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In 2024, Los Angeles Will Vote on Forcing Hotels to House the Homeless

Tackling homelessness in L.A. Image from video below

60,000 Homeless, 20,000 Hotel Vacancies 

Activists estimate there are about 60,000 homeless in LA with about 20,000 nightly vacant rooms.

On July 21, L.A. city attorney Michael Feuer reported that union activists from Unite Here Local 11 collected enough signatures to demand the City take some action on homelessness. 

The LA City council rejected direct action on August 5th by an 11-1 margin with one economically illiterate woke council member voting in favor. 

Voters now get to decide on March 5, 2024.

Here is a link where you can download the two-pronged Proposed Ordinance on utilizing vacant hotel rooms and on replacing space taken by new hotels.

The following points are direct quotes from the proposed ordinance.

Mandate on Housing the Homeless 

  • Each Hotel shall communicate to the Department or its designee, in a form that the Department prescribes, by 2:00 p.m. each day the number of available rooms at the Hotel for that night.
  • The Department shall develop a program for paying a Fair Market Rate, or such other rate as the Department may negotiate with a Hotel, for vacant hotel Guest Rooms on behalf of Unhoused Individuals or Families. 
  • It shall be unlawful to refuse to provide lodging to an individual or family seeking accommodations using the program.
  • Civil penalties of $500 for each day that each individual or family was unlawfully denied lodging

In addition to accepting homeless the ordinance blames hotels for causing homelessness and mandates replacement housing.

Attempt to Stop More Hotel Building

  • The City of Los Angeles has seen a massive increase in new hotel development in recent years at the same time as the number of people experiencing homelessness has skyrocketed and the City’s affordable-housing crisis has grown. Hotels are frequently proposed for land that is equally suitable for housing development and thus crowd out sites that could be used to help alleviate the City’s need for affordable housing.
  • The purpose of this Section is to enhance the public welfare by establishing policies which require hotel development projects to replace demolished or converted housing with housing affordable to households of Extremely Low, Very Low, Low, and Moderate Incomes, help meet the City’s regional share of housing needs.
  • A proposed Hotel Development Project shall be required to include the replacement, on a one-for-one basis, in the form of new construction of Residential Dwelling Units or acquisition and rehabilitation of existing market-rate Residential Dwelling Units, of each Residential Dwelling Unit on the Hotel Development Project parcel or parcels that is or will be Converted or Demolished as a result of the Hotel Development Project and each such Residential Dwelling Unit that was Converted or 9 Demolished during the five-year period immediately preceding the Applicant’s application for First Approval.

L.A. City Council Rejects Proposal Forcing Hotels to House the Homeless

LAMag reports L.A. City Council Rejects Proposal Forcing Hotels to House the Homeless

Councilman Joe Buscaino told KTLA in a report that aired Thursday night ahead of the vote that he thought the plan was “the dumbest measure” he’s seen in his decade on the City Council. He described the idea as “the worst of all options” in L.A.’s struggle to solve the homeless crisis, only exacerbated by the pandemic.

“It baffles me that Unite Here, which claims to protect its members, is leading this measure that would very likely jeopardize worker safety,” Heather Rozman, president and CEO of the Hotel Association of Los Angeles, in a statement Friday morning. “We’re relieved that the council saw this for the political stunt that it is and call on them to instead pursue long-term solutions to homelessness that actually work.”

Should Vacant Hotels in Los Angeles House the Homeless?

CNN asks Should Vacant Hotels in Los Angeles House the Homeless?

That’s the wrong question. Even the title is wrong. CNN left out the word “forced” or “forcing”. 

Here are the right questions.

Questions

  • Would you want your 12-year-old daughter riding an elevator with a smelly, emotionally-deranged drug addict? 
  • If you were a hotel owner, would you be fearful of losing business due to hoards of smelly, emotionally-deranged drug addicts running about?
  • If you were a hotel owner, would you be fearful of property destruction by someone mentally unstable?

Those are good questions, but here is a better one: How the hell can this ordinance possibly be legal?

The key question is likely moot because I believe the ordinance will not pass. Then again, we are talking California where woke madness is the norm. 

So, we cannot be certain until March 5, 2024.

