Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Budget would boost program to use hotels for homeless housing

Newsom’s proposal includes $750 million for Project Homekey, a success last year.

- By Benjamin Oreskes

Last year, a small silver lining amid a deadly pandemic was a state program that helped municipali­ties buy hotels, motels and apartment buildings to house and shelter homeless people.

The program, Project Homekey, was a rare success in the effort to combat the state’s worsening homeless crisis.

Gov. Gavin Newsom’s proposed budget, unveiled Friday, includes $750 million to continue Project Homekey. Last year, the program was largely funded with federal coronaviru­s stimulus money, with the state government and philanthro­pic partners chipping in $100 million.

The budget proposal also allocates another $750 million to create more beds for people having mental health emergencie­s, so they don’t end up in emergency rooms or in jail.

“We have, as a nation, underinves­ted in those kinds of interventi­ons for decades and decades,” said Jason Elliott, Newsom’s senior advisor on homelessne­ss, who spearheade­d Project

Homekey last year.

Announced last summer, the Homekey program set off a mad dash by local officials and social services providers to find buildings that could be purchased quickly and then to move people into the rooms within 90 days. The federal dollars had to be spent by the end of 2020.

In the end, about 6,000 units, including 1,800 in Los Angeles, were purchased through the program.

Local officials stressed that given more time and resources, they could buy more buildings and repeat the process. Elliott said this was a big reason Newsom’s team decided to budget more money for the program — without the requiremen­ts imposed by the federal government.

Still, there will be an ur

gency to get started fast. Elliott hopes the Legislatur­e will make $250 million of the $750 million available before Newsom’s budget, which will be debated by the Legislatur­e before it is implemente­d, goes into effect in July.

“There were so many more projects that we could have funded had there been more time and more funding,” Elliott said of last year’s Homekey efforts. “A lot of local government­s said, ‘We can’t close escrow by Dec. 30.’ That was reasonable. This new funding, even though it’s state funding, will still come with all of the same urgency.”

Local government­s — mostly through their housing authoritie­s — will compete for grants to buy and rehab buildings that can be converted into housing or shelters for homeless people. Of the money doled out last year, the city and county of Los Angeles together received about $270 million to make purchases.

One such developmen­t was an apartment building in the San Fernando Valley, where 40 previously homeless families got a permanent roof over their heads beginning last month. Their rent is supplement­ed using Section 8 vouchers.

Homekey followed another statewide effort, known as Project Roomkey, to move vulnerable homeless people into rented hotel rooms. As that program wound down, the Homekey purchases ramped up.

Acquiring and adapting existing properties is far cheaper than building.

On average, the city of L.A. spent about $230,000 per unit, much less than the cost of building a unit of permanent supportive housing — the type that is deemed most effective in breaking the cycle of homelessne­ss — from the ground up.

Officials said state legislatio­n waiving the need for environmen­tal and local land use approvals greatly expedited purchases. Newsom’s budget proposal requests that the streamlini­ng of the process continue.

Some units were immediatel­y turned into supportive housing, and others will function as interim housing until they can be renovated.

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? A WOMAN eyes motel rooms in North Hills used as part of Project Homekey, a state program that last year bought about 6,000 units, including 1,800 in L.A.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times A WOMAN eyes motel rooms in North Hills used as part of Project Homekey, a state program that last year bought about 6,000 units, including 1,800 in L.A.

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