Community Corner

Quickly Built Homeless Housing Program A Model For State: Newsom

The temporary housing is a partnership between the Los Angeles County and a nonprofit that took just a month to set up.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks during a a news conference about the state's efforts on the homelessness crisis on January 16, 2020 in Oakland, California.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks during a a news conference about the state's efforts on the homelessness crisis on January 16, 2020 in Oakland, California. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

LOS ANGELES, CA — Gov. Gavin Newsom visited the Safe Landing for Families-Broadway site in South Los Angeles Monday, getting an up-close look at 10 trailers donated by the state to temporarily house homeless families with children in the area.

Newsom was joined by two children who were recently homeless, and said the month it took to prepare the site for the trailers is a sign of what the state, counties and cities are capable of doing in a short period of time.

"We often think about the issue of homelessness, but this is not the face we always attach to the issue of homelessness," Newsom said, referring to the children. "But for too many Angelenos, for too many Californians, this is the face of homelessness -- first-graders, folks that are literally out on the streets, sidewalks."

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The trailers were previously used by first responders during the Camp Fire in Northern California, and they have been re-purposed to temporarily house homeless families. Volunteers prepared the site and made the trailers move-in ready.

The volunteers also assembled a playset, dog area and patio sets donated by the California Community Foundation, and they installed landscaping and supplied the trailers with household products, such as dishes and bedding.

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St. Joseph Center is the nonprofit homeless services provider for the site, which will work in partnership with the offices of County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas and City Councilman Curren Price.

"We know that this is a stop. This is not the end of the story," Price said. "We have to do this and more in getting our neighbors off the street."

Newsom recently announced $650 million in state grants would be put toward addressing homelessness, $250 million of which will be earmarked for Los Angeles. He said the state has identified 44,000 potential sites of surplus land where affordable housing complexes could be built.

"None of us are naive that this ... is the solution. This is ... part of one's journey," Newsom said of the trailers. "We're now just entering into this frame of responsibility. It's going to take another year or two, but you're going to start seeing real, demonstrable momentum."

St. Joseph Center President and CEO Va Lecia Adams Kellum said families moved into the trailers early last week.

"This work is really about families and it's about people who are struggling out there," Kellum said. "You're looking at these beautiful kids who are an example of what it means when communities come together and do whatever it takes."

Later this month, Caltrans will deliver another 10 trailers to Safe Landing for Families-Exposition, which will be in a parking lot at Exposition and Crenshaw boulevards.

City News Service