About an hour into the first night of an experimental homeless shelter at Glendale’s National Guard Armory, volunteers and staff outnumbered clients about two to one.
“It’s smaller, way smaller,” said Steven Elliott, a 52-year-old homeless man who stayed at the armory last winter when people lined up at the door to take refuge from the cold.
The long lines and chaotic quarters have been replaced by a mostly empty armory due to a new shelter program sponsored by Glendale and Burbank — and Scott McLeod, a 52-year-old who normally sleeps under an awning outside a Glendale church, didn’t mind.
“The atmosphere is a little better,” he said.
For the next 90 days, Glendale and Burbank plan to run a 50-bed program limited to pre-selected clients that have community ties. The program has a budget of $150,000. Fourteen transients showed up on opening night Thursday, many fewer than the 150 people the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority has housed in the past at its come-one, come-all shelter at the armory.
