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According to LAist, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, known as LAHSA, has been late in distributing some city and county homelessness funds to service providers. Nonprofits say delayed reimbursements have created cash flow problems and operational stress. The issue highlights ongoing administrative challenges in one of the nation’s most expensive homelessness response systems.
The Los Angeles City Council is set to approve roughly $177 million in contracts for activist nonprofits, including some that have previously sued the city over homelessness policies, according to reporting by the New York Post. At the same time, West L.A. residents are expressing frustration after a cleared homeless encampment reportedly reappeared within hours. The stories underscore tensions over strategy, accountability and the effectiveness of L.A.’s homelessness response.
The U.S. Supreme Court declined to review Huntington Beach’s federal challenge to California housing mandates, leaving in place lower-court rulings that the city must comply with state housing law. The broader fight is about whether California can force cities to plan and zone for more housing under RHNA and state Housing Element rules, even when a charter city claims “local control.” Huntington Beach has chosen a courtroom crusade. Most other cities have chosen compliance to avoid losing leverage and inviting harsher state penalties.
Orange County homebuying activity has slowed sharply again, according to new data reported by the Orange County Register. At the same time, home prices dipped in 42% of local ZIP codes, signaling uneven softness across the region. While this does not amount to a full-blown crash, it suggests higher mortgage rates and affordability pressures are weighing heavily on demand.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By KFI AM 640 (KFI-AM)According to LAist, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, known as LAHSA, has been late in distributing some city and county homelessness funds to service providers. Nonprofits say delayed reimbursements have created cash flow problems and operational stress. The issue highlights ongoing administrative challenges in one of the nation’s most expensive homelessness response systems.
The Los Angeles City Council is set to approve roughly $177 million in contracts for activist nonprofits, including some that have previously sued the city over homelessness policies, according to reporting by the New York Post. At the same time, West L.A. residents are expressing frustration after a cleared homeless encampment reportedly reappeared within hours. The stories underscore tensions over strategy, accountability and the effectiveness of L.A.’s homelessness response.
The U.S. Supreme Court declined to review Huntington Beach’s federal challenge to California housing mandates, leaving in place lower-court rulings that the city must comply with state housing law. The broader fight is about whether California can force cities to plan and zone for more housing under RHNA and state Housing Element rules, even when a charter city claims “local control.” Huntington Beach has chosen a courtroom crusade. Most other cities have chosen compliance to avoid losing leverage and inviting harsher state penalties.
Orange County homebuying activity has slowed sharply again, according to new data reported by the Orange County Register. At the same time, home prices dipped in 42% of local ZIP codes, signaling uneven softness across the region. While this does not amount to a full-blown crash, it suggests higher mortgage rates and affordability pressures are weighing heavily on demand.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.