The Crossing Podcast
A Community Health Provider That’s Too Big — and Vital — to Fail
Venice Family Clinic’s Elizabeth Benson Forer explains how the dramatic growth of her essential facility reflects the breakdown of our health care system.

At its inception more than 50 years ago, the Venice Family Clinic was little more than an idea and an after-hours storefront. The notion was simple: Plenty of people on the Westside of Los Angeles were struggling to get by, and some of them either couldn’t afford to see a doctor, didn’t know where to start or avoided the health care system altogether — sometimes because of fears related to their immigration status.
That storefront, a converted dental office, got busy in a hurry. Eventually, the clinic model expanded, funding grew and the model multiplied again. Now, amid a pandemic nearing the two-year mark, the Venice Family Clinic is poised to reach more patients — some 45,000 in 2021 — than at any other point in its history. After a recent merger with South Bay Family Health Care, the system comprises 17 brick-and-mortar locations, plus ever-expanding mobile services.
That’s the good news and the bad. The clinic’s ability to survive and thrive is absolutely something to celebrate. But the need for the Venice Clinic’s services — to the poor, the homeless, the uninsured and the largely invisible — is growing exponentially. It has become a game of catch-up in which it’s nearly impossible to win.
“Our growth reflects the tremendous need that has always been in Los Angeles County,” says Elizabeth Benson Forer, CEO and executive director of the Venice Family Clinic. “There is a huge issue across our country — but especially in Los Angeles County and in California — with health care and health care infrastructure, especially for people with low incomes and very low incomes.”
In this episode of Capital & Main’s weeklong podcast series The Crossing, we discuss with Forer the underpinnings of that need — and the dramatic growth of the community clinic system that works on the front lines to meet it.
Copyright 2021 Capital & Main

-
Featured VideoMarch 21, 2025
The Disaster After the Disaster: Many Contaminants May Be Overlooked in the Wake of the L.A. Fires
-
Beyond the BorderMarch 25, 2025
Venezuelan Dad Deported to Salvadoran Prison Was Family Man Who Worked for DoorDash
-
State of InequalityMarch 27, 2025
Stay Hungry: School Kids Learn the ABCs of Chaos
-
Latest NewsMarch 24, 2025
Visibly Bruised Venezuelans Allege Mistreatment in ICE Custody in Video
-
Latest NewsMarch 31, 2025
Residents Say Van Nuys Airport Is Making Them Sick
-
Latest NewsApril 7, 2025
A Mother’s Battle to Protect Her Son’s Care
-
State of InequalityApril 3, 2025
Have Skilled Nursing Facilities Become Dumping Grounds for the Mentally Ill?
-
California UncoveredMarch 23, 2025
Running While Black, Latino or Asian American — Under Trump