SPA 1Antelope Valley
SPA 2San Fernando Valley SPA 3
San Gabriel Valley
SPA 4Metro LA
SPA 5West LA
SPA 7East LA County
SPA 8South Bay
SPA 6South LA
LAHSA
2015 Greater Los Angeles
HomelessCount Results
Service Planning Area (SPA) 8South Bay
Homelessness by Household Type SPA Totals and % Share of the Los Angeles Continuum of Care (CoC)
SPA 1
SPA 2
SPA 3
SPA 4SPA 5
L.A. CoC
SPA 6
SPA 7
SPA 8
2,818
5,216
3,093
11,681
4,276
| 7%
| 13%
| 8%
| 28%
| 10%
2015# %
41,174 | 100%
7,513
3,571
3,006
| 18%
| 9%
| 7%
2,113
4,836
2,794
10,472
3,667
| 6%
| 14%
| 8%
7,045
2,168
| 20%
2,429 | 7%
| 6%
| 29%
| 10%
2013# %
35,524 | 100%
3,006
With the help of over 500 volunteers deploying from 23 sites throughout the South Bay, SPA 8 counted 100% of its 264 census tracts -- a 28% increase in coverage from 2013.
Sheltered and Unsheltered Totals
0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000
2005
2009
2007
2013
2011
2015
1,591(66%)
2,299(60%)
4,976(84%)
810(44%)
1,346(51%)
1,298(49%)
1,419(66%)
749(44%)
660(22%)
2,346(78%)
5,918
3,806
2,401
2,644
2,168
3,006
Unsheltered Sheltered
Individuals Family Members Unaccompanied Minors
All totals are for the LA Continuum of Care only and does not include data from Glendale, Pasadena, and Long Beach
0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500
2013
2015
1,602(74%)
2,456(82%)
551(25%)
537(18%)
15(.7%)
13(.4%)
832(40%)
942(16%)
Men, women and children were experiencing homelessness in Metro Los Angeles on the night of January 28, 2015
7/24/2015
LAHSA
2015 Greater Los Angeles
HomelessCount Results
Demographics ofHomelessness*
62 & Older55-6125-5418-24Under 18
759(25%)
116(4%) 296
(10%)329
(11%)
1,506(50%)
Ages10
(.3%)
Multi-Racial/Other
Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific IslanderWhite/Caucasian
American Indian/Alaskan NativeAsian/Pacific IslanderHispanic/Latino
African-American/Black
108(4%)
823(27%)
48(2%)
238(8%)
942(31%)
Ethnicity
● 88% of respondents were either born in LA County or have lived there for over 10 years● Only 9% said that their last permanent residence was in some place other than California● Unemployment or financial problems and substance abuse are the two most common ● reasons given for loss of housing in SPA 8
Demographic SurveyResponses
from UnshelteredHomeless Persons
in SPA 8
Service Planning Area 8Los Angeles Continuum of Care
Chronically Homeless Individuals
Persons with HIV/AIDS
Chronically Homeless Family Members
Substance Abuse
Mental Illness
Domestic Violence Experience
Physical Disability
Veterans
0 3000 6000 9000 12000 15000
4,016 (10%) 575 (19%)
12,356 (30%)1,122 (37%)
1,817 (4%)249 (8%)
10,388 (25%)1,084 (36%)
12,253 (30%)825 (27%)
8,801 (21%)584 (19%)
8,148 (20%)569 (19%)
757 (2%)25 (.8%)
*Demographic characteristics are not mutually exclusive
In SPA 8, the share of women in the the total homeless population is increasing, from 26% percent in 2013 to 37% in 2015. Ethnic distribution has remained largely the same since 2013, African-Americans or Black is still the majoritybut decreasing from 39% to 31% today. White or Caucasian has decreased from 35% to 28% and Hispanic or Latino has increased from 22% to 27% in 2015.
Gender0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500
Male1,907 (63%)
Female1,099 (37%)
837(28%)
LAHSA’s youth count received national acknowledgment as a best practice by the National Alliance to End Homelessness and the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness
LAHSA
2015 Greater Los Angeles
HomelessCount Results
The total number of homeless veterans in SPA 8 has increased by 142% since 2013, from 238 to 575 in 2015.
Veterans
The number of chronically homeless individuals has doubled since 2013 from 409 to 1,122. Chronic homelessness among family members has also increased from 110to 249.
Chronic Homelessness
Family members experiencing homelessness together in SPA 8 has decreased since 2013, from 551 to 537 of which 283 are children under the age of 18.
