Skip to content

Category: Uncategorized

“Everyone In” is more than our name, it’s a promise: We will speak out, as long as it takes, until everyone in L.A. County has the safety and security of a home.

Watch the video, get fired up, and share it with a friend:

In the year since we launched this campaign, we’ve mobilized more than 80,000 advocates for change. We’ve put enormous pressure on elected officials and communities across L.A. County to build the housing that’s needed. And today, thousands of units of supportive and affordable housing are in development.

But we have so much more to do, which is why we are making this renewed promise: We will not rest, we will not slow down, until everyone in L.A. County has a home.

We gathered on March 9 to recommit to the fight for our solutions in every neighborhood across L.A. County. If you missed us, check out the event recap here.

Everyone In South L.A. organizer Quincey Coleman knows that real change is not built overnight. To inspire communities to fight for justice, you need to go one door at a time and build relationships that last.

“Organizing sparks the fire of progress,” he says. “We can’t afford to burn out.”

Quincey grew up in South Central L.A., and made it through the riots, gang violence, and homelessness. He kept his head down and worked hard, but hard work isn’t always a ticket away from structural poverty and violence. On his way home from an SAT prep course one day, Quincey saw an innocent friend shot dead in the crossfire of gang violence.

“Even at a young age,” he says, “I had to look at it and say this is something that’s on a systemic level.” It made him think about more than survival, but how to change broken policies and practices that made his neighborhood unsafe.

While at Crenshaw High, Quincey became active in student groups, absorbing lessons from Malcolm X writings and Spike Lee films along the way. He later joined the SEIU and the L.A. Black Worker Center as a labor organizer, knowing that the well-being of working people is essential in the fight for equality and social justice.

Today, Quincey works with neighborhood leaders, local advocacy groups, and elected officials to get supportive housing approved in South L.A.

Watch the video to learn more about Quincey and the organizing team, then sign up for a training. You, too, can speak out until we bring everyone in.

Chelsea Byers joined Everyone In because she believes in the power of the people. Simple tasks community members can take part in, like going door-to-door and making phone calls, have been instrumental in passing legislation and getting thousands of housing units approved for construction. “I am more and more inspired and hopeful everyday as I meet new people working as service providers or in the community around the issue of homelessness.”

As a grassroots organizer, Chelsea knows the importance of community building and working towards a shared goal. For her, supportive housing just makes sense.

Chelsea has met many people throughout her life who experienced homelessness and knows firsthand what drives different folks into housing insecurity. Her own family lost their home in the 2008 economic crisis. “It was a totally upending and life changing event,” she says.

Since homelessness is a problem that affects everyone in Los Angeles, solutions like affordable and supportive housing require that everyone step up and send a clear message to elected officials. “We have the ability to reach thousands of Angelenos through this work and make an impact in so many people’s lives,” she says.

Watch the video below to learn more about Chelsea and the organizing team, then sign up for a training. You, too, can speak out until we bring everyone in.

For Gabriela Garcia, Everyone In’s deputy director of organizing, it’s personal.

She’s seen people in her own community displaced and forced from their homes. Her dad experienced homelessness recently, despite working a full-time job. And, like many parents in L.A., she worries whether her kids will be able to afford to stay in their hometown.

But it’s not just about one family or one neighborhood. Homelessness is an issue that affects all of us across L.A. and Gabriela works to unite communities, organizations, and individuals, channeling their collective power towards solutions like supportive housing.

“It’s about building power, together,” she says. “You got my back, I got yours.”

Through simple actions, like making phone calls and knocking on doors, we can make extraordinary change. “You sometimes get surprised at the door,” Gabriela says. “People are like, ‘why don’t you come inside.’” Doing that work, building this coalition one neighbor at a time, has already helped to pass legislation and get thousands of supportive and affordable housing units approved for construction. Almost 20,000 people have secured crisis and bridge housing, and last year the homeless population fell for the first time in years.

But we’ve just scratched the surface, and the work continues. Watch the video below to learn more about Gabriela and the organizing team, then sign up for a training. You, too, can speak out until we bring everyone in.

On Tuesday, the Los Angeles City Council voted to move forward with bridge housing in Venice, Hollywood, South L.A., and Westlake. For those who don’t know, bridge housing provides a safe place for people to stay and access services while they locate long term supportive and affordable housing.

It’s a critical part of the plan to end homelessness and we applaud Councilmembers Mike Bonin, Marqueece Harris-Dawson, Mitch O’Farrell, and Gil Cedillo for backing real solutions like these in their districts.

Also, a massive thanks to the Everyone In members and the #SheDoes crew who filled City Council chambers and stuck with the remarkably long meeting. It was a standing-room-only crowd that brought home a big win for our movement!

We know that when we show up, we win. And so do the tens of thousands of unsheltered Angelenos who don’t have a safe and stable place to stay.

Join the Everyone In team to get alerts about upcoming actions and sign up for a training. Organizing works and we will continue to speak out until we bring everyone in.