This post originated at MishTalk.Com.

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79 Comments
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Prince Butthole
Prince Butthole
3 years ago
Why stop with hotels? If you can compel privately owned businesses to provide rooms to crazy, smelly, violent homeless, why not also force homeowners and renters to provide their vacant rooms, couches and floorspace to the homeless? Have a back yard suitable for tents? That’s housing for the homeless. Together we can make Los Angeles the Hell on Earth that politicians have been working towards for so long.
Educated Liberal
Educated Liberal
3 years ago
I am convinced the way to solve the homeless crisis in big cities is to keep the border open and bring in 5 million more people who cant read and write or speak English. This is so simple lets do it!
Next we should make homeowners report by 2pm everyday how many bedrooms in their homes are unoccupied so we can house the homeless with them. If they refuse to cooperate then we will take their homes by eminent domain and use it for a homeless shelter.
For all those people who refuse to rent a hotel room when a drug user or criminal trying to stay off the grid is in the next room we will have the State of California confiscate your savings and checking accounts.
Casual_Observer2020
Casual_Observer2020
3 years ago
This is all much ado about nothing. Everytime some ballot measure or other measure gets voted on, more people vote against it. One reason Newsom continues to thrive isn’t because he’s loved by the left. Quite the opposite. Today we found out his in laws donated to a DeSantis PAC. The Repiblicans may have RINOs but the Democrats have a fair chunk of DINOs. Once ranked choice voting takes hold, normalcy will return. Both parties are lost right now which is why an Indepedent will have a great shot of winning the presidency in 2024. Right now 42% of voters are registered independents.
JeffD
JeffD
3 years ago
Ironically, this will push down room rates, because hotels will want 100% occupancy from paying (non-destructive) customers. I predict a lot of bankruptcies.
Car dealers, doctors, and now hotels will all be pushed out of California due to Dark Ages legislation.
CzarChasm Reigns
CzarChasm Reigns
3 years ago
It’s still OK to vote on stupid ideas in a democracy, isn’t it?
It better be: stupid ideas abound...
Off the top of my head: the Mayor could stick the homeless on buses headed to Austin.
Prince Butthole
Prince Butthole
3 years ago
Every city east of California is already sending their homeless here. The numbers aren’t increasing because economic conditions are forcing good people onto the streets. The asylums closed, drugs are legal, needles are free, tents and sidewalks are available at no charge and fast food is delivered to your tent all day long. California politicians LOVE the homeless. If housing them in hotels actually solved the homeless problem, politicians would be against it.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
do the proud boys have shelter? how about antifa and oath keepers????
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
skid row LA was literally built for itinerant hobos and tramps. nothing new under the sun really. SF put homeless in hotels during darkest days of covid. not sure if they are still in them. left the bay 2 years ago.
Counter
Counter
3 years ago
“Housing is a human right”

“Affluent liberals tend to be really good at showing up to the marches and talking about how they like equality,” video journalist Johnny Harris says in the documentary (Liberal Hypocrisy is Fueling American Inequality. Here’s How. | NYT Opinion). “They’re really good about putting signs in their lawns saying that all are welcome here. But by their actions, what they’re actually saying is, ‘We believe in these ideals, just not in my backyard.’”

The op-ed points out that over the past eight years, the San Francisco area added 676,000 jobs and only 176,000 housing units and singles out Palo Alto for its failure to rezone single-family districts to support higher-density housing projects.

NYT Editorial Board member Binyamin Appelbaum suggested that when it comes to opposing housing projects, it’s “always the same song, ‘I’m in favor of affordable housing. We need more of it in this county. However, I have some concerns about this project.’”

