PLAY PODCASTS
California put homeless people in hotel rooms. Then what?

California put homeless people in hotel rooms. Then what?

Project Roomkey, made possible by the pandemic, sheltered thousands of people. Here's how it both succeeded and failed.

Headlines From The Times · Shannon Lin, Mike Heflin, Stephanie Klasky-Gamer, Marina Peña, Benjamin Oreskes, Shani Hilton, Gustavo Arellano, Mario Diaz, Doug Smith, Ashlea Brown, Denise Guerra, Lauren Raab, Melissa Kaplan

October 6, 202126m 17s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (pscrb.fm) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

To Project Roomkey’s architects, the program was a no-brainer. Thousands of hotel rooms were empty because of the COVID-19 pandemic. And there were thousands of people who lacked homes and seemed especially vulnerable to the coronavirus. The plan to put the people in the empty rooms and pay the hotel owners seemed to solve two problems at once.

Sounds easy, right? But in practice, not so much. The program helped some people but certainly not everyone.

Today we examine Project Roomkey — its promises, achievements, shortcomings and future. We talk to L.A. Times reporters Benjamin Oreskes and Doug Smith, who have covered the program from the start. We also talk to Stephanie Klasky-Gamer, the head of a nonprofit that helps people transition out of homelessness.

More reading:

L.A. had a golden opportunity to house homeless people in hotels — but fell short of its goal

L.A. County won’t expand program to shelter homeless people in hotels

Federal aid allows L.A. to extend hotel-room rentals for homeless people

Topics

californiahomeless sheltercovid-19unhousedhousinghotelslos angeleslos angeles countypandemicproject roomkeyhomelessnessproject homekey