Homeless Family Members
Youth Count†
1,150Female
Shelter Count
Street Count
Youth Count
Shelter Count
Street Count
Youth Count
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200020406080
100
SPA 1Antelope Valley
SPA 2San Fernando Valley
SPA 3San Gabriel Valley
SPA 4Metro
SPA 5West LA
SPA 6South LA
SPA 7East LA County
SPA 8South Bay
2015# of Homeless Unaccompanied Minors
(children under the age of 18 without a parent/guardian)
2015# of Homeless Transition Age Youth(young adults between the ages of 18 and 24)
298
1525
16
1130
41
394340
57
18055
172
6286116
1,119458484
288268
61
441310
166
15258
120
776353
69
4
32
5
9564
6
21
-
-
-
-
-15
112
Service Planning Area(SPA) 8: South Bay
† Youth Count data is in addition to Total Counts submitted to HUD for Point-in-Time street count estimates and are to be used for local planning purposes only.
The 2015 Youth Count was conducted on January 27, 2015. Since 2007, LAHSA has coordinated the Youth Count as part of the overall Homeless Count; it offers an estimate of how many unaccompanied minors (under age 18) and transition age youth (age 18-24) are experiencing homelessness throughout the Los Angeles Continuum of Care. Our goal is that data from the Youth Count be utilized for the planning of the Youth Coordinated Entry System (CES).
Hidden in Plain Sight: Knowing how many young people are homeless is critical to understanding their needs, creating effective responses, and measuring progress. However, homeless youth are often missed during traditional homeless counts as they do not typically mingle with the homeless adult population, are less likely to access traditional homeless services, and frequently “hide in plain sight” to avoid the stigma often associated with homelessness.
Service Planning Area(SPA) 8: South Bay
LAHSA
2015 Greater Los Angeles
HomelessCount Results
www.lahsa.org
Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority811 Wilshire Blvd. 6th Floor • Los Angeles • CA 90017Homeless Count Headquarters: 213-225-6562email: [email protected]
@HomelessCountLAwww.facebook.com/lahsa.org
Opt-In Cities/Communities
Community Partners
● How many homeless people are there? ● What are the demographic characteristics of homeless people?● Where are homeless people staying?
The Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count’s main purpose is to answer very important questions about homelessnes in Los Angeles:Purpose of the Count
● Street Count: Captures a point in time estimate of the unsheltered population in each Service Planning Area (SPA). ● Shelter Count: Captures the homeless population who are in emergency shelters, transitional housing, safe havens and vouchered hotels/motels. ● Youth Count: Collaborative process with youth stakeholders to better understand and identify homeless youth.
● Demographic Survey: Captures the demographic characteristics of the unsheltered homeless population in each Service Planning Area (SPA).
Components of the Count
● Increased census tract coverage for the street count with 89% of census tracts covered in 2015 versus 72% in 2013. ● 2,200 demographic surveys used to understand the characteristics of the unsheltered population. ● 61 of the 85 cities within the Los Angeles Continuum of Care participated in the Opt-in Program.
2015 Methodology Highlights
● Avalon● Carson● Central San Pedro ● El Segundo● Gardena● Hawthorne
● Hermosa Beach● Inglewood● Lawndale● Lomita● Manhattan Beach● Palos Verdes Estates
● Rancho Palos Verdes● Redondo Beach● Rolling Hills● Rolling Hills Estates● Torrance
This is a community-wide undertaking made possible only with the support of thousands of volunteers, homeless housing and services agencies, nonprofits, businesses, faith-based groups, government agencies and academic organizations. Thank you for your support and dedication to helping end homelessness here in Los Angeles.
● 1736 Family Crisis Center● A New Start● Apollo West Carson Players● City of Carson● Communities in Motion● Kaiser Permanente - South Bay● Los Angeles County Department of Probation – ● Deputy Probation Officer, John Thompson● Los Angeles County Office of Education● New You Center● South Bay Coalition to End Homelessness● South Bay Cities Council of Governments
● Tessie Cleveland Community Services● LAPD Harbor Community Station● Harbor Interfaith Services● St. Margaret’s Center● California State University Dominguez Hills● City of Avalon● City of Avalon - Harbor Master● City of Redondo Beach● City of Torrance● Council District 15 – Joe Buscaino● El Segundo Police Department● Family Promise of the South Bay
● First Christian Church● First To Serve● Gardena CERT● Gardena Police Department● Hawthorne Police Department● Hermosa Police Department● I Heart Wilmington● Inglewood Police Department● Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department - Carson Station● Los Angeles Unified School District● Mental Health America of Los Angeles
● NAMI South Bay● Palos Verdes Estates Police Department● Providence Lifelong Learning Center● San Pedro Toastmasters● SHARE!● St. Cross Episcopal Church● St. John Fisher Church● St. Peter’s By The Sea Church● Torrance Police Department● Vasak Polak Health Center● West LA VA Outreach● Yo Amo Wilmington