© 2024 South Carolina Public Radio
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Los Angeles Launches $103 Million Program To Offer Relief To Renters

Graffiti on a wall on La Brea Ave. in Los Angeles, Calif. asking for rent forgiveness in May. This week, the city of Los Angeles rolled out a renters relief program to provide more than $100 million in assistance.
Valerie Macon
/
AFP via Getty Images
Graffiti on a wall on La Brea Ave. in Los Angeles, Calif. asking for rent forgiveness in May. This week, the city of Los Angeles rolled out a renters relief program to provide more than $100 million in assistance.

One in five people in Los Angeles County is out of work, according to California's latest unemploymentnumbers. And that means a lot of people can't pay the rent.

This week, the city of Los Angeles rolled out its Emergency Renters Assistance Program. It will provide a total of $103 million in assistance to LA renters in the form of temporary subsidies of up to $2,000 per household.

In order to qualify, renters of multifamily units must show how COVID-19 has affected them financially and earn less than 80% of the area median income — for example, $83,500 for a family of 4.

Nury Martinez, president of the Los Angeles City Council, helped devise the program. During an interview with All Things Considered, she notes that more than 100,000 people registered on Monday, the first day applications were accepted.

But after the application period closes on Friday, only 50,000 families will be randomly selected to receive subsidies.

"That just goes to tell you the huge need that currently exists," Martinez says.

Here are excerpts from the interview.

This [program] is for people who make 80% of the median income in the area or less. What about middle- or working-class people who don't meet that income qualification but are facing eviction right now?

I want to make sure that your listeners understand that we need more help than this [program]. ... We'll be able to help randomly selected families, about 50,000 of them by the time this program is over. That's not nearly enough to meet demand and the need that currently exists. Housing experts are telling us that we are going to see an evictions tsunami after this pandemic is over, and I agree. And this is why we are calling on the federal government to help pass the HEROES Act [coronavirus relief bill] that's currently sitting in the Senate.

LA was already facing a housing crisis and a homelessness crisis before the pandemic hit. Does the city have any plans to address these much larger issues that are already driving people out of their homes?

We're continuing to build supportive housing for our unsheltered community members ... continuing to push forward some of these affordable housing projects that are still in the pipeline.

The housing crisis is a result of people simply not being able to make enough to make ends meet. And the fact that we have not been able to keep up with the demand [for housing] in the city of Los Angeles has created this huge, huge crisis.

So I think this adds an additional burden — and a scary one, because they won't be able to keep their homes for much longer — if we do not figure out how to get more federal assistance to keep people housed, to ask the federal government to pass the next round of stimulus help to be able to help as many people as possible.

You know, in the midst of this pandemic, the federal government has given billions of dollars to corporations that have already gotten billions of dollars of unnecessary tax breaks. I cannot believe that we cannot find a way to help poor people in this country stay housed.

Listen to the full interview at the audio link above.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Ailsa Chang is an award-winning journalist who hosts All Things Considered along with Ari Shapiro, Audie Cornish, and Mary Louise Kelly. She landed in public radio after practicing law for a few years.
Maureen Pao is an editor, producer and reporter on NPR's Digital News team. In her current role, she is lead digital editor and producer for All Things Considered. Her primary responsibility is coordinating, producing and editing high-impact online components for complex, multipart show projects and host field reporting.