Around Town: Palo Alto comes under fire in New York Times op-ed Documentary cites Maybell vote as example of liberal misdeeds on housing by Palo Alto Weekly staff / Palo Alto Weekly
The ones who make the most noise are the biggest offenders. When the deadline was near, they pulled the plug on housing for low income elderly, not wanting to rush in and potentially harm people and built mansions on the land instead.
Christoball
Christoball
3 years ago
While they are at it; Every house rented to illegals must offer one of the rooms to a homeless person. There fixed the problem.
Jojo
Jojo
3 years ago
California is also still focused on Covid.
———-
California advances medical misinformation bill
29 Aug 2022
A California bill designed to combat disinformation and misinformation 0n COVID-19 by medical professionals passed in the state Senate on Monday evening.
Why it matters: The bill could see doctors and other medical professionals who spread COVID misinformation or disinformation face disciplinary action for “unprofessional conduct” from the Medical Board of California or the Osteopathic Medical Board of California, which could include having their state license suspended or revoked.
• If Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) were to sign the bill into law, California would be the first state to take legal action against medical practitioners in response to the spread of false COVID information, per the New York Times.
• Medical experts and groups including the American Medical Association have said misinformation has exacerbated the pandemic and caused “thousands of unnecessary hospitalizations and deaths,” the NYT notes.
….
Bam_Man
Bam_Man
3 years ago
Reply to  Jojo
Orwellian.
Jojo
Jojo
3 years ago
I’d be afraid of lice and bedbugs!
Matt3
Matt3
3 years ago
It’s all back to the elimination of private property – except for those favored by the government.
Us little people, will own nothing, travel no where, buy what is allowed and be grateful!
Bam_Man
Bam_Man
3 years ago
Who thinks up this crazy shiite?
Do they drop acid first?
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Reply to  Bam_Man
No. Had they dropped acid, the ideas would have been a lot better.
Pontius
Pontius
3 years ago
Recall the scene in Dr. Zhivago. Yuri returns home to discover his home now shared by a few dozen of his comrades. Maybe register spare bedrooms of all empty nesters. AirBnB spare room in your house not booked by 2? (Sorry, comment might be genesis of next petition).
Webej
Webej
3 years ago
Is there a certification/registration process for homelessness?
Seems it would pretty attractive for people now sleeping in their office, friends house, super-rent hostels, to check in as homeless at a hotel of choice on the government’s tab. Hell, if you have wheels, you can travel a little and apply at a fancier hotel. May even be an option for myself if I spend a few days in Los Angeles while globe trotting.
FromBrussels2
FromBrussels2
3 years ago
….everyday…. I pray I ll be on my way, …savin love for you ….Califoooornia blueuuu …..with the emphasis on blue , of course ….
Barpi
Barpi
3 years ago
Well … if the diseased liberals continue to vote democrats and spew anti-American hatred against President Trump, the greatest modern leader, …. you get socialism which always degrades into some form of totalitarianism – some combination of fascism and communism.
Sunriver
Sunriver
3 years ago
L.A. will certainly provide 2 police officers exclusively for each hotel that participates. All damage to the hotel will be compensated by the city also.
NOT. What a joke.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Why just hotels? Why not all rental properties? What about any unoccupied habitable domicile? Go on vacation and let the homeless live in your home while you’re gone. Think of all the vacant 2nd homes that could be used.
Somehow I doubt most in favor of this would offer their homes up.
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
Vacate Beverly Hills Four Seasons for the homeless. The Green : a kick to the shin, headbutt to the heart, shaolin to their eyes, from Putin.
MPO45
MPO45
3 years ago
How the hell can this ordinance possibly be legal?”
Simple…laws are written by the people for the people and there is no restriction on what crazy laws can be passed. The supreme court has endorsed, with the revocation of Roe v Wade, that states can do whatever crazy sh!t they want to do now so expect more of the same from red and blue states.
Pot was once illegal and now it’s legal in some states as was alcohol. At one point it was perfectly legal to discriminate against blacks and the GOP seems to be wanting to head in that direction again questioning whether state law should allow interracial couples as an example, they also want to ban birth control. There is no shortage of crazy out there which is why smart people are heading for the exit door.
Besides, its the boomer population that will likely be the most homeless out there so most of those hotels rooms will be filled with the elderly not drug addicts. The GOP cutting social security and medicare will accelerate the process.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45
It’s been going on for a while. Almost entirely among democratic leadership. Sanctuary cities and open borders completely ignore immigration laws.
MPO45
MPO45
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
