As Federal Judge Rules L.A. MUST House Homeless, AHF Renews Offer of 74-room Valley Haven Hotel

In Featured, News by Ged Kenslea

 

AHF’s Healthy Housing Foundation first offered use of a turnkey Van Nuys hotel to government officials over 2 months ago following a statewide call to action by the governor for hotel owners and agencies to temporarily house the homeless and/or isolate suspected coronavirus patients 

 

As L.A. city and county officials fall abysmally short in their efforts to provide emergency shelter or housing for the homeless during the pandemic—Los Angeles has only housed 3 homeless people under Gov. Newsom’s Project Roomkey—U.S. District Court Judge David O. Carter issued a ruling last week forcing local governments to develop a plan for doing so by this Friday

 

LOS ANGELES (May 19, 2020) As the coronavirus pandemic continues it deadly course and meaningful action on the homelessness crisis in Los Angeles remains largely at a standstill, AHF today renewed its offer of a turnkey 74-room Van Nuys hotel—an offer first made to government officials and agencies over two months ago—for its use to temporarily house the homeless and/or isolate suspected coronavirus patients.

 

Last week, in response to mounting health concerns for the homeless and ongoing inaction on the homelessness crisis by Los Angeles officials, U.S. District Court Judge David O. Carter issued a sweeping ruling compelling local L.A. governments to develop a plan for providing emergency shelter or housing for 6,000 to 7,000 homeless individuals currently living near freeway overpasses and underpasses in Los Angeles. The plan is due to the court by this Friday (May 22).

 

Los Angeles city and county officials continue to fall abysmally short in their efforts to provide emergency shelter or housing for the homeless during the pandemic. According to the Los Angeles Times, L.A. has only housed three homeless people under Governor Newsom’s ambitious Project Roomkey, his statewide call to action on hotel owners and local governments and agencies to quickly house 15,000 of the state’s homeless during the pandemic.

 

AHF’s Healthy Housing Foundation (HHF) first offered use of its Valley Haven hotel to government officials more than two months ago—on March 15— following Governor Newsom’s statewide call to action. At the time, Housing Is A Human Right (HHR) and Healthy Housing Foundation, the housing advocacy and housing provider divisions of AHF applauded the efforts of Governor Newsom to swiftly address the coronavirus crisis in California. AHF also urged both state and local legislators to move quickly to protect unhoused residents and vulnerable tenants.

 

AHF purchased the Valley Haven in January of this year to repurpose it as homeless and extremely-low-income housing for its Healthy Housing Foundation program but had not yet leased out when the pandemic hit.

 

“We tried repeatedly to make this property available for use to alleviate the crisis during the pandemic, but believe our offer languished due to bureaucratic ineptitude,” said Michael Weinstein, President of AHF. “It’s really a beautiful, turnkey facility well-suited to the task. If we can somehow cut through the red tape, we are only too happy to put it to use sheltering those in need during this crisis.”

 

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