Roughly 567,000 people living in Los Angeles are poor renters who can't access the government assistance they qualify for and are in danger of falling into homelessness, according to a new report from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
The report said these renters have "worst case needs" -- they make so little money they could get public housing or rental assistance, but there's not enough government help to go around.
Southern California's housing affordability crisis is far-reaching, but low-income renters may be among the hardest hit. And those living in Los Angeles are not alone. In the Riverside metropolitan area, poor renters with no government assistance number about 123,000.
"This population could be at risk of losing their housing altogether, further exacerbating the issue of homelessness," said HUD spokesman Ed Cabrera.
The renters resort to living in cheap, substandard apartments or places that can eat up more than half their income, which is about $45,000 for a family of four in Los Angeles County.