Homeless services provided by the city of Los Angeles and the Los
Angeles Homeless Services Authority are disjointed and lack adequate
data systems and financial controls to monitor contracts for
compliance and performance, leaving the system vulnerable to waste and
fraud, an audit ordered by a federal judge has concluded.
The audit by the global consulting firm Alvarez & Marsal found that
the city was unable to track exactly how much it spent on homeless
programs and did not rigorously reconcile spending with services
provided, making it impossible to judge how well the services worked
or whether they were even provided.
Contracts written by LAHSA were vague, allowing wide variations in the services provided and their cost, it said.
Those findings echoed a November report by the Los Angeles County Auditor-Controller that found lax accounting procedures resulted in
the failure to reclaim millions of dollars in cash advances to
contractors and to pay other contractors on time, even when funds were available.
The audit, posted on the website of U.S. District Judge David O.
Carter Thursday arose from a 2020 lawsuit filed by the L.A. Alliance
for Human Rights, a group representing business owners, residents and property owners, which alleged that the city and county were failing
in their duty to provide shelter and services for people living on the streets.
Both the city and county reached settlements providing for thousands
of new shelter beds and additional mental health and substance use
treatment.
But under continuing monitoring of that settlement, Carter repeatedly
said that he wanted more transparency for homelessness spending and
insisted that the city also fund an outside audit.
An attorney for the plaintiffs, Elizabeth Mitchell, said the audit
validates the core allegations in the lawsuit, reinforcing the urgent
need for systemic reform.
“These findings are not just troubling — they are deadly,”
Mitchell said. “The failure of financial integrity, programmatic
oversight, and total dysfunction of the system has resulted in
devastation on the streets, impacting both housed and unhoused.
“Billions have been squandered on ineffective bureaucracy while
lives are lost daily. This is not just mismanagement; it is a moral failure.”
LAHSA issued a statement acknowledging the “siloed and fragmented
nature of our region’s homeless response for driving poor data
quality and integration, lack of contractual clarity, and disjointed
services as major impediments to success and oversight.”
It said it had come to the same conclusion in 2021 and has since
“advocated for creating a regional body to mandate collaboration
between the City, County, and LAHSA, just as proposed in the court’s audit.”
A number of elected officials chimed in.
Supervisor Lindsey Horvath said she saw the audit as an endorsement of
her proposal to create a new county department that would take over
LAHSA’s contracting duties.
“No more waste through duplicated resources,” Horvath said in a statement. “No more contracts for services that don’t deliver. We
need accountability and results right now.”
Mayor Karen Bass, whose signature homelessness program Inside Safe
received mild criticism for prioritizing location over need, also
issued a statement characterizing it as a validation for her efforts
to “change what’s festered for decades.”
“The broken system the audit identifies is what I’ve been fighting against since I took office,” she said. “We still have work to do,
but changes we’ve made helped turn around years of increases in homelessness to a decrease by 10% — the first one in years. The
City, the County and LAHSA are working together to change and improve
the system and we are committed to continuing to do that.”
Los Angeles Councilmember Nithya Raman issued a statement saying the
audit reinforced the need for a motion she introduced last month
proposing a new city division to centralize oversight of the city’s homelessness spending.
“This work must happen now: this is about more than just metrics —
this is about saving people’s lives by bringing them indoors into safety,” she said.
The audit pointed to no examples of fraud or proven waste, but
highlighted numerous missing or overlapping controls that left
programs open to abuse.
LAHSA, for example, had no standardized method to determine when a
shelter bed was available and its funding was not adjusted based on
the number of beds occupied, a dynamic that “may have contributed to discrepancies in data, potentially inequitable fund distribution, and moreover, decreased motivation to maximize occupancy for the benefit
of unsheltered” people.
Lack of specificity in contracts could lead to cascading problems such
as insufficient locked storage space, which could dissuade unsheltered
people from accepting shelter, discourage those in the shelter from
leaving to seek work and exacerbate the insecurity of those with
hoarding tendencies.
The auditors faulted LAHSA’s oversight structure for using the same
team that approved invoices and cash requests to monitor performance.
“Within this arrangement, impartial judgment may have been
compromised, particularly if payment approvals conflicted with
findings that indicated service deficiencies,” it said.
Overall, the audit found the county’s system of direct contracting
with service providers offered “more efficient coordination and
clearer accountability” than the city’s indirect contracting
through LAHSA.
Alvarez and Marsal which said it could conduct the audit for between
$2.8 million to $4.2 million, was selected from among three bidders.
The city originally agreed in April to pay for the audit but limited
its contribution to $2.2 million. That amount has since been increased
as the scope expanded.
The audit was initially set to include not just shelters the city
committed to create under the settlement, but Mayor Karen Bass’
Inside Safe program, the city’s controversial anti-camping law and
the street cleanups by the Sanitation Bureau’s CARE+ teams. It was
later expanded to include LAPD homeless-related activities and county services to city shelters, while enforcement of the anti-camping law
was dropped.
In follow-up hearings, representatives of Alvarez & Marsal reported to
Carter it was having difficulty obtaining records necessary for its
work from the city, the county and the Los Angeles Homeless Services.
In October, Diane Rafferty, an Alvarez & Marsal managing director,
described “heart-breaking” experiences in field visits to shelters
and street encampments.
“Every day that goes by there’s people on the street that are not receiving the services that the city is paying for,” Rafferty said
in court.
She described one shelter resident with traumatic brain injury who
frequently missed meal cutoff time and “was prostituting themselves
on the street to get food.”
One shelter budgeted for four case managers had only two on site for
130 clients.
After street visits, she said, she was concerned about her team having
PTSD.
“The emotion that came out seeing what they were seeing and how
these people are living, with all the money going to the service
providers was heart-breaking.”
But detail provided in the 161-page audit sometimes softened the sharp
tone of the conclusions with recognition of the challenge frontline
workers face serving a difficult clientele within a fractured system.
Noting the 31% substance use disorder and 24% serious mental illness
reported by unsheltered homeless people in the most recent count, it
found that service provider morale was strained by “crisis
situations involving aggressive behavior or self-harm,” for which
they “lacked the necessary training, expertise, and resources to
adequately address these needs.”
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2025-03-06/court-ordered-audit -finds-flaws-in-l-a-citys-homeless-services
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