More than 75,000 are homeless in Los Angeles County as number jumps 9% from 2022

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Los Angeles Homeless
FILE – In this July 1, 2019 file photo, a homeless man moves his belongings from a street near Los Angeles City Hall, background, as crews prepared to clean the area. The Los Angeles City Council has passed a sweeping anti-camping measure to remove widespread homeless encampments that have become an eyesore across the city. Among other limits, the ordinance that passed 13-2 would ban sitting, lying, sleeping or storing personal property that blocks sidewalks, streets and bike lanes or near driveways, fire hydrants, schools, day care centers, libraries, homeless shelters and parks. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel, File) Richard Vogel/AP

More than 75,000 are homeless in Los Angeles County as number jumps 9% from 2022

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More than 75,000 people are homeless in Los Angeles County, California, marking an almost 10% increase in the unhoused population from 2022.

In a new annual point-in-time count released Thursday by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, it reported that 75,518 people in the county were either living in vehicles, tents, makeshift shelters, or provisional housing.

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Last year, there were 69,144 found to be living in such conditions, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Since the same count in 2015, the number has reportedly spiked 70% in the county and 80% in Los Angeles.

Neither Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass nor Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA) responded to the Washington Examiner’s request for comment.

Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority Chief Executive Va Lecia Adams Kellum characterized the data as disappointing but also not a surprise.

“We thought with last year’s numbers that we were flattening the curve. However, what we see in this trajectory is that people remain in a situation of vulnerability where they’re falling into homelessness faster than we can house them,” she told reporters during a briefing.

“There’s much more needed to right the ship,” she added.

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Black homeless people made up a disproportionate 31% of the count, while Latinos accounted for about 43%. Further, a quarter of the county’s homeless people are suffering from mental illnesses, and an additional 30% reported having substance use disorders.

Representatives whose districts make up part of the county did not respond to the Washington Examiner’s request for comment.

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