Are there any sanctuary cities in red states? If so why doesn’t the state do something about it? The truth is that no one (red or blue) does anything about illegal immigration because both of these parties benefit from cheap under-the-table labor.
Heck half the meat packing plants are in red states and every time there is a immigration raid about half the workers are undocumented… Gee I wonder how that happens in those die hard anti-immigrant red states so far away from the border?
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45
I don’t know of any sanctuary cities run by republicans.
I don’t doubt there are conservatives that hire illegals. But I think it has more to do with the kind of workers they need than their political leaning. There’s a much bigger demand for cheap manual labor in rural areas than in big cities. Outside of fast food, not sure where the need is in an inner city. Maybe a few maids and gardeners. And I would guess there are many illegal fast food workers.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
construction and delivery and uber and all sorts of work……….
MPO45
MPO45
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
So you’re saying rural areas would fail without immigrant labor? but I thought rural areas were all trump country? I’m confused by your arguments. Republicans don’t run sanctuary cities but evidently they run rural areas. Are immigrants need or not? And don’t say “legal immigrants” because those guys all have college degrees and want high paying jobs on H1B visas in the big cities.
Karlmarx
Karlmarx
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45
I believe that the current administration is using social security cuts to “pay” and i use that word loosely, for their loan relief giveaway to the young revolutionaries.
LM2022
LM2022
3 years ago
First, I doubt this passes and if it does it will be declared unconstitutional. Even if the ordinance does go into effect it won’t be enforced – in LA big business still owns all the levers of government.
Jcbl
Jcbl
3 years ago
I’d say the LA City Council collectively is as dumb as a box of rocks but then that would be an insult to all the rocks of the world.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  Jcbl
You’re in favor of this?
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
3 years ago
My guess is the hotels aren’t located in the suburbs, but in the city center where the woke live. This will make them a bit unwoke, well slowly.
Karlmarx
Karlmarx
3 years ago
Not so sure. I know a bunch of wokers – wokies, woksters, woktistia, i don’t know what they are, in NYC and they think all is sunny and bright. Its what the New York Times tells them to believe and they don’t question, but just do and believe as they are told.
What do you get for pretending the danger’s not real
Meek and obedient you follow the leader
Down well trodden corridors into the valley of steel
What a surprise
The look of terminal shock in your eyes
Now things are really what they seem
No, this is no bad dream – R. Waters
Billy
Billy
3 years ago
I’m not sure any of the votes were even counted in Cali. The crazy DA in LA, George Gascón, said he doesn’t want to prosecute rapes if their isn’t major physical harm that was done. He supports the criminal and not the victims. Even San Fran kicked him out because he was too far left.
Well, LA just voted to have him recalled and somehow the citizens voted for him to stay. Everyone I know voted for him to go.
The scary part is how when you research about him the search results seem to paint him as a good guy.
Funded by Soros too.
But don’t worry because this is far better than Trump because he’s MEAN.
Karlmarx
Karlmarx
3 years ago
Reply to  Billy
I guess Gascon does not tweet.
Communist revolution in Cuba was pulled of by about 500 revolutionaries. It does not take all that many dedicated people to destroy a country or a city in this case
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
3 years ago
Reply to  Karlmarx
The Cuban revolution was pulled off by the whole country being fed up with the pre-Castro regime.
The Castros put up monuments of their brave defeat of the previous regime, but in reality the previous regime soldiers must have surrendered en masse.
When Castro lived in his “hideout” in Sierra Madre, a Canadian journalist visited him, and found he had a library of books with him. Some hideout. Anyways, if he could get to him, why couldn’t the Batista regime?
Karlmarx
Karlmarx
3 years ago
This is of course true, but the Cuban Army fielded thousands of men against Castro’s dozens. It does not take many revolutionaries to rile up a country if people are pi##ed off. I doubt there are all of that many revolutionaries riling up the BLM, Antifa, etc. brownshirts.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
the cuban revolutionary museum in havana is the greatest political museum in the world. better than kremlin. the cabin cruiser castro used is there, and the propaganda is so thick it’s great. what many don’t know, is battista, the indian, purged the police and military of whites and installed blacks and indians and dark browns. he rose to power as a socialist reformer of racism on island. he quickly pivoted and became a puppet of USA. the people did NOT like the puppetry. Castro’s tank he left at university of havana to this day. as a reminder to the radical college kids, not to do what he did. he had brains and testes. very unique. the Jan 6th insurrectionists seemed to lack both.
