The Skid Row Action Plan (SRAP) is a roadmap that aims to dramatically expand housing and other homeless services downtown while supporting the development of a culturally vibrant and thriving Skid Row community. Specifically, the Plan sets priorities to support safety and wellness in Skid Row by expanding access to interim and permanent housing, health care, harm reduction, other supportive services and economic opportunity.
For information about new projects and a description of the community design process, recommendations and results, review the Skid Row Action Plan implementation report to the Board of Supervisors.
The Skid Row Action Plan generated the idea for the Skid Row Care Campus, a welcoming and safe space for services, connection and community. Learn more about the Skid Row Care Campus.
Skid Row Action Plan History
In 2022, according to the 2022 Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count, about 4,400 people were experiencing homelessness in the Skid Row neighborhood. Of those individuals, 2,695 were unsheltered. As the epicenter of homelessness in the nation, Skid Row also experienced the highest overdose mortality rate in LA County. Acknowledging the importance of creating a healthy and safer community in a neighborhood that has been shaped by decades of structural and systemic inequalities, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors passed a motion introduced by Supervisor Hilda Solis in June 2022 to create the Skid Row Action Plan.
In June 2023, Housing for Health and partners were awarded a $60 million state grant to provide housing and services to an estimated 2,500 individuals experiencing unsheltered homelessness on Skid Row. The funding served as a catalyst for the Skid Row Action Plan, a $280 million initiative developed in collaboration with community members, business owners and service providers.
Community Collaboration
Throughout 2022 and 2023, community members, community-based organizations and government agencies collaborated during many design sessions to create recommendations for the Skid Row Action Plan. The workgroup members presented their final recommendations in December 2023 during a celebratory event at the Los Angeles Mission. Now the projects are moving toward implementation.


Skid Row Projects
- Increasing the availability of safe interim housing and opening more pathways from interim to permanent housing
- Increasing the availability of and access to safe permanent housing
- Creating a Safe Services Space that centralizes access to a wide range of care services and programs that support and empower vulnerable populations
- Expanding access to health and behavioral healthcare that offers critical services for those in crisis and those seeking a low-barrier entrance into preventative and ongoing medical care
- Creating a Harm Reduction Health Hub that increases the safety and wellbeing of those who use drugs through holistic support
- Expanding economic opportunities for people living in Skid Row