Two years ago, L.A. voters committed $1.2 billion to build homes for people experiencing homelessness. It was an extraordinary statement about our shared humanity and, along with Measure H, opened the door to an unprecedented opportunity.

For the first time in memory, it felt like we might be able to end homelessness—for real this time.

So, where are we? Six projects are currently under construction with more breaking ground soon. Three more have been approved for construction so far and another 46 are approved for funding, for a total of 3,097 units of supportive and affordable housing.

After decades of inaction and indifference, it’s hard not to look at the progress being made and see HHH as anything other than a success at this early stage. For what it’s worth, last year homelessness went down in L.A. County for the first time in years.

But let’s be clear: As long as our most vulnerable neighbors live in tents under freeways, we do not have enough supportive housing in L.A. HHH promised 10,000 units in 10 years. Right now, we’re not going to meet that goal.

There are a lot of reasons for this, chief among them: resistance from some neighbors, bureaucratic red tape, higher than estimated costs, and political apathy. The fix for all of these problems is clear: advocacy and organizing.

The same simple actions that got HHH passed in the first place—phone banking, canvassing, rallying, housing tours, and training—can increase the pace of construction by holding political leaders and our neighbors accountable.

The L.A.City Council has committed to approve 3,330 units of new housing by July 2020. We passed two ordinances in L.A. to speed up supportive housing approvals and convert disused motels into housing. We helped pass two ballot measures in California to raise money for supportive and affordable housing. And we have been showing up and speaking out in one community after another, from Sherman Oaks to South L.A. to Venice, where housing is needed. These are all great things, and evidence of our collective momentum.

A small group of hardworking people did these things. Imagine what we could accomplish with your help. Sign up for a training, and we’ll show you how to take the simple actions that change people’s lives.

We’re all neighbors. We’re all in this together. And we will speak out until everyone is in.

Pictures of progress from around L.A.

West Hollywood – LGBT Center Anita May Rosenstein Campus (124 units)

Photo credit: Hunter Kerhart

Silver Lake/Rampart Village – PATH Metro Villas (187 units)

Photo credit: Mike Dennis

Downtown – Six Four Nine Lofts (55 units)

Photo credit: Mike Dennis

South L.A. – 88th and Vermont (62 units)

Photo credit: Mike Dennis

The vibe at last night’s Stories from the Frontline event in Boyle Heights was electric. More than 200 people came out to hear people from the neighborhood who have overcome homelessness, addiction, and domestic violence. We shared a few tears, a lot of laughs, and an overwhelming sense that we have an opportunity and an obligation to change lives.

Our movement will succeed if we can get people to recognize the humanity of our homeless neighbors and become inspired to act. As MC David Valdez put it: “We need an army of people who say yes to supportive housing.”

We’re building that army and you’re a part of it. Take the next step and commit to an organizing action: Get involved.

Don’t worry if you’ve never done something like this before. We will guide you through each step and we promise to make it fun!

A big thanks to our co-host the John and Marilyn Wells Family Foundation, our partners ELACC and Jovenes, and, most of all, our amazing speakers: David Valdez, Josefina López, Jaci Cortez, Johny Figueroa, Caridad Vazquez, Xavi Moreno, Fanny Ortiz, RhondaLynn, and United Way of Greater L.A. CEO and President Elise Buik.

Here’s what they had to say:

“You want to make a difference? You become the difference.” – Jaci Cortez

“I understand the challenges of not having stable housing. I also understand the power of opportunity.” – Johny Figueroa

“The condition of my home is the condition of my state of mind.” – Fanny Ortiz

“We need to hear the voices of the people who are most affected in the community. It’s through conversations and connections and storytelling that we can bring people into this incredibly important work.” – Isela Gracian

“Tonight embodies what we stand for. it’s about courage, compassion, and humanity. We believe that housing is a human right and we believe that with all of you, we can get everyone in.” – United Way of Greater L.A. CEO and President Elise Buik

And, finally, here are some more memories from the night…

In L.A., housing costs eat up an average of 47 percent of residents’ income—more than any other major U.S. city.

Much has been written about how L.A.’s sky-high rents are destroying the character of neighborhoods, eating into grocery and gas bills, and even hurting our economic growth.

But the greatest cost of our affordable housing crisis is being felt by our most vulnerable neighbors. Steep housing costs are largely responsible for California having the highest poverty rate in the nation when factoring in the cost of living, and rent jumps are increasingly pushing people into homelessness.

Creating more housing that Angelenos can actually afford would benefit the hundreds of thousands of residents who are currently at risk of being displaced and experiencing homelessness.