Karlmarx
Karlmarx
3 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
I think the best thing is that he (castro) is buried under a rock.
Honestly seeing Cuba really opens one’s eyes to the evils of communism. My really big impression was in Santiago where the Bacardi distillery was. Its still used to make pretty good rum (santiago de cuba rum if you can find it). You know it was the Bacardi distillery because it still says Bacardi on it. Just like everything in Cuba it has not been painted or maintained since 1959
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
3 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
Maybe beaten by Che Guevara museum in Santa Clara, but I didn’t visit the former.
Those places seem to be the only maintained places in Cuba, beside the hotel complexes in tourist destinations.
Didn’t know Batista was an indian, but then in revolutionary Cuba race wasn’t ever mentioned.
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
Reply to  Billy
There was a second petition to recall Gascon. Despite far more signatures than needed, there were allegedly not enough valid signatures for it to qualify for the ballot. Gascon was replaced in San Francisco by Boudin, who was recently recalled, as the city has gone in the toilet. At least some store owners are now threatening not to pay taxes to the city if something isn’t done to fix the problems plaguing the city.
Karlmarx
Karlmarx
3 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
How can they pay taxes – with 90 percent of your customers just walking out without paying there is not much left to give to the junta
LM2022
LM2022
3 years ago
Reply to  Billy
Well, LA just voted to have him recalled and somehow the citizens voted for him to stay.
None of that is true, but carry on.
JeffD
JeffD
3 years ago
Reply to  Billy
Unwanted pregnancy is major physical harm. A lifelong STD is major physical harm.
shamrock
shamrock
3 years ago
Seems more of a problem with progressives than with woke.
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
“In 2024, Los Angeles Will Vote on Forcing Hotels to House the Homeless”
That will do wonders for tourism if it passes. In other news, Ozzy Osborne is moving from L.A. back to the UK, as he says it is too violent.
The other weekend, there was a farmers market on some street in Hollywood. A man came out on his balcony with a hand gun and started shooting at them. No one was wounded.
Karlmarx
Karlmarx
3 years ago
So what. California just voted to imposed state control over private sector wage rates. People in LA want to live in Cuba so they live in Cuba. Difference is that you can at least emigrate from LA or from California. And that is exactly what anybody with a brain is doing.
That is what America was supposed to be. People in different states and communities should be able to live as they wish. I lived in NYC and people there love to be regulated by the government and told how to live their lives. I did not, so i moved to the free state of Florida. I should not tell people in NYC or LA to live, and they should not tell me how to live. That was why the Constitution limited the Federal Government.
Unfortunately, since the Constitution is no longer considered to be relevant, we will all live like Cubans in a few more years.
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
Reply to  Karlmarx
The woman who seems to be the odds on favorite to be the next mayor of L.A., was a fan of Castro.
As i mentioned before, one of my neighbors grew up under Castro and he left in 2020, as he could clearly see what Democrats are turning the state into.
“California just voted to imposed state control over private sector wage rates.”
‘Whether you like it or not’
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  Karlmarx
you seem well tempered, with much wisdom. i concur. i’ve lived in nyc and sc and az and urban and rural CA………….it’s a big continent.
Robbyrob
Robbyrob
3 years ago
The Trauma Of Homelessness Doesn’t End Under A Roof
And a LOT of ‘red’ states have a large if not huge homeless population
Avery
Avery
3 years ago
Hopefully California goes full Dr. Zhivago and confiscates houses of the celebrities and tech giants.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
of course this is wrong. however, as a history buff, i suggest folks see what the US and states and cities did during past crisis from great depression to civil war to ww2 to 9.11.01………………..
probably the gold standard in insane policies was slaughtering cattle in great depression and letting the meat rot. along with the vegetables………….while folks in the country were going hungry. this situation in LA pales in comparison to reality of what has occurred.
when men are desperate, they do desperate and many times idiotic things. the homelessness in the warm parts of USA from hawaii to CA to AZ to FL is palpable for a super wealthy country.
Dutoit
Dutoit
3 years ago
Probably Texas should do the same as for illegal immigrants : give the homeless a free travel by bus to California.
radar
radar
3 years ago
Seems like that would put a dampener on folks wanting to travel to LA. Not good for their business.
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Funny how the homeless population avoids states with low housing costs and good job prospects and gravitate to blue states.
