All five candidates who agreed to be interviewed for this guide listed homelessness as a top issue. Their stances vary on the best ways to tackle the problem and on city ordinance 41.18, which prohibits homeless people from setting up tents within 500 feet of schools and day-care centers and allows the council to designate other areas as off-limits to encampments.
Bird said he would focus on building more housing, expanding supportive services and increasing access to those services. He also envisions a digitized tracking system for available beds so outreach workers have the information they need to help move people off the streets.
Bird is against a repeal of 41.18 but does not support expanding the ordinance to new sites. “It is a response to fear in many communities,” he said. “In some ways the intent is correct because it aims to enhance safety … but sweeping encampments just relocates them.”
Burgos said she supports a housing-first model with wraparound services like mental health support and job programs. “You can’t just get people into housing and then do nothing else,” she said.
She is strongly against 41.18 and would make its repeal a priority. “The criminalization of poverty is cruel and does not treat people like people,” she said.
Gonez emphasizes prevention, including tenant protections, as a means to mitigate the homelessness crisis. He said he would not work to repeal 41.18, but called the ordinance “a policy of last resort and a sign of failure.” It’s the city’s only option right now, he said.
Kbushyan, who supports Mayor Karen Bass’ Inside Safe initiative, said he would prioritize permanent housing over short-term solutions. He also would advocate for wraparound services and robust enforcement of 41.18.
Nazarian said there was no silver bullet for homelessness in Los Angeles, but a solution involves long-term supportive housing and investment in mental health support. He doesn’t believe police or firefighters should be called on to address homelessness.
He supports Inside Safe and 41.18 because he wants to get people indoors. “You have people languishing on the street,” he said. “That is not humane.”