Here are four more reasons why we need more affordable housing in Los Angeles now:

  • L.A.’s housing crisis is a key driver of homelessness. Median rents in our region have increased 32 percent since 2000, while the median renter’s household income decreased by three percent. If we want to end homelessness in L.A., we have to address the root cause: a lack of affordable units. Tweet
  • There’s evidence that the situation is getting worse. While overall homelessness went down across L.A. County last year, more than 9,000 people became homeless for the first time, a 16 percent increase from 2017. Most people simply can’t afford to pay twice as much rent from one month to the next, and affordable housing is disappearing fast. The best way to prevent homelessness is to keep people in their homes while we work to build more new housing. Tweet
  • Vulnerable folks are the hardest hit by this crisis. Those who are singled out for eviction often are from groups that disproportionately experience homelessness already or have seen recent rises in homelessness. These are low-income tenants and those on fixed incomes, including people with disabilities and the elderly (who are declaring bankruptcy today at triple the rates of the early 1990s). Tweet
  • We need to do more to help people with disabilities stay in their homes. Right now, the only rent-stabilized buildings were built before 1978. Back then, landlords didn’t have to make buildings accessible to those with disabilities. (That legislation wouldn’t come until 1990.) This means that no one currently living in an accessible building is protected by rent stabilization. We need to fight for homes that are both affordable and accessible. Tweet

We know you give a damn, and that you’re ready to advocate for real, long-term solutions to ending homelessness. So will you join us by signing up as a team member? We’ll set you up with a plan that makes sense with your schedule. Do it now.

Rudy Salinas is tired. Last night, at two in the morning, he received a call from one of his clients, asking for help breaking into her own car. She’d been sleeping in one of the few “safe parking lots” spread throughout Los Angeles, which are patrolled by security and thus significantly safer than parking on any old corner. (They’re also rare: a mere twenty such spaces exist in Hollywood and North Hollywood.) But then she got locked out.

“This is a nonstop job,” Salinas says, matter-of-factly. “It is a job that does not have a whistle that blows at five.”

Salinas has been working with unhoused people in L.A. for 17 years—and has seen, up close, just how much the county’s response to the crisis has evolved. In the beginning, he would tag along with church groups, handing out PB&J sandwiches and bottled water to the folks he found on streets near his San Gabriel home. Today, as head of outreach for a drop-in service agency called the Center in Hollywood, he works with sophisticated teams that include clinicians capable of prescribing psychiatric drugs.

“If you would have told me that that was possible a decade and a half ago, I wouldn’t have believed it,” he says.

 

The Heartbreak of Waiting

But there are also more extreme economic forces with which to contend. Rent increases have pushed thousands more Angelenos onto the streets, where resources are still stretched thin due to political gridlock and NIMBY resistance. “The conveyor belt that creates homelessness is moving faster every day,” says Salinas.

“It’s heartbreaking at times to tell them, ‘I just need you to wait two months.’ And then, ‘I just need you to wait two more months.’”

Instead of building more housing, politicians and NIMBYs often hold up the city’s progress, which has had a huge effect on Salinas’ clients. It can be wrenching to watch from the sidelines as unhoused people get shuffled through the system, waiting fruitlessly for a spot in supportive housing to open up.

His team follows unhoused people, sometimes for years, from emergency rooms to jails to courts. “It’s heartbreaking at times to tell them, ‘I just need you to wait two months.’ And then, ‘I just need you to wait two more months.’”

But then there are the success stories. At the Center, Salinas works alongside social workers and case-managers to lessen the overwhelming isolation of folks who have been living on the streets for years. Every morning, he and his colleagues meet with Center visitors for coffee before they head into classes for yoga, art, recovery and mindfulness & meditation.

“We’re at a point where our county has realized that these kinds of spaces are crucial to healing.”

His coworker, Malinda Estrada, says she can see the effect these meetings have on her clients. “You’re working on their hearts, you’re working on their minds, you’re showing them love and patience.”

“We’re at a point where our county has realized that these kinds of spaces are crucial to healing,” says Salinas. “The problem is that the public still has a ways to go toward understanding why these places need to be built in their neighborhoods.”

 

The Fight Ahead

Both have seen the huge effect it can have on someone when they finally find a home. In addition to all the things you’d expect—the lifting of crushing dread around where to sleep at night—there’s a lightness to their step. Malinda says she can spot housing recipients by their demeanor alone.

“There’s no price tag on it. It is unequaled,” says Salinas about moving someone into a new home. “It’s like seeing a unicorn on a rainbow flying in a rocket ship. It’s a feeling of having been witness to a very key moment, like a wedding or a birth.”

“These people didn’t come out of the womb homeless,” adds Estrada. “They had a home at one point. Why wouldn’t they want to get back to that and be able to go to their kitchen and cook something or take a bath?”

“We know how to handle this problem. Let’s just do it.”

She has a message for residents wary of building more supportive housing in their neighborhoods. “We can’t build here, we can’t build there. Why is everything so difficult? We know how to handle this problem. Let’s just do it.”

This message—impatient for some humanity to win over greed and apathy—comes through loud and clear in “The Advocates,” a new documentary that details Salinas’ work with L.A.’s unhoused residents over the past decade.

The film is screening this month at theaters across L.A. Check our calendar for a showing in your area and find out what dedicated people are able to achieve for our most vulnerable residents.