Los Angeles "Lost" Billions in Homeless Funding—Where Did the Money Go?
Los Angeles officials have lost track of billions of dollars meant to fight homelessness, according to a damning independent audit released on March 6. That’s right—billions in taxpayer money disappeared into a bureaucratic black hole, with no clear accounting of where it went.
The audit, commissioned by U.S. District Judge David O. Carter and conducted by Alvarez & Marsal Public Sector Services (A&M), reveals an absolute disaster of financial mismanagement. The city funneled approximately $2.3 billion into homelessness programs, yet the auditors found that Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA) failed to track how those funds were actually spent.
Billions Spent—With No Paper Trail
A&M’s findings paint a picture of chaos:
- Inconsistent, inaccurate, and incomplete data made it nearly impossible to track spending.
- No uniform data standards across city and county agencies left auditors unable to verify where the money went.
- Service providers were paid based on vague contracts, with little oversight on whether they actually delivered what they promised.
- Lack of accountability meant billions could have been squandered—or worse.
To put it simply, Los Angeles wrote massive checks with your tax dollars, and no one knows what they got in return.
A System Built for Failure
The city and county outsourced management of these billions to LAHSA, an agency that has repeatedly proven itself incapable of proper oversight. Auditors found LAHSA couldn’t even identify which contracts existed or what expenses they covered. Even worse, the agency failed to verify whether services were actually delivered for the payments it approved.
The audit also found that Los Angeles’ entire homelessness response system is a bureaucratic nightmare:
- Fragmented data across agencies makes tracking spending nearly impossible.
- Lack of real-time oversight increases the risk of fraud and resource misallocation.
- No financial accountability means no one can say for sure where the billions actually went.
A Crisis With No End in Sight
All of this financial waste is happening while homelessness in Los Angeles reaches historic levels. A separate report from the L.A. County Department of Public Health found that in 2023, an average of seven homeless people died every single day in L.A.—most from drug overdoses.
Billions of dollars were spent, yet homelessness has only worsened. So, where did the money go?
What Happens Next?
The auditors are now urging the city to appoint an independent financial manager to clean up the mess. Their recommendations include:
✔️ Requiring service providers to submit detailed invoices before receiving payments.
✔️ Implementing strict oversight to track exactly how funds are used.
✔️ Holding LAHSA accountable for its mismanagement.
Yet, will anything actually change? Or will city officials continue throwing money into a broken system with no results?
This is the kind of reckless financial mismanagement that destroys public trust—and it’s a prime example of why we must take control of our own financial futures. If they can "lose" billions on homelessness, what do you think will happen when a banking crisis hits?
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