A recent Los Angeles audit exposes the failure of the city’s efforts to transition homeless individuals from temporary shelters to permanent housing. Conducted by LA City Controller Kenneth Mejia, the report reveals that between 2019 and 2023, less than 20% of interim shelter residents moved into permanent housing, while over half returned to the streets or had unknown outcomes. Adding to the issue, one in four city-funded shelter beds went unused, costing taxpayers $218 million. Critics argue that the city's "housing first" approach is fundamentally flawed, as it fails to address core issues like addiction and severe mental illness. Without mandatory treatment and stricter policies, this revolving door of homelessness will persist. The audit highlights systemic mismanagement, data quality failures, and lack of accountability among service providers, pointing to a broader breakdown of California’s liberal policies in tackling homelessness.