Skip to Content
Streetsblog California home
Streetsblog California home
Log In
Homelessness

New “LeaseUp” Initiative Partners to Lease Housing to Curb Homelessness

LeaseUp is a new program that helps landlords navigate the process of filling units with people in need of housing. LeaseUp partners property owners and property managers with housing non-profits. These organization offer resources including incentives and case management expertise in matching homeless clients with appropriate housing, and continuing to work with formerly homeless renters.

The LeaseUp program is operated by People Assisting The Homeless - PATH.

The initiative was announced today at a kick-off ceremony at Selma Community Housing in Hollywood. At the event, L.A. City Councilmember Mitch O'Farrell praised the new program and spoke of his successful efforts to partner to house the homeless in Council District 13. PATH's CEO Joel John Roberts described LeaseUp as the "Zillow of affordable supportive housing." Roberts stated that the goal of the program is to house 2,000 people each year in existing housing - while PATH and many others continue to build needed new supportive/affordable housing.

Dhakshike Wickrema, L.A. County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas' lead deputy for homelessness, touted the LeaseUp program as a win-win-win. First and foremost, people who need housing will get housed. Non-profit agencies get connections to (and subsidies for) available housing units. Landlords get guaranteed rent and deposits through partner non-profits; the non-profits support placing renters, and provide ongoing case management.

The housing units involved are not just covenanted affordable units, but include common market-rate housing.

LeaseUp is funded at $3 million per year from Measure H, the 2017 county sales tax measure to end homelessness. The initiative is a scaled-up version of a successful pilot program operated by PATH.

How it works: landlords sign up via the website. Within a day, PATH staff contact landlords and orient them on the program. If a landlord opts to enroll their unit, non-profit staff inspect the site and provide a holding fee prior to client placement. Non-profit staff work with both clients and landlords to place people in appropriate units. When the homeless individual becomes the renter, non-profit case managers continue support to ensure success.

The LeaseUp website is already up and running. PATH and its partners encourage landlords to explore the website and sign-up to discuss becoming part of the program.

At today's announcement, formerly-homeless Angela Davis praised PATH for connecting her and her three children with housing through their earlier leasing pilot. Davis related that so many homeless people are "crying and screaming for second chances." LeaseUp is one promising new tool to provide some of those much-needed second chances.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog California

The Smog President Takes California to Court

I'm not even sure which Trump-made disaster he's trying to distract people from with this latest stunt.

March 13, 2026

The Short Week in Short Videos

Diverters, e-bikes, and a cameo appearance for Joe's kitchen.

March 13, 2026

Friday’s Headlines

Man, this guy really likes smog.

March 13, 2026

Why We Can’t Have Nice Things: Drivers are Destroying Ktown Mini-Traffic Circle

Some Streetsblog readers are familiar with some of the sad history of the deadly intersection of 4th Street and New Hampshire Boulevard in L.A.’s Koreatown neighborhood. Last year, after a driver killed a 9-year-old, and after volunteers painted guerilla crosswalks, the city of Los Angeles Transportation Department (LADOT) installed official crosswalks and a temporary traffic…

March 13, 2026

Friday Video: Buenos Aires Will Challenge Everything You Think You Know About Buses

The Paris of South America has an amazing bus system — but it doesn't run like North American ones at all.

March 13, 2026

Reading Changes in City Streets

Markings on cities streets can sometimes reveal what used to be there.

March 12, 2026
See all posts