USA Today - 26.08.2019

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$2.00 z THE NATION'S NEWS MONDAY


zLos Angelesvoters passed a
$1.2 billionbond measure in 2016
with the hope of seeing up to
10,000 permanent housing units.
zThe measurewould be enough
to make a significant dent in the
27,221people deemed living
“unsheltered” in the most recent
homeless count.

zAt the current rateonly
somewhat more than 7,000 units
will be constructed, according to
Controller Ron Galperin. “This kind
of cost is utterly unacceptable.
I believe we need a fundamental
course correction,” he said.

LOS ANGELES – As this city tries
to cope with thousands of people
living on the streets, a few home-
less and low-income senior citizens
will be luckier than most next year.
They will receive keys to one of
72 new apartments, complete with
a fitness center, in the heart of tren-
dy Koreatown, built at a projected
cost of $690,692for each unit, ac-
cording to the city controller’s of-
fice. Two additional projects in the
pre-approval phase are expected to
top $700,000 a unit in total costs.
“This kind of cost is utterly unac-
ceptable,” Controller Ron Galperin
said. “I believe we need a funda-
mental course correction.”
Despite a booming national econ-

omy, homeless people have set up
tents in makeshift encampments in
major cities on the West Coast amid
a housing shortage that has driven
up rents to unaffordable levels.
In Los Angeles, the tents are
spread out on sidewalks across the
city, the homeless emboldened by a
court ruling that allows them to live
outside if no shelter space is avail-
able. Making matters worse, many
live in filthy, third-world conditions
without basic necessities such as
toilets and sinks. It makes them and
those who venture near susceptible
to disease.
Cities continue to grapple over
difficult housing decisions about
how to solve the problem. Should
homeless people be entitled to the

Homeless encampments crowd a downtown Los Angeles sidewalk on Skid Row.FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

HOMELESSNESS IN LOS ANGELES

Housing SOS

Misery on the streets is spreading – and the cost of solutions is skyrocketing

Chris Woodyard
USA TODAY

See HOMELESSNESS, Page 3A

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USA TODAY,
A division of
Gannett Co., Inc.

©

The 19th
Amendment
took effect
99 years ago
today, extending
universal
suffrage to U.S.
women.

SOURCE U.S. Census bureau
AMY BARNETTE, DAVID ANESTA/USA TODAY


‘80 ‘84 ‘88 ‘92 ‘96 ‘00 ‘04 ‘08 ‘12 ‘

70%

0

60
50
40
30
20
10

Women Men

The percentage of
eligible voters who
reported casting ballots:

IN NEWS


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IN LIFE


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Touring Chicago from


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BIARRITZ, France – President Don-
ald Trump denied reports Sunday of
tension among leaders at the G-7 sum-
mit in southwest France, insisting that
he was having “good meetings” and
that everyone was getting along well.
“From the moment we got here,
we’ve been treated beautifully,” he
said during a meeting with Japanese
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
But behind the scenes, there were
signs of discord.
Trump aides complained to report-
ers that French President Emmanuel
Macron had arranged the agenda to fo-
cus on issues such as climate change
that would play well in his home coun-
try and make Trump look bad, given
Trump’s decision to pull the U.S. out of
an international climate accord.
At one point Sunday morning, the


Backstage


discord


rattles G-


summit


But Trump maintains


leaders getting along well


Michael Collins
USA TODAY


SeeG-7 SUMMIT, Page 3A


The Amazon is burning at an alarm-
ing rate as tens of thousands of fires
lay waste to the world’s largest tropical
rainforest.
There have been more than 74,
wildfires across Brazil this year, up
85% over the same period in 2018, and
about 40,000 of them are burning in
the Amazon, according to the coun-
try’s National Institute of Space Re-
search.
The Amazon often is called “the
lungs of the world,” absorbing green-
house gases that would otherwise
harm the planet. It also is home to a
number of indigenous people who rely
on the forest’s resources.
Why it’s on fire and why it has be-
come such a big problem:

Amazon wildfires sounding an alarm

Brush wildfires devour deforested land last week in Mato Grosso state in
west-central Brazil.CORPO DE BOMBEIROS DE MATO GROSSO VIA AP

In Brazil, preservation,

profit and politics clash

Elizabeth Lawrence
USA TODAY

See AMAZON, Page 2A

08.26.
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