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
No. They don’t avoid, they’re stuck where they went homeless.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
Most homeless are mentally insane. They’re incapable of having a job. There are many in California because of the warm climate and the government tolerates them.
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
Chicken or the egg? Has promoting unbridled drug use encouraged mental illness by chance?
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
And you’re not?
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
  • It shall be unlawful to refuse to provide lodging to an individual or family seeking accommodations using the program.
Would that be expanded to Airbnbs too? Now that would be interesting.
JeffD
JeffD
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
Do they have this plan yet in Europe? I’ve always wanted to see Europe, and free lodging sounds great!
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
First of all, I would like to add that being homeless and being mentally unstable are not the same. Hell, look at the president if you want to talk about mental health issues. Or anyone in congress for that matter. Most are that way because of the state. And the state always puts in a ton of obstacles to prevent the homeless from ever becoming housed. However, this is just plain idiocy. No sane society would force people to donate to charity (which is exactly what this is; a forced donation). And speaking of deranged, would you want your 12 year old daughter to ride in an elevator with a deranged city council member or a homeless person? Trust your child with a politician? Remember, Epstein didn’t service the homeless.
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
Not sure if I would want her to ride in an elevator with Biden either.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
There’s a big overlap between the homeless and mentally insane. Not the same as being senile. If you’re old and senile, you can go into an institution paid for by the government. Assuming you have no one to take care of you.
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
Look up the stats on psychiatric drugs. Almost none are taken by the homeless. The percentages aren’t that different from the rest of the population.
Felix_Mish
Felix_Mish
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
No sane society would force people to donate to charity
That sounds reasonable until one notices that a large part of government spending is for charity.
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Reply to  Felix_Mish
How does the government doing it make it reasonable?
Felix_Mish
Felix_Mish
3 years ago
Reply to  HippyDippy
Ouch. The curse of “that“. What does “that” refer to?
Implication is we haven’t been a sane society for a loooong time, or “no sane society would force …” is not true.
Anyway, we’re on the same page.
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Reply to  Felix_Mish
Thought you’d like that.
dwkeller
dwkeller
3 years ago
The left will impose rules. They do not respect private property.
randocalrissian
randocalrissian
3 years ago
This is as dumb as proposed legislation can get. Mish doesn’t even have to tell us if this passes, who will ever be insane and foolish enough to construct a new hotel in jurisdictions where this law applies? You have to also build super low income housing. Nobody will invest in those projects, no right minded owner will embark on those projects, and then what? No more housing or hotels built and he was just playing this tune the other day, housing gets more expensive.
I’ve got a strong utilitarian streak in me, but even so, this is such obvious idiocy. Just pay attention for now to who is backing it, if anyone is that nuts.
Mish
Mish
3 years ago
The petition organizers have a clear message: No new hotels
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
You might build a hotel if your aim was to only house the homeless. The rooms are paid for by the government. Build it entirely out of cinder block walls and concrete floors. Have thick plastic covers over the mattresses. Cleaning would mostly be done with a hose.
TexasTim65
TexasTim65
3 years ago
Instead of calling it a ‘hotel’, you build a club and say that only club members can rent rooms and not the general public.
Then take memberships to the club (sort of like the Hilton rewards thing) only membership now is scrutinized by the Hotel (er Club) to make sure you have a job, decent income etc before you can become a member.
Voila, you are not a hotel and thus don’t have to house homeless.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
3 years ago
“If you were a hotel owner, would you be fearful of property destruction by someone mentally unstable?”
No. I would concrete everything (including furniture) and hose out every morning.
I see no problem …
…. Oh, wait … what are the water rates in LA??
Captain Ahab
Captain Ahab
3 years ago
Reply to  Tony Bennett
Recycle a fuel storage tank (many available as EVs take over). Install a few pumps in the basement. Recycle the water.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
3 years ago
Reply to  Captain Ahab
Yeah, that’s the spirit … maybe find a way to capture / purify homeless urine as water source??

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