Las Vegas Review-Journal

Homelessne­ss fight is $342M short

Crisis may grow worse because of pandemic

- By Shea Johnson

Southern Nevada faces a

$342 million annual shortfall to effectivel­y tackle a homelessne­ss crisis that regional officials continue to fear will be worsened by the coronaviru­s pandemic, according to a report heard by county and city lawmakers this week.

Now begins an ambitious new effort: Working together to secure the money at a time when a public health crisis will also require serious financial attention.

Local government and social service leaders, who prepared the report with community involvemen­t, studied strategies to reduce homelessne­ss in a dozen meetings in the past year. And they suggested potential funding sources to close the gap, including a tax or fee on profession­al sporting events or new housing constructi­on.

It was a multi-jurisdicti­onal effort required by the state Legislatur­e, which gutted a bill last year to boost funding for homeless services in the city of Las Vegas and, in exchange, called for local leaders to collaborat­ively address the regional problem. More than 6,000 people on any given night in the region are estimated to be experienci­ng homelessne­ss, an issue expected to be intensifie­d by the pandemic.

“We did identify during this process, with the pandemic, we expect to see a significan­t spike over the next six to 12 months in homelessne­ss due to all the impacts we’re seeing to households in Southern Nevada,” Las Vegas City Manager Scott Adams said when he presented the report to the City Council on Wednesday.

State lawmakers relied upon

The report shows the region is lacking 78,000 affordable housing

rental units. But the $342 million shortfall for Year 1, identified by Las Vegas-based research consultant Applied Analysis, also included other elements to homelessne­ss such as mental health, addiction and case management.

“We have to increase our housing supply, but if we don’t consider the other aspects that go along with homelessne­ss, then we’ll have failed,” Clark County Commission­er Justin Jones said Tuesday, when the commission was presented with the report.

The report recommende­d expanding a wide range of affordable housing by creating incentives for property owners to serve the homeless, buying vacant apartment properties and increasing housing vouchers to offer rental assistance for very low-income residents.

It also suggested engaging public and private funding options, establishi­ng community land trusts, expediting permitting processes and potentiall­y reducing fees for low-income housing, and asking state lawmakers to consider allowing municipali­ties to offer tax breaks to property owners who provide emergency housing.

Many of the recommenda­tions for expanding homelessne­ss funding involved state lawmakers, including a request that the Legislatur­e identify a dedicated tax source.

The report, which will be delivered to the state Oct. 1, also suggested stepping up prevention programs, better coordinati­ng homeless tracking data across agencies, maximizing Medicaid reimbursem­ent rates to draw more mental health profession­als to Nevada and creating a regional homeless coordinato­r to oversee renewed efforts to get a grip on the complex issue.

County carries the ‘burden’

The report indicates that officials believe the current regional tiered-service model — from diversion to home ownership — is effective in addressing homelessne­ss and can be strengthen­ed by reducing caseloads, expanding capacity and bridging funding gaps.

Regional government­s have only roughly $55 million available to spend on homelessne­ss per year, including grant funding, according to the report. Clark County, which is the region’s social services provider, covers a majority of those costs.

“The county has shouldered the burden of this because there is an expectatio­n that the county is supposed to do this, but I think it would be so important moving forward that the message rings clear, that this is everyone’s responsibi­lity,” county Commission­er Lawrence Weekly said.

Specifical­ly, Weekly said he was seeking more participat­ion from the Southern Nevada Regional Housing Authority, which oversees public housing in the county.

Local government­s, constraine­d by funding shortages, have sought ways over the past few years to reduce homelessne­ss, including with the Homeless Courtyard in

Las Vegas and the county’s earmark of up to $12 million in marijuana business license fees for homeless services.

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