Sun Valley housing project offers stability to homeless families in LAUSD

Sun Valley housing project offers stability to homeless families in LAUSD
Sun Valley, CA – April 10: Anica Rubana poses for a portrait with her daughter Faith Leon, 3, at Sun King Apartments, a housing project created for homeless families with LAUSD students to improve their daily lives in a common area on Wednesday, April 10, 2024 in Sun Valley, CA. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)
(Dania Maxwell/Los Angeles Times)

Sun Valley housing project offers stability to homeless families in LAUSD

Anthony De Leon April 16, 2024

Nestled in the working-class community of Sun Valley stands a bright red and white four-story cube building, which dramatically contrasts

with

the dated beige and gray apartment blocks surrounding it.

The Sun King Apartments offers stability for once-homeless families

like such as

Anica Rubang and Angel Leon, who have struggled to stay housed for years. What made them eligible for this home was their energetic

three- 3-year-old

daughter, Faith Leon, who attends the Pacoima Early Education Center a few miles away.

When Many Mansion Mansions

,

an affordable housing non

profit, purchased the half-acre parcel opposite what was formerly Sun Valley High School in 2017, the Los Angeles Unified School District approached it with a proposal to develop the land into housing for homeless families with children in the district.

After nearly seven years

of

overcoming bureaucratic and pandemic hurdles, the project is finished. Families began moving into the 26-unit residential building in December.

Rubang’s family of three was among the first to move in on

day one Day One.

This was the first time any of them had a place to call home.

We were very scared but excited, Rubang said. It was the first home our baby has actually ever had to herself.

Rubang and Leon first met in a shelter in Bakersfield in 2022, each struggling with homelessness for years. Rubang, 21, left home when she turned 18, a decision caused by an emotionally stressful home life.

And Leon, 25, themselves have been homeless for nearly a decade since the age of 16. And Leon, 25, has been homeless since the age of 16.

The partners took a chance making the 103-mile trek to Burbank earlier in the year after Leon received a job at the Burbank Airport. But not knowing anyone in the San Fernando Valley isolated them, and their pay was not enough to afford the high costs of a long-term apartment lease.

While in Burbank, the couple obtained an emergency housing voucher from the Department of Public Social Services. In September, they discovered the Sun King complex through the district, receiving assistance from Many Mansions and the

Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles, orcity’s housing authority,

HACLA, for the paperwork process.

The transition was definitely rough because when you come here with no resources, and when it’s solely you and your family, it’s really hard to get a step up, Rubang said.

This effort marked LAUSD’s first collaboration with Many Mansions and HACLA, focused solely on helping homeless students and their families.

Many Mansions obtained project funding from the state, along with the citys HHH funding program the proposition that provides funds for the development of supportive housing for homeless individuals and families throughout the city.

Originally estimated to cost

around about

$15.5 million, the final total for the project reached $21 million, about $807,000 per unit.

LAUSD and the county’s Coordinated Entry System for homeless services identified families who self-identified as experiencing homelessness and would meet the criteria based on household income and size. These families were then referred to LA Family Housing for a detailed eligibility assessment before being placed in apartments.

HACLA provided tenants with project-based Section 8 vouchers, with residents paying no more than 30% of the

area area’s

median income.

As part of their strategic plan, LAUSD wanted to promote housing stability, said Rick Schroeder, president and chief executive

officer

of Many Mansions. That is a huge need for the kids’ success in school and in their lives.

Nearly 15,000 students in the district are experiencing homelessness, according to

the

LAUSD. However, this figure is likely an undercount since the data relies on self-identification, which many students and families choose not to disclose.

Schroeder noted that the Sun King Apartments houses 47 school-aged children, with most families being single-parent households.

Homelessness affects children when you’re living with two or three other families, in a small cramped space, where there is crime and it’s dirty, Schroeder said. With families that are homeless is where you really see the damage that homelessness has caused.

In 2022, L.A. City Council District 6, home to Sun Valley, ranked third highest in homeless counts for households with at least one child

under younger than

18 and one adult over 18 in L.A. Data from the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority

(LAHSA)

recorded 361 such households in the district.

A Sun Valley native and the district’s council member, Imelda Padilla, underscored the significance of resources

like such as

Sun King Apartments in addressing homelessness, particularly with families in her area.

This has to be successful because we need to be able to point to it and say, This is a model that should be replicated, Padilla said.

The signs of a community setting tailored to families and children are evident: a communal room arranged for an upcoming after-school program with computers and a cooking station, several outdoor recreational areas, a laundry room, an

onsite on-site

case manager and a planned space for a library.

Since settling in, Rubang described a sense of community at the complex, where older children befriended Faith and neighbors drop off food at their house. She calls it a constant cycle of giving back to each other.

Faith’s mother noted a significant change in her daughter’s happiness since adjusting to the new apartment. Faith eagerly starts each day by opening the blinds and welcoming sunlight into the apartment.

The biggest thing for us is we’re starting to really grow as parents and grow with our child mainly because there is stability, she said.

Both parents are currently employed, with Leon working for

security company

Allied Universal

security company

and Rubang being a certified nursing assistant.

Stability was really lacking in the household because of the constant fears and factors going through your head, Rubang said. It’s definitely become a burden off our shoulders not having to worry about where we’re going to sleep.

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