Malibu’s homeless numbers are down nearly 80% from 2020, city announces

"Malibu hasn't done anything for the homeless," said Elvin Rudolph Dekle, 69, who spends most of his days in Malibu.
MALIBU, CA - FEBRUARY 8, 2024 - - Malibu hasnt done anything for the homeless, said Elvin Rudolph Dekle, 69, who spends most of his days in Legacy Park in Malibu on February 8, 2024 (in the background is Kacy Richardson). Not allowed to camp or spend the night in Legacy Park, many homeless, including Dekle, find other areas to bed down for the night, some near the Malibu Library. The City of Malibu, which participated in the 2024 Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count, has seen a 30% decline in homelessness since the 2023 Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count. The two men in the background are both homeless. (Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)
(Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)

Malibus homeless numbers are down nearly 80% from 2020, city announces

A few days after a yearlong stint at a sober living home in Los Angeles, Kacy Richardson finished a sandwich and stared at the gray clouds cruising over the green slopes of the Santa Monica Mountains. He was happy to be back in Malibu.

Richardson, 33, said he's lived outdoors in the wealthy beach town for much of the past 10

ten

years because it's peaceful and people are kinder than

those

in Los Angeles or Santa Monica.

Like several of his companions in Legacy Park, Richardson has some complaints about

the treatment of homeless people byhow

sheriff's deputies

treat them

. But over the past two years, he said, he has seen increased efforts by the city to move people into shelters or permanent housing, including two friends who

had

lived outdoors in Malibu for many years and now have apartments.

"It feels like the process is faster, he said. Ive definitely seen more people being placed in apartments.

City officials

in Malibu

agree and are promoting statistics to back

up

the claim.

up.

In an early release of its annual homeless count,

the city of

Malibu

has

announced a fourth straight year of declining encampments on its streets and beaches.

The team surveying Malibu as part of the annual countywide point-in-time count found 51 people living outdoors in January, compared

withto

71 in

2023the prior year

and 239 at the peak in 2020.

Only

Two fires were caused by homeless people last year, the report said, a dramatic decline from the 23 in 2021. There were four in 2022.

The

count reflects results reflect

Malibu's proactive approach combining contracted outreach

with and

enforcement by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, said

public safety liaison

Luis Flores

, the city's public safety liaison

.

Flores said Malibu is showcasing its preliminary numbers months ahead of the official countywide release "to be proactive with our messaging." Over the years, he said, there's been an ebb and flow that create

s

"a perception that not a lot is being done and that we have a major crisis on our hands. We want to ensure and highlight that a lot of great work is being done."

The city's preliminary numbers may change slightly in the official count, which is generally not released until late spring or early summer. That's because statisticians contracted by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority will adjust for the average number of people estimated to live in cars, vans, tents and makeshift shelters observed over the three days of the count.

Flores said he doesn't expect the adjustment to be significant because the city's count was conducted by skilled volunteers and outreach workers who are familiar with the local homeless population.

Since 2017, Malibu has contracted with the People Concern for services and currently has two outreach workers and a housing navigator, Flores said.

In Legacy Park, Richardson's hangout, he and his companions said they have seen the difference. But they

still

fault the city for not having a shelter or affordable housing. At night they move across the street to the library, adjacent to the courthouse. The buildings provide protection from

the

cold winds, and the awnings keep them dry

frominthe

rain.

"There's a lot of towns that have to build housing for low-income people, but Malibu has zero," said Elvin Dekle,

who pushed pushing

his belongings

into the park

in a shopping cart

into the park

on

ea

recent afternoon.

Dekle, 69, said he has been living in Malibu for 20 years. He acknowledged an improvement in services but wonders why the city doesn't use vacant land near Pepperdine University to build housing or, at least, establish a place where people

cancould

sleep.

The City Council rejected a 2022 recommendation by its task force on homelessness to provide funds for an alternat

iv

e sleeping area where tents could be set up

somewhere

outside the city limits. Instead, the city funds four shelter beds in Santa Monica, Flores said.

Dekle's friend Kenneth Erickson agreed that a designated sleeping space would be helpful, especially since he is not ready

to livefor living

indoors,

paying rent and other bills.with bills and rent.

Erickson, 38,

who was

a

former

pyrotechnic artist for music concerts, said he came to Malibu after spiraling into homelessness eight years ago, because it felt safe.

"The area is peaceful," he said. "You don't have to worry about people robbing you or hurting you while you're sleeping."

While he appreciates that the city is trying to get people indoors, he thinks

it is moving those they're moving people

who are not mentally ready and need more guidance to prepare

them

for

the responsibilities that come with housing.living indoors and having responsibilities.

According to monthly outcome records posted on the city's homelessness website, the People Concern outreach workers made more than 3,900 contacts last year, with a monthly average of 72 individuals. Over the year, the team moved 51 people off the streets: 28

went

into shelter

s

, 15

went in

to permanent housing, and eight

through relocation relocated

to live with family or friends elsewhere. Another 14

people

have vouchers and are searching for housing.

The monthly reports indicated that 100 new

homeless

individuals had been identified during the year. With the decline of 20 in the overall count and 51 moved from the street,

there arethat leaves

dozens

of people

unaccounted for.

It's not uncommon, Flores said, for people to show up in the city, hang around for a day or two, then leave, especially near the end of the Metro bus line

that runs

from Santa Monica to Trancas Canyon.

"We see faces on a routine basis, and we never see them the following day or the following week," he said.

A Malibu ordinance prohibits overnight stays "in any public park, public beach or public street (including in a vehicle parked on a public street).

"

An amendment bringing the law into compliance with federal court rulings specifies

that itthe law

will not be enforced on people who "do not have access to adequate temporary shelter."

The city's

encampment

removal program cleared 29

encampmentscamps

in 2023, half as many as

it did

in 2021, reflecting the decline in the overall homeless numbers. Outreach workers provide advance notice of encampment removals and offer services and shelter, Flores said. Sites are revisited to ensure that no

new

campers return.

Flores attributed the decrease in fires to an aggressive media campaign and enforcement. Signs have been posted in canyons and parks warning people not to start fires. Also, the Sheriff's Department identified and arrested

key

people who were known to start fires, Flores said; others got housed or simply left.

Sheriff's Sgt. Chris Soderlund reported that eight of the city's 11

recent

arson arrests

since 2020 involvedhave beenof

homeless people

, three in 2020, two in 2021 and one in each year after that

.

"Once one individual gets arrested and charged, we use outreach and the Sheriffs Department to push that," he said. "The message spreads. A lot of individuals who started fires are no longer here."

After a decade on and off Malibu's

streets

, Richardson

said he

hopes to get on a housing list, "because being out here sucks," he said.

Though it's relatively safe, and people are kind, he sometimes feels hassled by

Sheriff's

deputies who tell him where he can and cannot linger.

His main complaint is being cited for taking shopping carts from

nearby

Malibu Village, a shopping center lined with restaurants and boutique

shop

s.

"We have nowhere to put our stuff and no way to transport it," he said.

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