs new âWe Are LAâ program recently began, intended to reach and help at-risk Angelenos stay housed. Outreach teams connected with nearly 41,000 Angelenos and made case management appointments with more than 10,000 Angelenos. The program aims to connect with more than 200,000 in the coming weeks. Measure ULA, also known as the âmansion tax,â is a 4% sales tax on properties exceeding $5 million, and 5.5% sales tax on properties exceeding $10 million. The revenue from the sales tax will be collected and earmarked for renter protections, including protections for low-income seniors at risk of homelessness, rental assistance programs and
building more affordable housing units. City officials initially reported the measure would generate between $600 million and $1.1 billion annually, but that estimate was lowered to $672 million. The mayorâs office reported Thursday afternoon that $38 million has been raised from the measure. The mayorâs office indicated the ULA spending plan will come before the councilâs Housing and Homelessness Committee on Aug. 2, and then to the full council soon after. The spending plan proposes the following: $18.4 million for a short term emergency assistance program, allowing eligible income tenant households to apply for up to six months owed back rent;
nother bus of migrants from Texas arrived at Union Station in downtown Los Angeles Thursday, the sixth group to arrive since June 14. According to Mayor Karen Bassâ office, the bus arrived around 8:50 a.m. âThe city has continued to work with city departments, the county, and a coalition of nonprofit organizations, in addition to our faith partners, to execute a plan set in place earlier this year,â mayoral spokesman Zach Seidl said in a statement. âAs we have before, when we became aware of the bus yesterday, we activated our plan.â According to the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights, or CHIRLA, the group included 15 men, eight women and 13 children, with the children ranging in age from 2 to 17. The migrants were taken to nearby St. Anthonyâs Croatian Church, where they were met by city officials and immigrant-support groups for an orientation. âIn addition to receiving urgent humanitarian support services, such as food, water, clothing, hygiene kits, and legal immigration guidance, this group of asylum
See Rent debt Page 27
See Migrants Page 28
Union Station in downtown Los Angeles. | Photo courtesy of Alossix/Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 3.0)
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